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Disabled Students Are Spanked More

August 11th, 2009

The Autism News | English

By SAM DILLON | The New York Times

More than 200,000 schoolchildren are paddled, spanked or subjected to other physical punishment each year, and disabled students get a disproportionate share of the treatment, according to a new study.

Most states prohibit corporal punishment in public schools, but 20 do not. The two watchdog groups that collaborated on the report, Human Rights Watch and the American Civil Liberties Union, are urging federal and state lawmakers to extend the ban nationwide and enact an immediate moratorium on physical punishment of students with disabilities.

“Corporal punishment is just not an effective method of punishment, especially for disabled children, who may not even understand why they’re being hit,” said Alice Farmer, who wrote the report.

The report, based on federal Department of Education data, said that of the 223,190 public school students nationwide who were paddled during the 2006-7 school year, at least 41,972, or about 19 percent, were students with disabilities, who make up 14 percent of all students.

As recently as the 1970s, only two states had laws banning corporal punishment, but 28 others have since passed similar legislation. Corporal punishment is still permitted in some form in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Wyoming.

The most recent state to enact a ban was Ohio, where Gov. Ted Strickland last month signed into law a measure including a such a prohibition.

In states that do not have bans, some school districts do. In Louisiana, about 56 districts allow corporal punishment, while about 14 prohibit it. Last month the Education Committee of the Louisiana Legislature voted 8 to 6 to reject a proposed ban.

Roy McCoy, principal of Beekman Junior High School in Bastrop, La., testified against the bill. Classroom discipline has been an increasing problem, Mr. McCoy told lawmakers. In an interview, he said paddling is no cure-all, “but when other means of correcting behavior have failed to produce the desired improvement, it could be a viable option.”

“My view is that this should be a decision made by each local school board,” Mr. McCoy said.

Among the cases cited in the report was that of a 6-year-old, first-grade boy with autism, who was paddled at his Mississippi elementary school. An assistant principal who the report described as weighing 300 pounds “picked up an inch-thick paddle and paddled him” on the buttocks, the report said.

“It just devastated him,” the report cited the boy’s grandmother as saying. “When a child with autism has something like that happen, they don’t forget it. It’s always fresh in their minds.”

Alan Richard, a former journalist who is the spokesman for the Southern Regional Education Board, said he once surveyed attitudes in Southern districts.

“One principal said, ‘I was whipped as a child, so it’s fine with me,’ ” Mr. Richard recalled. “Others said, ‘We don’t do that anymore.’ It varied by community.”

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/11/education/11punish.html

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3 sought in slaying of couple with 16 children

July 11th, 2009

The Autism News | English

Fla. authorities suspect home invasion; kids unharmed

By msnbc.com | news service reports

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

BEULAH, Fla. – Investigators were seeking three suspects in the home-invasion slayings of a couple with 16 children — 12 of them adopted, the Escambia County Sheriff’s Office said.

Byrd and Melanie Billings were found shot to death Thursday night in their bedroom at their home in Beulah, just west of Pensacola near the Alabama border.

Deputies found eight children in the home, ranging in age from 8 to 14, Sheriff David Morgan said Friday at a news conference. None were injured, and the couple’s other children were safe and accounted for, he said.

Twelve of the couple’s 16 children were adopted. The Billings married 18 years ago and each had two children from previous marriages. The couple then began adopting children with developmental disabilities and other problems.

The couple owned several local businesses, including a fiance company and a used car dealership, and had been featured in the Pensacola News Journal for their generosity taking in children with disabilities and from troubled backgrounds.

Authorities were searching for three men in a large red van seen leaving the home. No motive has been established.

“It would be pure speculation. We see many random acts of violence now. We just don’t know,” Morgan said.

Investigators went to the home after a 911 call from a woman who lives in an outlying building and who helps care for the children, Morgan said. The woman said she believed there were two people dead inside the house.

Morgan said one of the children inside the house called the woman, and she called 911.

The sheriff said the suspects had forced their way into the sprawling home through multiple entrances.

In a 2005 story in the News Journal, the couple said they wanted to share their wealth with children in need, but didn’t imagine their family would grow so large.

“It just happened,” Melanie Byrd told the newspaper. “I just wanted to give them a better life.”

