Anonymous wrote:OP here -- just as an update. I did talk with the director. They said the primary issue was a non-behavioral medical condition that he has, which they weren't willing to accept, although it seemed like the behavioral things maybe made them less inclined to deal with the medical situation. Next fall, we should all start a post about which camps have which strengths.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They actually did give our money back for the future weeks, which I appreciate. And I'm not saying they necessarily made the wrong decision. I just was a little surprised that this was the first call I ever received from the director. And I guess I don't really have a sense about whether he was endangering other children, since I only got one call about one incident, where he was admittedly being too rough with another child -- they used the term "rough-housing) (although they off handedly previous said something about his not listening well to the teachers). I'm not sure if it was a "one strike and he's out" situation, or if there were additional issues. I guess I also don't have a good sense of what the camps consider to be an acceptable (or at least predictable) level of rough-housing among boys this age -- he mentioned to me that another boy hit or pushed him, and I didn't mention it to the camp, but maybe I should have. He's been to many camps before and never had any problem. I guess I was just wondering if this is typical camp behavior, or if most of them give you a little more warning that there's a problem.
Uh, op, no amount of rough housing is okay in a camp or day care situation. You need to teach him to keep his hands to himself.
There was actually a fantastic story on NPR this afternoon about how boys learn so much from rough housing. And stopping them does them a disservice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here -- just as an update. I did talk with the director. They said the primary issue was a non-behavioral medical condition that he has, which they weren't willing to accept, although it seemed like the behavioral things maybe made them less inclined to deal with the medical situation. Next fall, we should all start a post about which camps have which strengths.
And are you satisfied with that explanation? Presumably if it was a medical condition that required anything extra from the camp, you would have told them ahead of time. So it doesn't seem fair to wait until camp has already started for them to decide they couldn't support it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, do people here have a lot of incidents when the kids are asked to leave the camp for good, regardless of the provider knowing the kids' diagnose / needs? I am new to the area but getting nervous that I'm about to enroll my kid in a mainstream camp. Do you guys mind sharing the name of the camps that couldn't accommodate your kids (or the ones that absolutely great, beyond expectation), so other parents can learn? Thanks.
We tried JCC camps last year and they were not equipped to deal with my DS (ASD/ADHD). Constant phone calls, eye rolls from the Camp Director. After 4 days there, we pulled him out. It sucked because the camp was expensive and claimed they accepted SN children. They did give us our money back. Luckily our 2nd choice camp still had a few spots and they were able to accommodate us. Very good transition and they brought out DS' interest in sports!
Was this the rockville jcc?
No, JCCNV
Do you mind sharing the name of the great second camp?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, do people here have a lot of incidents when the kids are asked to leave the camp for good, regardless of the provider knowing the kids' diagnose / needs? I am new to the area but getting nervous that I'm about to enroll my kid in a mainstream camp. Do you guys mind sharing the name of the camps that couldn't accommodate your kids (or the ones that absolutely great, beyond expectation), so other parents can learn? Thanks.
We tried JCC camps last year and they were not equipped to deal with my DS (ASD/ADHD). Constant phone calls, eye rolls from the Camp Director. After 4 days there, we pulled him out. It sucked because the camp was expensive and claimed they accepted SN children. They did give us our money back. Luckily our 2nd choice camp still had a few spots and they were able to accommodate us. Very good transition and they brought out DS' interest in sports!
Was this the rockville jcc?
No, JCCNV