Thursday, May 1, 2014
Blogging against disability day 2014: Don't put words in my mouth
Too many orginzations that serve people with disabilites, the most famous one being Autism Speaks Do not listen to people with developmental disabiltes
Why is this a problem you might ask?
Let me take you back to history class more specifically American History class.
Your in fifth grade and its time to learn about colonazation. In it you learn about the British forced the colonist to pay taxes. The colonist pay taxes on things in which they have no say over stamps papper goods . Then they foce you to only drink tea from the East India tea company. People do not like it and a little thing oh what is the word for it o h yeah the American Revoultion happends. Americans are taught that British were the bad guys because they forced there agenda on the colonost, later the Americans.
Now can you igmane what would happend if instead of money people told you that you are an epidemic. That medince needs to heal you. That you have to wear smelly uniforms. The last straw for American people was when activist had to house soliders, You know what those all called to us Yanks the intolerable acts.
Then fast forward to the mid 20th centruy. We learn that seprate is not equal and everyone deserve a vote. So many fellow men and women of color gave there lives for freedom. People were hosed and had dog attacking.
Why isn't the same liberaty offered to those with disabilities. Why is it that people time and time again disregard us in making descins. Why do you refuse to ignore our wants and desires. Give us a vote. Bring us to the table and show us where the money is going. Ask us what we hope for. Ask us if we want to be in the world or a community. Asks us if we want jobs. Asks us what our dream job is. Then listen to what we have to say. Listen like you would to our able bodied counterpart. Listen to us. We know best. We know what it feels like to be isolated. We know how it feels to be talked down too. WE know whats it like to work hard in theaphy. WE have experinced frustration. WE experinced the laughter and taunts go unoticed . We know the pain of people dreading a birth of someone like us. We know how it feels when people tell us our experinced isn't valid because we are not normal.
Nothing about us without us.
Monday, April 21, 2014
Dear People sitting across the table
Dear People sitting across the table,
You guys are gathered around a table for a school meeting of a student that struggles. Maybe they have a intellectual disability or a behavior issue but you are about to meet with that student and their families to talk about the upcoming school year. I am that bad student. I was the one no one wanted to teach. I was "the hardest student I had ever had to teach". I am now that adult who is hardest to teach. I have been those meetings and boy they are not fun.
Can I ask you guys around the table for a favor. Can you please remember that every person has both a good and bad side to them. Can you please remember that students like me are not future inmates or horrible people headed nowhere. We are more then IQ scores or how inteligble our speech is.
Can I remind you that their is no alternative to inclusive education. It is the law for a reason No research has found that segregation what you guys call " a program" or " special day class" is a better option even for those with serve disabilities. LRE says that students like me should be educated for the most amount of time among peers who do not have disabilities using the rights supports and services and if all the supports fail first then is it ok to remove to a more restrictive environment That is the law. No one should have to prove that they are worthy of an education and everyone learns at a different pace.
Dear people at the other end at a table in an IEP meeting. Before you start , please look into the parents and child eyes. Everyone has a story. The parents probably have experienced a lot of heartache over their disabled child. Most people do not want a disabled family member and it is quite possible that there was a time when the child was small that they cried for their child's future. You may be able to go home and back to your lives , but the child's parents have to see the child that night. Please make it easy for them to see their child that night. If all you do is remind said parents that there child is rude and disruptive. They will have to go home and become the cop to the child. This will undoubtly make the student self esteem suffer immensely which will lead to more bad behavior and their believing that they are bad people.
Instead of calling it bad behavior why not say" Jimmy is confused by the social new-ounces of classroom life. Can we all work together to try to teach him social skills so he can get along in life." It is a lack of skill not bad behavior. Students are not bad if they do not understand an Algebra concept, nor should they be called bad if they do not understand how to behave in class.
One last thing. No one has a crystal ball so try not to predict the future thanks.
Sincerely
A young person that lacks social skills, and
has a strong love of learning.
image urlhttp://www.picgifs.com/clip-art/communication/meeting/clip-art-meeting-532273.jpg
You guys are gathered around a table for a school meeting of a student that struggles. Maybe they have a intellectual disability or a behavior issue but you are about to meet with that student and their families to talk about the upcoming school year. I am that bad student. I was the one no one wanted to teach. I was "the hardest student I had ever had to teach". I am now that adult who is hardest to teach. I have been those meetings and boy they are not fun.