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31852899/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/?gt1=43001

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Aged-out foster child faces possible homelessness

July 2nd, 2009

The Autism News | English

BY CAROL MARBIN MILLER | Miami Herald

For Selim Isimer’s next birthday, his parent — the state of Florida — plans to kick him out of the house.

Being shown the door on your 18th birthday would prove daunting for any foster kid. Twenty percent end up homeless without public assistance.

For Selim, it would be disastrous: He has autism and mental retardation.

He can’t read or write, and speaks like a preschooler.

For about a year, Selim has been raised by the Department of Children & Families, which has spent $6,000 each month for his care at a North Miami group home for disabled children.

Child welfare administrators were hoping another state department, the Agency for Persons With Disabilities, would pay Selim’s bills when he ”aged out” of foster care.

But disability administrators say their hands are tied: Selim is in the United States illegally. And they cannot spend taxpayer dollars to pay for his care.

Time runs out for Selim on July 11, his 18th birthday.

”He could get picked up by immigration at any moment,” said Michelle Abarca, one of his attorneys at the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center.

In a March report, the advocacy group called healthcare at immigration lockups “poor and sometimes appalling.”

”Imagine explaining that to a child like him,” Abarca added.

“It’s very disturbing.”

Though the details of Selim’s case may be unusual, his plight is not.

JUVENILE COURTS

Undocumented children — and the parents who bring them here — have become a common demographic in South Florida’s juvenile courts. So common, in fact, that child welfare administrators have contracted with immigration attorneys to work full time at the Miami Children’s Courthouse.

Administrators at DCF and Our Kids, which provides foster care services for the state in Miami, declined to discuss Selim’s case, citing confidentiality. Our Kids has been overseeing the boy’s case, and is paying his attorneys to represent the teen before immigration authorities.

DCF Secretary George Sheldon told The Miami Herald Thursday he planned to speak with his counterpart at APD, Jim DeBeaugrine, to find an alternative to rendering the teen homeless.

”Let me go out on a limb and say that will not happen,” Sheldon said. “This kid will not be without services on July 11.”

John Newton, APD’s general counsel, also declined to discuss Selim’s case, citing the confidentiality of agency records.

In general, Newton said, ”the agency has no discretion” under state law to spend tax dollars on migrants without legal residency.

JAIL OR PRISON

In cases involving disabled people with challenging behaviors, Newton said, the likelihood is they will wind up in jail or prison — and, ultimately, right back on APD’s doorstep.

”This is a sad situation,” Newton said.

“This sounds like an individual who will end up in the system one way or another — probably after a lot of misery in the criminal justice system. It’s a shame that services can’t be delivered sooner.”

About 6-foot-2, with dark hair and olive skin, Selim can be warm and affectionate one moment — but then explode in a temper tantrum the next. He has rudimentary math skills and has trouble writing or spelling his name. A source who knows the boy said he is moderately mentally retarded, and suffers from a severe emotional disturbance.

Selim’s parents brought him to Miami in August 2001 from Turkey, and overstayed their tourist visa. His father abandoned the family two years later, his immigration attorneys say.

In the spring of 2008, Selim’s mother took him to Miami Children’s Hospital for care — and then essentially left him there, said Aidil Oscariz, one of his attorneys.

The mother, Oscariz said, was overwhelmed by Selim’s medical needs and difficult behaviors.

At the end of April 2008, Selim was declared a dependent of the state and placed in foster care with Our Kids, the private, not-for-profit agency that last month renewed its $95 million annual contract with DCF. He now lives in a group home where he receives round-the-clock care, medication and therapy.

Selim’s attorneys say he has flourished at the group home, and, recently, Miami-Dade Circuit Judge George Sarduy signed an order saying the child’s ”best interests” would be served by granting him legal residency.

LEGAL STATUS

Attorneys at the advocacy center are asking an immigration judge to grant the youth legal resident status, but unless the petition is granted, Selim could be detained by immigration authorities — a risk that petrifies his attorneys and caregivers. He also could end up homeless.

”It would destroy him,” said the source familiar with the boy’s case. “It would, literally, be like putting a 2-year-old child in the middle of an intersection. He has no idea how to fend for himself. Whatever progress he’s made would completely crumble.”

