What is the importance of computer education in school from Kindergarten level?

How can I and this family get the resources they need from the school district?

  • I was talking to a good friend of mine yesterday. He has two young boys, twins aged 4 years old in September. These two boys are amazingly intelligent. Their father was telling me about their online blog (I don't have one of thsoe, and neither does he!), their use of the computer to read and write stories, poems, journal entries, play games, and many other things. These boys both tested at a 2nd grade level 2 years ago (at age 2!) and are now testing at a 4th to 5th grade level, thanks mostly to the amazing work that their mother does with them at home. They are currently in a preschool program for children with special needs because they did not start talking until they were 3 years old, but they speak in signs fluently. The reason they did not speak until they were three is because of a physical deformity in both the boys' vocal cords (most people's vocal boxes are shaped like a U, but their vocal boxes are shaped like a V [this is what their father told me]), so it's not a lack of communicative skills, a lack of intelligence, or a lack of trying that has caused hem to devolop late vocal skills. It is a lack of physical ability. The school district they live in wants to delay the twins from attending Kindergarten until they have better vocal skills. Not because they aren't devolopmentally ready, but because their body is not ready! I asked their father how this is any different from denying a child from entering school because they can't walk or are deaf or blind. He agrees that it is ridiuclous that the school district wants to hold them back, but doesn't know what to do to enforce their attendance of Kindergarten this coming fall. It is my belif that any delay in their school would lead to a delay in their educational ability, that they may lose some skills that they have gained, that they will slow down in their progress (in two years, they gained almost 3 grade levels in ability, and delaying their education may dealy that progress). It is my belief that these two boys should be in special education, but not for the developmentally -delayed- but for the Gifted and Talented, perhaps even be tested for special classes for children who show genius possibility. However, the boys' school wants to keep them back, and says they don't have a teacher that can work with them...they don't want to teach them sign language because they are not deaf, but they don't have a special program for non-vocal gifted children. The school says that they cannot go in the 'regular' GT program because they do not talk well enough to be understood (both boys have trouble with multi-syllable words or long sentences, because the amount of air it takes to push words out takes a lot more energy and effort out of them then a normal vocal box would allow, so t hey tire easily). I am shocked and upset that their school district is not willing to work with these two very smart, very wonderful little boys to give them the very best education, and so my question is: What can the parents of these little boys do to force the school to allow the children into a gifted program, whether their vocal skills get better by then or not (btw, the doctor says that with practice and effort, the children's vocal boxes will become a normal shape, and they will have no further trouble with their speech when the shape rights itself). Advice? Help? If it helps, the boys live in Chesapeake, Virginia. They will be 4 years old in September, and yes, they are seeing a speech therapist (which is why they are speaking at all now, because of practice and therapy to improve muscle strength and try to push their vocal boxes into a U shape). And the cause of the mis-shapen vocal boxes was prematurity (not sure how premature they were, but that is the only lasting disability they have from their prematurity)

  • Answer:

    This is a violation of ADA and 504 (in the US) GT doesn't really fall under special ed--but some states do include it. it is usually a separate program. The children should be allowed to enroll in any advanced classes available-most likely with a 504 plan that can include speech therapy and assistive devices for communication or sign language if needed...including an interpreter. This could be included in special ed (the accommodations) under the other health impaired or communication disability category, but being that they only need accommodations, a 504 plan would be appropriate. The parents can file a complaint with the government, but the government is generally unresponsive start by looking up the state Protection and Advocacy office also the state department of education . and the federal education office A child could have both a disability And be in the Gifted Program. The can still be in the GT program even if they have an IEP for a disability or a 504 plan.

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Just wondering - have you actually met and spent time with these children? It does seem very advanced for children this age to perform these tasks - who did the testing that provided the age levels? Needless to say it is highly unusual for two-year olds to perform at the same level as 7 year-olds - an overall second grade level?. Are they signing as fluently as a 4 year old who must rely on that communication method? There is no mention of their social skills and level of social maturity - that is a major consideration in recommending children with special needs for kindergarten. As 4 year old males with September birthdays - I would be very hesitant to send them to kindergarten even if there were no special needs. It just doesn't bode well no matter how academically advanced a child is - social maturity is the key factor here.Finally, there are rarely separate "Gifted" programs at the kindergarten level. The children most likely are receiving special education under the category or developmentally delayed or other health impaired as their vocal issues impacts on their abilty to access the general curriculum. They sound like excellent candidates for voice output assitive technology devices. That is something their parents should focus on to get them prepared to function in a kindergarten classroom.

JazzyGee

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