Can I ask you guys around the table for a favor. Can you please remember that every person has both a good and bad side to them. Can you please remember that students like me are not future inmates or horrible people headed nowhere. We are more then IQ scores or how inteligble our speech is.
Can I remind you that their is no alternative to inclusive education. It is the law for a reason No research has found that segregation what you guys call " a program" or " special day class" is a better option even for those with serve disabilities. LRE says that students like me should be educated for the most amount of time among peers who do not have disabilities using the rights supports and services and if all the supports fail first then is it ok to remove to a more restrictive environment That is the law. No one should have to prove that they are worthy of an education and everyone learns at a different pace.
Dear people at the other end at a table in an IEP meeting. Before you start , please look into the parents and child eyes. Everyone has a story. The parents probably have experienced a lot of heartache over their disabled child. Most people do not want a disabled family member and it is quite possible that there was a time when the child was small that they cried for their child's future. You may be able to go home and back to your lives , but the child's parents have to see the child that night. Please make it easy for them to see their child that night. If all you do is remind said parents that there child is rude and disruptive. They will have to go home and become the cop to the child. This will undoubtly make the student self esteem suffer immensely which will lead to more bad behavior and their believing that they are bad people.
Instead of calling it bad behavior why not say" Jimmy is confused by the social new-ounces of classroom life. Can we all work together to try to teach him social skills so he can get along in life." It is a lack of skill not bad behavior. Students are not bad if they do not understand an Algebra concept, nor should they be called bad if they do not understand how to behave in class.
One last thing. No one has a crystal ball so try not to predict the future thanks.
Sincerely
A young person that lacks social skills, and
has a strong love of learning.
image urlhttp://www.picgifs.com/clip-art/communication/meeting/clip-art-meeting-532273.jpg
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
How I celebrated CP day
Hay guys so sorry long time no blog. I have been discouraged about the lack of comments but now i am back. I wanted to share with you what I did for national CP day.
My sister made cookies that I took to my program. ( I am not in school this semester but I may be in school in the Fall we have to see). The program
am was tempory and now i am done with the program.
I went to program in my green clothes and hat. It was cold that day so I wore a long white t shirt under my HOPE t shirt. After program I went to pizza and then took the bus home. I had a fun day.
A fellow Ceep, person with CP made this video. It was so nice to see many people wearing green to support us.
My sister made cookies that I took to my program. ( I am not in school this semester but I may be in school in the Fall we have to see). The program
am was tempory and now i am done with the program.
I went to program in my green clothes and hat. It was cold that day so I wore a long white t shirt under my HOPE t shirt. After program I went to pizza and then took the bus home. I had a fun day.
A fellow Ceep, person with CP made this video. It was so nice to see many people wearing green to support us.
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
The Solution is Inculsion
One of my earliest memories come from when I was in preschool. I have a few memories, but the one that stands out is when on a playground on a elementary school campus. The teacher yelled , " The big kids are coming." Now she could have yelled that the big kids are coming for two reasons One that we were preschoolers and when you are that little a seven year old is a "big kid" compared to you. Or it could have been that all the kids on the playground, including myself, were disabled. I attend a county preschool special needs class. That ment that most days I rode a small yellow bus to and from school I was met by others that had special needs. Some were hearing impaired others were in wheelchairs, I was in a speech impaired class as talking was, and continues to be, a huge moments task for me.If I spoke clearly, I would try to do a Ted talk on inclusion. Since I don't talk clearly, a blog post I will write. I am able to write it because I was included and learned how to write essays.
Special education classes are the biggest diservice to students with disabilities today. That is a pretty bold statement . But so all these.
34% of people with intellectual disabilities are employed
In 2012, 12% of people with any disability had a BA or higher.
How are thses outcomes OK for students. How can we commit one more youngster to these same "programs" that produce these result. Obviously we have failed people with disabilities but is inclusion the answer. I argue that it is because I was included in school.