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami-dade/story/1125524.html

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Swimming with the animals

June 30th, 2009

The Autism News | English


Lars Nelen kisses Gee Gee the dolphin as he swims with his therapist, Astrid Schrama, right, during morning therapy session at Curacao Dolphin Therapy and Research Center, May 1, 2009.

By Frances Robles | McClatchy Newspapers

WILLEMSTAD, Curacao — A 350-pound dolphin named Matteo tickles a toddler with his snout, sparking a burst of giggles. The disabled child hitches a ride on Matteo’s belly while gleeful parents snap photos. The dolphin expels water through its blowhole and rests its head gently on the girl’s shoulder while her parents silently plead for results.

It’s a scene Kirsten “Kiki” Kuhnert has watched thousands of times. She used to be one of those moms who prayed for miracles at the side of a dolphin therapy center pool, thinking: Maybe this will make my child talk. Maybe someday he’ll walk.

“I have seen kids speak their first word, mothers cry because their autistic son looked at her in the eye or kissed her,” Kuhnert said. “Every day a little miracle.

“How big a miracle is in the eye of the beholder.”

Kuhnert, a single mom from Key Biscayne, Fla., has dedicated the past 15 years of her life to raising funds for dolphin-assisted therapy, a controversial behavior-modification treatment for severely disabled children. Struck by tragedy as a young mother of a 2-year-old, the Germany native turned her heartbreak into a calling.

Convinced that swimming with the animals paired with intensive speech or physical therapy helps with autism, Down syndrome, cerebral palsy and other debilitating ailments, Kuhnert spends her days snapping orders at therapists and trouble-shooting emergencies at a therapy center at the Seaquarium in Willemstad, Curacao. She makes phone call after phone call raising money to get children to treatment, at $7,000 or more for just two weeks of care.

But, these days, she is hardly ever by the pool, rarely with the children. The memories of the son she lost sting too much.

A mom’s mission

It was June 18, 1994. Kuhnert was the married mother of two kids from an upper-class family in Germany who made her living in sports event marketing.

That June day, the family had gathered at the country club to celebrate her infant daughter Kira’s christening, when suddenly they realized they had lost sight of Tim, Kuhnert’s 2-year-old.

“We looked for 15 minutes,” she remembers. “He was 15 yards away behind a hedge, in an unsecured swimming pool. This is where they found him. He was lifeless.”

Tim suffered brain damage that left him in a coma and with cerebral palsy. Kuhnert became obsessed, she says — the type of mom who would “fly to a rain forest and dance” to make their kids well.

She traveled to hospitals around the globe, fought with neurologists, lost her marriage.

In 1995, Kuhnert flew from Germany to the Keys, where her little boy swam with dolphins at a facility that has since closed. After four days of being put in the water with a dolphin — following 16 months in a coma — Tim woke up.

“I was so happy. I thought every kid that has a problem should be able to do this,” she said. “I thought, ‘Somebody should set up something like a foundation.’ “

That’s what Kuhnert did.

“She was so excited about it, she started kind of a crusade to help kids come,” said David Nathanson, a South Dade, Fla., psychologist who is considered the founder of dolphin-assisted therapy. “She’s very dedicated and passionate. I would call her semi-eccentric — in a good way.”

Nathanson ran a company called Dolphin Human Therapy in a variety of locations from Miami Seaquarium to Key Largo and Mexico from 1995 until 2006. In that time, he said, Kuhnert held raffles, organized dinners and made countless calls to send at least 1,000 children to therapy. She’d get airlines to donate tickets and corporations to write checks.

South Florida

Kuhnert was so dedicated that 10 years ago she packed up and moved to South Florida, so her son could be closer to the dolphins she credits for bringing him out of a coma.

Tim remained severely disabled for the rest of his life, communicating by the roll of an eye. He died suddenly last year at 17.

“He was the funniest, most charming person in the world,” his mother said. “He was an angel the day he was born.”

Despite her loss, Kuhnert continues on her quest to find funding for other families to visit the Curacao center.

Kuhnert helped create the program at the Curacao Dolphin Therapy & Research Center, an interdisciplinary treatment center on the grounds of the Sea Aquarium in Willemstad.

