Charlotte has a new teaching assistant assigned to her. She will be there 4 days a week which is what the statement funding will cover. It will be great to see how she makes progress in the classroom with a bit of extra support.
She told me that the new teacher showed her how to draw a bicycle with two wheels and a seat. It seems as though she was not aware that pictures of bicycles included a seat.
The plan is that we won't make Charlotte expressly aware that this teacher is assigned just to her. It will be better for her socially, and for her relationships with the other teachers, if the new teacher is there as extra support for the whole class.
I am so pleased and proud of the school. So many (private) schools won't accept statemented children; but this one understands that there are benefits for the class and the whole school. From a purely mercenary standpoint, they have put in some extra work up front for paperwork and meetings and got an additional teaching assistant out of it. Who, parents and staff, would not prefer their nursery class to have one teacher and three assistants? By the time she gets to year one, it would mean a doubling of assistant resources across two classes. (Two assistants for two classes, instead of one shared between two).
I am aware that this is possible because of public funding and I am incredibly grateful for the state support that she has received. From medical services, through visual impairment support and disability benefits, we have been incredibly fortunate. Tax and spend, heh?
On a practical level, I briefed the new teacher by giving her a copy of the incredibly helpful Teachers Guide to Helping a Student with Achromatopsia from the Low Vision Centres of Indiana.
Friday, 24 May 2013
Tuesday, 7 May 2013
Watch me!
One of the benefits of having a blind child is that the
endless “Watch me, Mummy!” can be faked.
“Yes, yes, I’m watching
darling!”
Except I’m not, I’m looking down at my book/phone/work as one
does when one is supervising small children in the garden.
“You’re not watching!”
Huh?
“I can’t see your face!”
How much vision she has is still a source of mystery to
me. We were in full sun and she was moving confidently between light and
shade and she could see if my face was turned towards her or not. Partial
Achromatopsia? She still hasn’t let her Ophthalmologist actually measure
her visual acuity.
Friday, 3 May 2013
Statement approval
Great news – Charlotte has a statement from the local
council. She is going to be getting the
maximum hours per week of classroom support which equates to a full time
classroom assistant dedicated to her learning.
It is going to be wonderful for her progress in school, she is clever
and she probably has been held back in the classroom by her vision. The school are now due to recruit someone for
her and I can’t wait to meet them. It is going to be under review after two terms but hopefully it will be able to become longer term and might last her through her primary years.
She is making great progress in her independence. I'm sure that having an older sibling really
helps. She sees her sister going to “drop-off”
birthday parties and playdates and has insisted that she wants to do the same. Luckily the last two parties were ones where
her older sister was also invited so it was easier to leave the two of them together. But she has been getting
on fine on her own. It is amazing what a
difference that first year of nursery makes to their birthday party
participation. In September, she was lying
on the floor, crying; now she is rushing off without even saying goodbye!
She is scooting to school every day. I have to give her a lot of help with bumps
in the pavement but on the flat surfaces, on a familiar route, she takes off in
front on her own quite happily. I would
like to get her riding a bike some day. It will be a good source of mobility and
independence in adulthood, if she can be safe in traffic.
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