I was included right from birth. My parents did not spend an hour a day with me then leave to take care of my seven year old brother. Could you imagine if a parent did that. That would be child abuse. If that is child abuse, Why is it OK for elementary school kids to only be include for specials( art music PE science and history) ? The science and history disappears as an option once students enter middle school. This is not okey. This is denying children access to stories and math games and other things that kids are doing. I was in general education classes and we spent most of the day doing reading and math. If I were only mainstreamed for science and social studies, I would not have had writers workshop or reading Charlotte's Web, and tile math.
Speaking about other kids, Why is ok to deny children with disabilities access to neighborhood schools? For kids, schools are there first community outside their family, so when we bus kids to other places they do not get to meet the neighborhood kids. They do not get to walk to school. They do not see other kids that they know in there local supermarkets or REC Centers. Isolation is common amongst kids with disabilities. So knowing this , why do school people routinely bus kids to other schools in there district All kids that use public schools should go to the school in there neighborhood.
How do we teach kids how to be in the community when all they know is isolation. The answer is not to take secondary students out in the community during the school day. The kids need to be in there local high school classes learning about the world around them. Just like they would if they did not have a disabilities. If they need work experience why not try to find it within the high school community so they can feel connected to the school. Could they work in the cafeteria once a week? Could they mange the sports equipment physical education department? Could they be messengers that work in the front office? Could they be teacher assistants? Could they be on student council ? They can do all of these activities and more to get job skills within their high school experience with help. Without ever stepping off the campus they can work in there community. When you are 16 your community is the high school. I remember being afraid when I started pre -k in a inclusive setting. There were more kids and different expectations. I can not imagine if I had spent my entire school carrer in a special day program then transition into the community. I would have been lost. My transition into the community was made easier by me being in inclusive education because I grew up in my community. I learned about being in a community by being part of my school community.
Parents might tell me that there kid loves being in the special day classes. You know what ask any kid if they wanted to go to all day dance and most would like it. Ask any kid if they want to go ice skateing for the day and most would like it. How bout to see the latest film.? If that was there school day then of course then most kids would love school, but they are not ready for life. This is not education. Education is all about learning.
All the special needs classes that I was in did not have structure The teachers and students disrespected me. Most students with intellecual disabilities were segered, so when I showed up last year at university, people taught that I was not intelligent People were surprised when I did well on tests. I really do not blame these stereotypes I am willing to bet big bucks that these professors never had a chancee to know what disabilities were. Professors never knew that the disabled were capable of greatness. The sad part is a whole generation of kids in america are not having the opportunity to know different because of the system. The system needs to change. Kids need to be on the same level to begin to falsify these stereotypes They can not do if they are helpers. They can not do it if disabled kids are segregated. They can only do it when the disabled student is just another kid in their classes for the whole day.
For those of you that haven't heard my story watch this
What do you think? I want to hear from you. Please commet before you leave/
References
http://www.disabilitystatistics.org/reports/acs.cfm?statistic=2
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/unemployment-of-people-with-intellectual-disabilities-more-than-twice-as-high-as-general-population-245835281.html
Special education classes are the biggest diservice to students with disabilities today. That is a pretty bold statement . But so all these.
34% of people with intellectual disabilities are employed
In 2012, 12% of people with any disability had a BA or higher.
How are thses outcomes OK for students. How can we commit one more youngster to these same "programs" that produce these result. Obviously we have failed people with disabilities but is inclusion the answer. I argue that it is because I was included in school.
I was included right from birth. My parents did not spend an hour a day with me then leave to take care of my seven year old brother. Could you imagine if a parent did that. That would be child abuse. If that is child abuse, Why is it OK for elementary school kids to only be include for specials( art music PE science and history) ? The science and history disappears as an option once students enter middle school. This is not okey. This is denying children access to stories and math games and other things that kids are doing. I was in general education classes and we spent most of the day doing reading and math. If I were only mainstreamed for science and social studies, I would not have had writers workshop or reading Charlotte's Web, and tile math.
Speaking about other kids, Why is ok to deny children with disabilities access to neighborhood schools? For kids, schools are there first community outside their family, so when we bus kids to other places they do not get to meet the neighborhood kids. They do not get to walk to school. They do not see other kids that they know in there local supermarkets or REC Centers. Isolation is common amongst kids with disabilities. So knowing this , why do school people routinely bus kids to other schools in there district All kids that use public schools should go to the school in there neighborhood.