The owner pays her a consulting fee to supervise speech and physical therapists and she uses the rest of her time to raise money for her charity, Dolphin Aid, which provides grants for people, largely Europeans, to come.

“She is an inspiring, very driven individual,” said owner Adriaan “Dutch” Schrier. “I am a son of a Presbyterian Dutch farmer — I don’t believe in hocus pocus or so-called miracles. But what I’ve witnessed here …”

Among the perceived miracles is the case of Daniuq Kuypers, a 12-year-old who did not speak until after swimming with dolphins in Curacao at the age of 10.

“The only thing I can tell you is that I came here with a daughter who did not speak and flew back to Holland, and she spoke,” said Daniuq’s father, Hans Kuypers, a Dutch homicide detective. “For 10 years, I had no contact with my daughter. Now she can say why she wants to cry or has pain.

“I can’t be sure if it was the dolphin that caused it, and I don’t care.”

Kuhnert admits she’s not exactly a trained expert.

“I didn’t know what I was doing. I was just a mom trying to do the right thing,” she said.

The therapy has been the target of criticism largely from animal rights groups, which consider it dangerous to humans and unfair to dolphins.

“Because of the lack of scientific study, there are two vulnerable groups being exploited: dolphins and children and parents seeking a miracle under expensive circumstances,” said Courtney Vail, director of the Caribbean program for the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society. “There is such an affinity for these animals, it’s easy to believe. But if you are going to claim it has a medical benefit, you have to validate it.”

Expert view

Janelle Nimer, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Tennessee who researched dolphin therapy for her three-year fellowship in veterinary medicine, says experts are not sure why the therapy shows results, but they believe it could have to do with the sonar the animals emit under water.

She tried it herself in Mexico and felt a “high-like” feeling for two weeks. The research, Nimer said, shows children show improvements compared to traditional therapy alone.

“All animal therapy is controversial, because it hasn’t been researched as it should have been,” she said. “People are afraid dolphins are being mistreated. You have exotic animals and parents of autistic kids who are willing to try anything.”

Those who support the therapy say one only needs to see the benefits to believe.

“Therapy without the dolphin does not work. The dolphin without the therapy does not work,” said Marco Stork, an Amsterdam newspaper ad salesman with two autistic sons. “They work together.”

His son Damian, 8, had been in speech therapy for three years, and only started speaking after that work was combined with two weeks of two-hour-a-day swims with dolphins.

“His first word was ’spelen’ — play,” said Stork, who speaks Dutch. “Something he could never have said, he said after three days here. Every day we saw a little bit more, a little more.”

Source: http://www.kansas.com/wichitalk/story/873150.html

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An 8-year-old tells the world: “Bullying, no way!

June 23rd, 2009

The Autism News | English

By Liz Massey | Today’s THV

In Today’s Living, an eight-year-old in Florida is taking a stand against bullies.

This summer, Jaylen Arnold is on an anti-bullying mission and he is using his Tourette’s Syndrome to teach tolerance.

It takes Jaylen a while to type an e-mail. He is often interrupted by uncontrollable ticking.

Jaylen says, “It makes you do all different things you can’t control… your brain does.”

He has Tourette’s Syndrome, a neurological disorder. Many other kids don’t understand.

Jaylen’s mother Robin says, “The people who have Tourette’s Syndrome are just ticking and regular people are looking. I just want the regular people to know that they can’t control it and not to make fun of them”

Diagnosed at age 3, he’s gotten used to the laughing, odd looks and mimicking.

“They bully because they’re not aware. They don’t know what it is. It’s something different and no one likes something different,” says Jaylen.

Jaylen doesn’t let bullies bring him down. Its advice his dad taught him early on. “Speak-up for yourself, defend yourself, don’t just take it,” he adds.

This summer break, he’s using the internet to launch an anti-bullying campaign, called “jaylen’s challenge”.

Howard Arnold, Jaylen’s father, “I’m proud of the young man he’s turning into.”

With help from adults, he created a web site. “Jaylen drew his own logo. Jaylen prepared everything,” says Robin.

There are message boards, facts about Tourette’s, even this video.

His mother taped him ticking, to show others how severe the condition can be.

