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General Parenting
So helpless with my five years old
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<blockquote data-quote="nvts" data-source="post: 442539" data-attributes="member: 3814"><p>Wow! Your hands are full! With Aspergers going on in the family, you have a child already on the spectrum. There's a higher likelyhood that a sibling can also be that way as well. </p><p></p><p>He sounds like he's got a lot of sensory issues going on here. You need to get two things done: a neuropsychologist exam (or at least a developmental pediatrician to take a look at him!) and an occupational therapy evaluation. If sensory integration issues are really going on, the behavioral stuff will keep getting worse or at least stay the same. He can't handle all of the input.</p><p></p><p>IEP's are not only for academic reasons. You need to send a certified letter requesting testing and stating that you are NOT in agreement with removing the IEP. Behavioral issues can keep the IEP in place.</p><p></p><p>Take a look at Ross Greene's book "The Explosive Child". At the top of the Early Childhood forum, there's a sticky that helps you adapt it to smaller children.</p><p></p><p>Welcome to the group! Lots of strong shoulders here!</p><p></p><p>Beth</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nvts, post: 442539, member: 3814"] Wow! Your hands are full! With Aspergers going on in the family, you have a child already on the spectrum. There's a higher likelyhood that a sibling can also be that way as well. He sounds like he's got a lot of sensory issues going on here. You need to get two things done: a neuropsychologist exam (or at least a developmental pediatrician to take a look at him!) and an occupational therapy evaluation. If sensory integration issues are really going on, the behavioral stuff will keep getting worse or at least stay the same. He can't handle all of the input. IEP's are not only for academic reasons. You need to send a certified letter requesting testing and stating that you are NOT in agreement with removing the IEP. Behavioral issues can keep the IEP in place. Take a look at Ross Greene's book "The Explosive Child". At the top of the Early Childhood forum, there's a sticky that helps you adapt it to smaller children. Welcome to the group! Lots of strong shoulders here! Beth [/QUOTE]
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So helpless with my five years old
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