How do we teach kids how to be in the community when all they know is isolation. The answer is not to take secondary students out in the community during the school day. The kids need to be in there local high school classes learning about the world around them. Just like they would if they did not have a disabilities. If they need work experience why not try to find it within the high school community so they can feel connected to the school. Could they work in the cafeteria once a week? Could they mange the sports equipment physical education department? Could they be messengers that work in the front office? Could they be teacher assistants? Could they be on student council ? They can do all of these activities and more to get job skills within their high school experience with help. Without ever stepping off the campus they can work in there community. When you are 16 your community is the high school. I remember being afraid when I started pre -k in a inclusive setting. There were more kids and different expectations. I can not imagine if I had spent my entire school carrer in a special day program then transition into the community. I would have been lost. My transition into the community was made easier by me being in inclusive education because I grew up in my community. I learned about being in a community by being part of my school community.
Parents might tell me that there kid loves being in the special day classes. You know what ask any kid if they wanted to go to all day dance and most would like it. Ask any kid if they want to go ice skateing for the day and most would like it. How bout to see the latest film.? If that was there school day then of course then most kids would love school, but they are not ready for life. This is not education. Education is all about learning.
All the special needs classes that I was in did not have structure The teachers and students disrespected me. Most students with intellecual disabilities were segered, so when I showed up last year at university, people taught that I was not intelligent People were surprised when I did well on tests. I really do not blame these stereotypes I am willing to bet big bucks that these professors never had a chancee to know what disabilities were. Professors never knew that the disabled were capable of greatness. The sad part is a whole generation of kids in america are not having the opportunity to know different because of the system. The system needs to change. Kids need to be on the same level to begin to falsify these stereotypes They can not do if they are helpers. They can not do it if disabled kids are segregated. They can only do it when the disabled student is just another kid in their classes for the whole day.
For those of you that haven't heard my story watch this
What do you think? I want to hear from you. Please commet before you leave/
References
http://www.disabilitystatistics.org/reports/acs.cfm?statistic=2
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/unemployment-of-people-with-intellectual-disabilities-more-than-twice-as-high-as-general-population-245835281.html
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Cerebral Palsy PARTY Day 17: National Cerebral Palsy Day
I do not hope that there will be a cure for CP because I am not suffering. Honestly do I look that I am suffering from CP. I am not broken, therefore I do not need to be fixed. CP is a part of who I am. Please do not pity me. I am on a adventure called life, which includes CP. I do have hopes for fellow CPers.
Ten things I hope that people with CP have.
I hope that kids with CP will have the chance to meet other kids and adults with CP so they will have role modals.
I hope that kids with CP will attend school and develop a love of learning.
I hope that people with CP will be valued members of their families.
I hope that people with CP will be valued members of their community.
I hope that people with CP won't get bullied.
I hope that people with CP will find friends
I hope that people with CP will enjoy life and have fun.
I hope that people with CP won't always have to prove that they are intelligent.
I hope that people with CP will have people expect greatness from them.
Ps if you are wearing green today. Let me know. If you want to send me a picture of you or your loved ones wearing green. Post a pic on my AZ Chapman face book page. or email me azchapman1991@gmail.com. You could be featured in a upcoming blog post.
Monday, March 24, 2014
Cerebral Palsy party DAY 16: I love the snow
Today's pics come from skiing at MT, Rose NV. We used to go up every President's weekend and go skiing. I love the snow. I have not been in awhile so I am hoping to go back perhaps next winter.
Roesbuds has a great adapted ski school, I was able to get private lessons. Pricy but worth it |
all business |
carrying my ski |
book gal AZ and Princess, |
Heading in,
Remember to wear green tomorrow for national CP day. If you do take a picture and send it to me. You could be on the blog later this week.
|
Friday, March 21, 2014
Cerebral Palsy Party Day 15: golfing
Hay guys so today's photo to end out the week will be from the first time I played golf.
Ok so its not real golf but mini golf. I really enjoyed playing here. Besides mini golf they had go carts, an arcade, and bumper boats. This was a really fun center. I was sad when they had to close this fun-land.
I continue to play golf for Special Olympics and was on my high school golf team.
Don't forget to comment before you leave.
PS Happy World Down Syndrome Day.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)