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Ideas for Helping Son with Hygiene
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<blockquote data-quote="BusynMember" data-source="post: 706788" data-attributes="member: 1550"><p>She sounds difficult herself lol.</p><p></p><p>There are good, medium, and lacking in every field. Check schools all over. Talk to the Special Education teachers. See who will work with you.</p><p></p><p>My advocate, who was important in our journey, knew the area and what schools to look at. I was not as aware as she, but of course as an area advocate she knew every single teacher in all the area schools. And she came with hub and me to all school meetings. Nobody tried to pull a fast one on us when she was sitting there. Haha. We sure got our IEPs with no trouble. Nobody wanted to mess with pur advocate although they were willing to mess woth us before we had her. Our advocate was an area mom with a child in a wheel chair with cerebral palsy and she didn't put up with anything.</p><p></p><p>She brought a school district to court and won. An advocate knows all the state laws and forces schools to comply. Or it's court and none want to go to court especially if they know they will lose. The advocates are in close touch with the Dept.bof Public Education in the state and they can do an investigation. But it has to be a public school.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BusynMember, post: 706788, member: 1550"] She sounds difficult herself lol. There are good, medium, and lacking in every field. Check schools all over. Talk to the Special Education teachers. See who will work with you. My advocate, who was important in our journey, knew the area and what schools to look at. I was not as aware as she, but of course as an area advocate she knew every single teacher in all the area schools. And she came with hub and me to all school meetings. Nobody tried to pull a fast one on us when she was sitting there. Haha. We sure got our IEPs with no trouble. Nobody wanted to mess with pur advocate although they were willing to mess woth us before we had her. Our advocate was an area mom with a child in a wheel chair with cerebral palsy and she didn't put up with anything. She brought a school district to court and won. An advocate knows all the state laws and forces schools to comply. Or it's court and none want to go to court especially if they know they will lose. The advocates are in close touch with the Dept.bof Public Education in the state and they can do an investigation. But it has to be a public school. [/QUOTE]
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