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Special Ed 101
more I read, more confused
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<blockquote data-quote="Big Bad Kitty" data-source="post: 47668" data-attributes="member: 3647"><p>I was just thinking.</p><p></p><p>My younger brother (a difficult child if there ever was one) ended up going to a school called Ombudsman. </p><p></p><p>I remember my mo going through all kinds of fights with the school over my brother, similar to what you are going through. Finally they plaved him in the Ombudsman school (not without her fighting for it though). </p><p></p><p>Ombudsman was a much smaller class with more teachers per student. They worked with the kids individual needs. But it wasn't one big Learning Disability (LD) calss. If a kid needed his skills taught orally instead of visually, that's what he got. If a kid did great on school work but freaked on tests, they worked around that.</p><p></p><p>I looked it up, the schools are still in business (<a href="http://www.ombudsman.com" target="_blank">www.ombudsman.com</a>). They are not in WI but there are some pretty far north in IL. </p><p></p><p>Just an alternative idea.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Big Bad Kitty, post: 47668, member: 3647"] I was just thinking. My younger brother (a difficult child if there ever was one) ended up going to a school called Ombudsman. I remember my mo going through all kinds of fights with the school over my brother, similar to what you are going through. Finally they plaved him in the Ombudsman school (not without her fighting for it though). Ombudsman was a much smaller class with more teachers per student. They worked with the kids individual needs. But it wasn't one big Learning Disability (LD) calss. If a kid needed his skills taught orally instead of visually, that's what he got. If a kid did great on school work but freaked on tests, they worked around that. I looked it up, the schools are still in business ([url]www.ombudsman.com[/url]). They are not in WI but there are some pretty far north in IL. Just an alternative idea. [/QUOTE]
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