AZ with Sandra and Sean March 2014 |
Today is Sean McElwee's twenty second birthday. I have met Sean and his Mom Sandra at CA TASH in 2014 .
Sandra wrote a book about her son's educational experience called Who is the Slow Learner. I decided to let her talk about her book and if you like it then you can enter for a giveaway at the end of the blog
AZ: Why did you write the book?
Sean in kindergarten |
Sandra: The real purpose was to educate and inspire while entertaining in the hopes that parents could learn, and educators could see that they hold the key to success…or hell. Who’s the Slow Learner? A Chronicle of Inclusion and Exclusion was an accidental book. Sean had a text-book perfect elementary school inclusion experience, but secondary school was a stark contrast. I started documenting the bad behavior of the administrators and educators and five years when Sean graduated from high school I looked back and thought, “I couldn’t make this stuff up!” That’s when the idea of turning Sean’s story into a book, but it couldn’t just be the secondary school experience. Parent’s needed to know what to watch out for, but it would have been too depressing. So I broke out the elementary school communication notebooks, IEPs and started recreating each grade chronologically.
I searched and searched and I couldn’t find one book that chronicled a student with special educational needs from preschool through high school graduation. We have plenty of the ‘baby born, parents mourn’ stories but none that provide practical realities of the school-age years.
I wrote the book as a memoir, simply because I enjoy reading real-life memoirs. My hopes were that parents could learn first how inclusion was supposed to be supported and accommodated as it was in Sean’s elementary school…and what legal tools they have to use when it isn’t provided appropriately from the secondary school experiences.
AZ Chapman : What has been the feedback for the book?
A lot of people like Sandra's story that shows that when you include everyone benefits |
Sandra: I am thrilled to have 31 Five-Star Ratings on Amazon.com. Parents have told me they purchased the book for their teachers and administrators and have had them comment they never looked at Inclusion from a parent’s perspective before. This has led to positive changes in their schools, and THAT is the feedback that makes my day. Some of the headlines from the ratings on Amazon ‘Highly recommended,’ A must read for teachers and parents,’ Invaluable resource,’ and my favorites comment that they couldn’t put the book down.
Sean in forth grade |
AZ Chapman: What advice do you have for future special education teachers?
Sandra: My advice for special educators and general educators alike is to always have high expectations for their students. To learn to collaborate as a team and to spend the time they are in school learning to differentiate instruction so they can teach one subject to learners of different abilities and learning styles.
Sean with the baseball team. He was an assistant to the team during his high school years |
AZ Chapman: What is Sean up too now?
Sandra : Sean is about to turn 22, and is attending community college focusing on acting classes. He is an assistant coach for a Challenger Flag Football team, volunteers in a SundaySchool class and goes dancing every chance he has. He was just hired to work at Home Depot! He has a full social life and enjoys doing presentations and signing books. In his spare time, Sean loves to make music videos using an app on his Iphone. He’s currently single, but has a girl that he is trying to woo.
Thank you Sandra
Enter for a chance to win a copy of this book by leaving a comment on this post. The giveaway will close on the 31st. Winners will be announced on November forth.
Click here for the book's website
Click here for the book's Facebook page
6 comments:
Love this post!!! Loved Sandy's first book!!!
Would love a copy of this book!
Would love a copy of the book!
Would love a copy of this book:)
Thank you Sandra for being one of the many wonderful trail blazers for Moms like us who know the potential of our children and just want to shift perceptions so that educators see it as well! I look forward to the day when outdated views are gone, inclusion is the norm and we no longer need these conversations! Until then keep writing!!! Thank you!
AZ,I still remember you sharing your experience in school. The things you wanted to do, but could not experience. Thank you for giving us parents insight when our children can't communicate!
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