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Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Reply to "Ok to just make major parental decisions solo?"
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[quote=Anonymous]It is possible to be both gifted and have some kind of disability, some of these posts make me understand why your husband might hesitate on getting an evaluation. My kid is smart, and also has an iep because she does need some accommodations not given to the class as a rule. I’ve noticed a few things with having an IEP. First, the school sets it up as us v. them. Everybody has been pleasant, but there is definitely a “We’re in charge, and you aren’t” attitude. I’ve noticed too that they set low career aspirations for her, almost like now that she has a diagnosis they simply don’t expect much. Nobody has ever said this, but I can see it in the meetings.. and to be honest, I’m not really sure they know they are doing it. They have offered accommodations that don’t make sense, I can remember one IEP meeting where they kept pushing an accommodation because one of the ladies on the school’s side of the table (and she was literally on the school’s side of the table) had a son who used it, only problem, her son had a very different disability. Your husband is right to be skeptical. He’s right to not blindly trust what the experts tell him. He’s right to wonder what the diagnosis will mean, will you treat your son differently in a way that may harm him.. he doesn’t have to clean up, he has (fill in whatever diagnosis). You paint your husband as what I’d call a “typicl redneck” they get an idea in their head and nothing can shake it. Maybe he is. It’s also possible he’s got some real concerns about the process and what comes next. He also may have some experience in his past you may be unaware of which is making him upset. I worked with a lady who rode the special ed bus when she went to school. She had asthma. Today a kid with asthma would ride the regular bus, but that wasn’t done when she was in school. She truly hated the special ed bus. Just being on it got people to think she was what used to be called mentally retarded. I’m sure there were other things that upset her too, not being able to wait for the bus with her friends, perhaps being treated like she was stupid, things that are huge when you are a kid, and which are difficult to explain to an adult. She was in her fifties, hadn’t ridden the short bus in decades and it still upset her. She once told me “I hate seeing those busses on the road, I’ll quit my job and drive my kid to and from school if school wanted him to ride that bus, he can ride a regular school bus, but I won’t have him ride the short bus”. I believe she meant it. Given your husband’s and your past disagreements, he may feel that he’ll be ignored about what he wants for his son. Could he be more right then you want to admit? The fact that you’re thinking of just excluding him makes me wonder. [/quote]
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