Since his web site launched last month, an average of 5,000 people visit it, each day.

“It it’s changed one person… It was worth it for him,” says Howard.

He personally responds to every e-mail. And when not online, he raises awareness with these yellow and blue bracelets.

“I gave them away at school,” says Jaylen.

Jaylen hopes to one day to see his “bullying no way!” bracelets around the wrists of famous folks. “The Presidents, uh… Oprah”

He’s aiming high.

While he can’t always control his body, he hopes he can help people think twice, before they making fun of someone else.

To check out Jaylen’s website, click the link to the right.

Bullying is a problem that’s been around for generations and generations.

In today’s unscientific poll on todaysthv.com, 49 percent of people said they were the victim of bullying when they were children.

Jalen’s website: http://www.jaylenschallenge.com

Source: http://www.todaysthv.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=86964&catid=2

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Tech tools helping moms stay sane, in sync

June 1st, 2009

The Autism News | English

By BRIDGET CAREY | McClatchy Newspapers

What’s for dinner tonight? Check your recipe iPhone app and your electronic shopping list.

Free for a play date next week? Sync your kids’ schedules on Google calendar.

Looking for ideas on potty training? Sign on to a virtual community and see how other moms handle it.

While previous generations of mothers handled all these tasks in chats in the car-pool lanes and playgrounds, through books and magazines, now you find them juggling it all with smartphones.

Modern moms have embraced the communications revolution to make parenting easier and richer, said Maria Bailey, whose Pompano Beach, Fla.-based BSM Media specializes in marketing to moms. She calls it Mom3.0, the title of her new book on the trend.

Dads can be just as savvy with social media. But online moms are rapidly becoming one of marketers’ most coveted target groups for their interactivity — and their influence on each other. Moms make most of the spending decisions for the family — and studies show that moms are more likely to buy a product or visit a destination if another mom recommends it.

Stefani Newman, 32, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., is a telling example.

She rolls out of bed, checks her e-mail on her iPhone, then gets her two girls — 4-year-old Natalie and 6-year-old Nissa — ready for school.

Phone alarms remind her of a playdate that afternoon. Her iPhone calendar syncs with her Google calendar and her husband’s calendar. The digital notepad is her daily shopping and to-do list. She said she was always a pen-and-paper person, but her iPhone is more convenient.

Newman has also downloaded a few iPhone applications for her kids to use when they get bored, like math, Scrabble, Bloggle or popping virtual bubblewrap. While her daughters are at school, she’s blogging at TeensyGreen.com on eco-friendly parenting.

And, of course, she’s on Twitter, too.

“The moms that I’ve met on it are incredible,” she said.

Not every mom is wired the same. Generation X and Y moms have embraced social networking. Grandparents jumped online to keep in touch with grandkids. Boomer moms, busy blazing the trail of work and family balance, have been the slowest to adapt.

“The younger generation is all about customizing motherhood. They are customizing everything from teddy bears to TiVo,” Bailey said. “They can be NoDramaMomma online or YogaMom or whatever they want their identity to be.”

POWER OF PLUGGING IN

Nielsen Online research shows that moms age 25 to 45 are nearly twice as likely as the average Web user to give frequent advice on parenting, household products and beauty. And these online moms are nearly 25 percent more likely than the average person to write a blog.

Bailey estimates that there are 26 million mom bloggers. Many started blogging to socialize and share, overcome isolation or chronicle their pregnancy for their children.

Moms don’t just Google a question. They post it to their networks on Twitter, Facebook, a blog or a local Web site, and within minutes, moms from all over the world are responding.

A couple of recent events show the power of such influence on products:

- On April 22, Apple pulled an iPhone app called “Baby Shaker” in response to outraged moms and child-welfare advocates. The game featured a crying baby on the screen. If you shook the phone hard enough, red X’s appeared over the baby’s eyes. (Shaking a real baby can cause brain damage.)

- Motrin got a big headache last year when moms flocked to the Internet to protest an ad showing a mom complaining of neck and shoulder pain from “wearing” her baby in a pouch. Motrin’s makers, Johnson & Johnson, pulled the ad and apologized.

But moms come together, too, to share triumphs and losses that maybe only parents can really understand. Like the tragic story last month of Heather Spohr.

