Albuquerque Homeschooling
 
New Mexico Homsechoolers
abqhomeschool.com Information and support for New Mexico homeschoolers

 

Come make new friends at the all homeschoolers park day on Thursdays at 10 am.

We meet in Albuquerque every Thursday.
Park day location.
 

Educational catalogs
Curriculum suggestions
Parks and indoor play
 

Home Calendar Search Register Login
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Forum Login
Username: Create a new Account
Password:     Forgot Password

 Board Index    Homeschool discussion boards    Introductions  ›  homeschooling our disabled children
Users Browsing Forum
No Members and 1 Guests

 Pages: 1
Recommend Print
  Author    homeschooling our disabled children  (currently 584 views)
sacararose
Posted on: July 27th, 2004, 6:45pm Quote Report to Moderator
Guest User



I've had quite a few emails asking what our children's disablities are so I wrote a basic list down to help explain it.
Our daughter is 6 and she has complex partial seizures, as well as the starting of schizophrenia although at this point it is being called "psychosis NOS". She is sweet but is differnet that other kids and we pulled her out of school because of the terrible things other children were doing to her. I've wanted to homeschool for years so I was happy to school her in the safety of our home. The other problem was that instead of the 3 arteries that are in a normal umbilicord my daughter only had one which didn't allow for enough oxygen to flow through to her brain. Sensory integration issues and OCD.  This gives her problems that only time will allow us to deal with.

Our son is 4 and was born at 31 weeks with the cord wrapped 3 times around his neck. He was in distress so I was induced to have him. Severe Rh disease caused my son to need a full blood transfusion to save his life, unforuntately it also caused many problems for him. Hydrops fetalis (fetal hydrops) is rare I'm told but that made no differnce in the damage that was done to him. The excessive amounts of bilirubin in his blood lead to brain damage (kernicterus), resulting in various serious health problems, including hearing loss, mental retardation, and behavior problems. Luckly the hearing loss has been improved with tubes being placed every 18 months so that he is not deaf. Mental retardation seems to be called "developmental disabilities" more than anything else. His behavior problems can be very violent at times. He is very tall and large for his age which gives him the extra strength to bulldoze someone down. We have been taught to restrain him as needed which can be daily at times. Although watching it can be distressing to some people, I've learned that not restraining can be worse.
Hope this helps some. We love our children very much, and at least our life is never boring We also have our children in speech and OT therepies as well as seeing more doctors than you can shake a stick it.
Logged
e-mail
 Pages: 1
Recommend Print

Locked Board Board Index    Introductions  [ previous | next ] Switch to:

Forum Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post polls
You may not post attachments
HTML is off
Blah Code is on
Smilies are on

Powered by e-blah Platinum 8.3 © 2001-2005 - June 19th, 2013, 6:35am