Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ignore DH’s brother.
With your dad, have you told him how the comments come across? Or what you would prefer from him? He is probably used to being the expert in the room and is probably worried about your DD, and those two things are combining badly.
OP here. I’ve tried to tell him, but it’s hard to get him to listen. I think you’re right. He really adores DD, but is used to being the expert and being the one to swoop in and have the answer. He had a long, successful legal career. It’s very hard for him to accept that someone else might know better.
Either don't talk with your dad if you don't want his opinion, or actually listen to him. It's entirely possible that he knows more than you do. When he questions whether your child is really up to par because someone at the school said she is based on one DIBELS, it may not be what you want to hear, but he may have a point. Schools are constantly trying to wiggle out of providing services. How well was the tester actually trained???
Her school is giving her phonics intervention and the DIBELS was done by the reading specialist. They were simply saying she’s on benchmark now, not that she doesn’t need services. The reading specialist said she’ll do another DIBELS soon and that we don’t know if she’ll be on benchmark then.
They are also giving her a language exemption to support her pull out tutoring.
They are implementing the full plan her neuropsychologist asked for. There’s no evidence at all that they’re trying to wiggle out of services.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:except that I don't think your retelling is truthful. This doesn't sound right.
? What are you questioning?
Both no.1 and no.2. This sounds like those usual DCUM stories where OP fails to insert some critical information that is damaging to her side of the story. I can't imagine a dad saying that.
Those were quotes. It really was terrible. I wish I was exaggerating.
Anonymous wrote:Do not share.
EmWhat is your purpose in sharing? I think you are proud of her test results. You are not going to get the support you want from this corner. I know it sucks, but you know this, so protect yourself.
No reason for grandparents to know about kid’s DIBELS. Like literally, most won’t understand, and the others will be like your dad & other posters’ parents who become WebMd experts. Stop & find other people to share these victories with, & find other victories to share with parents - videos of her reading a book, singing a song she worked to memorize, etc.
She is going to be older & cognizant of these conversations & what you are saying & what he is saying. If you feel bad about what he says now, think about how she’ll feel when she overhears one of these conversations between you 2 in a few years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:except that I don't think your retelling is truthful. This doesn't sound right.
? What are you questioning?
Both no.1 and no.2. This sounds like those usual DCUM stories where OP fails to insert some critical information that is damaging to her side of the story. I can't imagine a dad saying that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:except that I don't think your retelling is truthful. This doesn't sound right.
? What are you questioning?
Anonymous wrote:except that I don't think your retelling is truthful. This doesn't sound right.
Anonymous wrote:How do you all deal with family members who are insensitive or otherwise annoying about your kid’s diagnoses?
Two situations:
1. My husband was visiting his family recently. He mentioned that DD had been diagnosed with dyslexia and ADHD. His brother laughed and said “good luck with that,” in a sarcastic way.
Extremely obnoxious.
2. My dad got his Master’s in Special Ed in the 70s and worked for 3-4 years with kids with profound needs. He then switched careers and was a lawyer for decades. He now thinks that his experiences from the 70s makes him an expert at everything related to DD’s diagnosis and treatment.
He questions what her neuropsychologist recommends, all the way down to how to use specific test instruments. When I tell him what her very well qualified school team and neuropsychologist say, he pouts and says “well I guess I’m just stupid and don’t know anything.”
We recently found out DD is on benchmark with her latest DIBELS and were very happy. His response was, “well you don’t know how well qualified the people are who did that test.”
It’s so frustrating. I’m typically close with my parents and have kept them updated, but I’m at the point where I’m just going to tell my mom what’s happening.
Anyway, just a vent, but wanted to know who else deals with obnoxious family members.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ignore DH’s brother.
With your dad, have you told him how the comments come across? Or what you would prefer from him? He is probably used to being the expert in the room and is probably worried about your DD, and those two things are combining badly.
OP here. I’ve tried to tell him, but it’s hard to get him to listen. I think you’re right. He really adores DD, but is used to being the expert and being the one to swoop in and have the answer. He had a long, successful legal career. It’s very hard for him to accept that someone else might know better.
Either don't talk with your dad if you don't want his opinion, or actually listen to him. It's entirely possible that he knows more than you do. When he questions whether your child is really up to par because someone at the school said she is based on one DIBELS, it may not be what you want to hear, but he may have a point. Schools are constantly trying to wiggle out of providing services. How well was the tester actually trained???