The Los Angeles mom blogger had been writing about her 17-month-old daughter, Maddie, since before she was born. She had also become active on Twitter, with thousands of followers.

When Maddie suddenly got sick, then died, the story played out live on the Internet.

Within two days, moms from all over were turning their Twitter page backgrounds purple in honor of Maddie, releasing balloons in her memory and raising $21,000 – which has since grown to $35,000 – for the March of Dimes.

That kind of bond, which transcends geography, is what draws many moms to online networks.

COMFORTING ADVICE

Lolli-Renee McLeroy, 41, a Hollywood, Fla., mother of two, said her wired life started when she found DiaperPin.com and began chatting on the forums.

“I used to go there and just lurk because it felt like I was getting some kind of adult conversation in my day,” she said.

“I made friends that I still talk to six years later.”

Now McLeroy blogs about her 5-year-old daughter’s autism therapy on MomsMiami.com and networks with other local moms on all sorts of topics.

“Before I had my daughter, I really wasn’t very techy. After I became a stay-at-home mom, it became my lifeline,” she said.

Networks helped her through pregnancy. And when she wasn’t sure if she was going into labor, she asked her network. Within 10 minutes, she got six other moms telling her yes, it was time to go to the hospital. And when her child had a fever in the middle of the night, within five minutes other moms gave her guidance.

“At 2 o’clock in the morning, there’s nothing better than another mom saying that it’s OK.”

Source: http://www.sacbee.com/848/story/1907629.html

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Teen Teaches ADD/ADHD & Autistic Kids Through Natural Horsemanship

May 31st, 2009

The Autism News | English

By Huliq News

Danielle Herb is a 15 year old Florida based teen CEO who owns a company called Drop Your Reins. Her self-branded training program shares the same name. Drop Your Reins teaches ADD/ADHD and Autistic kids self-calming techniques and how to overcome their fears through the use of equine assisted training, natural healing techniques and Natural Horsemanship.

Drop Your Reins is a revolutionary company geared towards helping parents to transition their ADD/ADHD and Autistic kids off of prescription medication.

Danielle Herb, a 15 year old teen entrepreneur developed program with the help of her mom Marianne St. Clair. They co-teach the program and assist parents with everything from diet & nutrition, understanding things in their environment that cause allergic reactions and self-calming techniques they can teach their children to do at home on their own.

Source: http://www.huliq.com/0/81607/teen-teaches-addadhd-autistic-kids-through-natural-horsemanship

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Parents Defend Teacher Accused of Abusing Autistic Student

March 25th, 2009

The Autism News | English


by Roger Weeder

JACKSONVILLE, FL — A Kernan Trail Elementary teacher accused of abusing an autistic child in her classroom has parents speaking out in support of Rhona Silver.

Silver was arrested last week, charged with child abuse. Police say the 30-year classroom teacher restrained a child, with his pants down, for three consecutive school days in a Rifton Chair. The chair is a toilet chair with restraints.

Tanya Tsoutsos is one parent who voiced her support for Silver. She says her daughter was in Silver’s class at Kernan Trail.

“She’s a sweet lady,” said Tsoutsos.

“She’s good with kids, she loves the kids, kids love her. She’s personable, she comes to kids’ birthday parties and special events we have.”

In police reports, a teacher’s aid and a student teacher in Silver’s classroom said they witnessed what they called abuse.

Silver was removed from the classroom last October. She remains employed by the district in a non-teaching position while the investigation continues.

Source: http://www.firstcoastnews.com/news/l…134551&catid=3

Previous news on the subject: http://www.helpcd.com/forum/showthread.php?t=451

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Parents push for changing how disabled are taught

March 23rd, 2009

The Autism News | English


By Tiffany Lankes
Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Florida parents are pushing for a law that could dramatically change how teachers treat students with disabilities, banning techniques such as secluding children in isolated rooms, strapping them into chairs and spraying them with liquids.

The bill would require school districts to train teachers non-physical strategies for working with special needs students. It also would require teachers to file reports and notify a child’s parents when restraints are used in emergency situations.

If the bill is passed, Florida would have one of the toughest laws in the country for regulating the treatment of the state’s 376,000 students – about 14 percent – who qualify for special education.

