Since P started school, I have battled my own anxieties about being insistent and making demands. Nearing the end of the second year, I have come a long way, but I have certainly not mastered the art of advocacy. A meeting is scheduled next week for which I am assiduously preparing, hoping not fumble yet another opportunity for supporting my son, by making those in charge of his education understand what he needs.
At the beginning of this year such a meeting was held, at my instigation. Everyone smiled at me. The new teacher seemed nervous; she had clearly never had an AS child before. She was handed a book by the teacher who co-ordinates the disability kids; no-one asked us if there were any materials we would regard as helpful.
There was lots more smiling, laughing, praise for my boy, how well he was doing. Whenever I tried to say, "that's great, so perhaps we could start extending him further", and gave an example of an area where he had difficulty, I was politely told by the person in charge, repeatedly, how many kids have that problem, how he doesn't stand out. This same woman talked to the new teacher about teaching him to recognise facial expressions. I tried to point out that he can do that fairly well; it's relating those expressions to internal states and other relevant connections that he needs help with. But she insisted on talking about him as if he were a little robot needing to be programmed with bunch of discreet emotional tags which he will somehow miraculously be able to employ just as his NT peers do. Actually, I don't think she thought that; I think she assumed that he, as any ASD kid, just has no hope of getting that far, so pictures of angry faces is about as far as it is worth going; more would be a waste of the teacher's time.
We got nothing that counts in that meeting. It took me back again to that first workshop, how revelatory it was to see my 2-year-old for the first time surrounded by little boys with short attention spans and emotional volatility. I can't blame them for not understanding; the teachers really need to have their eyes opened as I did that day. But since I can't drag them off to a group like that, they could at least have an attitude of professional curiosity. I am so tired of feeling like I am being tolerated. I know a lot, I have a lot to offer, I can and want to work with them for my son's betterment.
At a subsequent meeting, I thought I'd learned my lesson and was a lot more forward in specifying what I wanted for P. An arrangement that I regarded as ideal for regular informal communication between the teacher and myself was organised, with the blessing of an autism specialist from within the education system. Once that overworked specialist was out of view, however, the school attempted to renege almost immediately. I was told that it was unfair for a teacher to devote so much time and energy to one student.
If I've learnt anything, it's to turn down the emotional volume as much as I can when they pull this kind of stunt. So instead of sleepless nights, tears, helplessness, I've tried hard to focus on what they are not getting, how I can make them understand, and how I can push myself to keep asking even after I've been told "no, something that I am very bad at. This is not to say that I've banished all emotion; anger and frustration are particularly hard to keep at bay. I did realise though that all my attempts to do things in a placating, submissive kind of way are failing. At the next meeting, I will make sure that they know that I will keep asking extra support for my son, all the way through his time at their school.
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