T-Bird Anni Rides Again

January 28, 2009

interesting meeting

Filed under: Life

As it gets more evident that Aprilia is at least as dyslexic as me I’ve started thinking more about assessments and so on.  By chance I "spoke" to someone by e-mail who is involved in advocacy for parents trying to access services in Cheshire and she  put me onto the Parents Partnership.  I hmmmm-ed and harrrr-ed about going to the "forum" (sort of meeting-y type thing meets parent support group) but ended up going just to see what I could find out and meet up with people. Whilst it still looks like I’m on my own as far as funding the whole assessment process goes, it was still a good meeting for lots of reasons. 

the "Elective home education team" were there (on behalf of all of Cheshire’s home edders, hoping to get a bit of straight information about what home edders can and cannot access) and I spent a while talking to the lady who is "looking after" my area now.  She’s nice.  She doesn’t believe in all this nonsense about samples of work etc but she will admit to liking to put faces to names either by visits (or meeting on neutral ground) or by catching up with people at the home education forum meetings taht they run arround the area.  She’s very quick to point out what she is and isn’t allowed to do legally though and to frown on overbearing practices outside her area!  We had a long chat about accessing dyslexia resources and I informed her about free library audio book loans for dyslexics which she didn’t know about.

 I sat on a table with several mums of children with dyslexia (and other problems) non of whom knew about things like coloured overlays being available without waiting several milenia for the school to get off their butts to "test" the child (by test, read "spend 5 minutes trying the 10 different overlays easily available via Crossbow to see what colour seems to help)  It seemed odd to be considered almost "expert" on a condition although it wasn’t nice to ahve to say "I got lots of funding but it’s not available to school age children, you ahve to wait until they get to college, assuming they haven’t already given up on trying to learn by then" 

I spoke to someone who does some work with dyslexia and who may have access to some funding for listening skills for Aprilia (she has "dyslexic ears" - posh title is auditory processing disorder) which would be a damned good start as part of the reason she avoids noisy places is her inability to filter out noise and pick out speech.

And actually, it was just nice to be in a room full of (mainly) mums who know what having a child who struggles is like.  I went thinking that really having a child who "just" has dyslexia would make me seem like a whinger compared to some of the families there where they are coping with complex needs but it just didn’t happen.  It was almost like being in a home ed setting but without the children!

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