“What we’re talking about here is creating safety for teachers and children ,” said Sylvia Smith, with Florida’s Advocacy Center for Persons with Disabilities.

A similar proposal died last year after critics said it was vague and could restrict teachers too much. And this time around, the state is dealing with a severe budget shortage, also putting the future of the bill in doubt.

“Anything that is going to have a fiscal impact in this kind of year is going to be a problem,” said Sen. Nancy Detert, R-Venice, chairwoman of the Senate Education Committee.

But supporters are pinning their hopes on a growing advocacy movement among parents, who say techniques referenced in the bill are dangerous. The movement gained steam after a former Venice Elementary teacher was found not guilty of abusing her profoundly disabled students, even after admitting to hitting them in the head with objects and strapping them in chairs to control their movement.

“There’s just been too much going on,” said Sharon Boyd, a Charlotte County parent who has been at the forefront of the push for the legislation. “We’re done with it.”

Hundreds of supporters plan to rally for the bill in Tallahassee on Developmental

Disabilities Awareness Day on Tuesday.

Florida’s Department of Education has been trying for more than a year to implement its own rules, but each time it has brought a proposal to the table parents and advocates have said it is not strict enough.

Some of the techniques banned in the bill may seem surprising to people unfamiliar with special education classrooms, where teachers sometimes use unconventional strategies to teach students with extreme learning challenges and to control their behavior.

But the state does not have any policies or laws regulating what techniques teachers can use, even though there are rules for people who work with the disabled in health care settings.

The state allows school districts to decide, but most do not have specific written guidelines.

Parents and advocates say properly trained teachers can manage behavior without getting physical.

There is no way to know how widespread the use of restraints is in Florida classrooms.

Most school districts do not require teachers to record instances, or report them to anyone – including parents.

Some parents say they have no idea their children are being restrained until they come home with injuries.

“No one knows what goes on behind those doors,” said Boyd, whose 9-year-old son has autism.

Even educators debate the legitimacy of restraints.

Administrators in Sarasota County say they do not allow teachers to use most of the techniques that would be outlawed in the bill.

“When I review the bill I didn’t see it as an additional burden,” said Sonia Figaredo-Alberts, who oversees Sarasota’s special education services.

The Florida Education Association has not taken a position on the bill, but spokesman Mark Pudlow said the organization has a lot of concerns .

The bill has not yet been scheduled for a hearing before either of the Legislature’s education committees, but Detert said her staff is conducting an analysis of its costs and its impact.

Advocates say that school districts already spend money on training and could redirect their resources.

They also say if teachers are using the correct techniques the need to use physical restraints, and file the accompanying paperwork, will be rare.

Source: http://www.gainesville.com/article/2…ed-are-taught-

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Teacher Charged with Abusing Autistic Elementary Student

March 20th, 2009

The Autism News | English


Rhona Silver

By: Ryan Duffy

JACKSONVILLE, FL — A Duval County school teacher has been arrested on charges of abuse against an autistic elementary student.

55-year-old Rhona Silver was a teacher at Kernan Trail Elementary and was arrested Tuesday.

Police say last September she forced one student to sit on a “self contained toilet chair” in restraints with his pants down for the entire school day and only a short break for lunch.

And police say this continued for three to four days

Two teachers aids and an intern were also in the class of six autistic children at the time and told police Silver was the one that put the child in the chair.

“We take these things very seriously which is why when we immediately heard about the incident we removed her from the classroom while we did our investigation. So the school system takes this very seriously any sort of misuse of equipment,” says Jill Johnson with Duval County Schools.

Silver was kept out of the classroom from the time the abuse was reported last year until her arrest.

The district does use the “Rifton Chairs” as they’re called, but they are not supposed to be used as punishment.

Thursday parents picking up their children at Kernan Trail were stunned to hear one of the teachers had been arrested.

“Excellent school, both my kids go here, excellent school, never had any complaints and just very shocking to hear that,” says parent Melissa Matthews.

Silver is a 30 year veteran teacher in Duval County Schools, she was both arrested and released on bail Tuesday.

Source: http://www.firstcoastnews.com/news/l…134174&catid=3

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