Weird boy, I asked, do you mean the
boy with Down syndrome?
What’s that? Allie replied.
Well he is special needs, like Boo,
I explained
Oh, is that why he has a teacher
just for him in the class? (Yup) That makes sense now. I thought there was
something different but couldn’t figure it out. Why didn’t they tell me so I
could help him?
This conversation floored me on many levels. First, Allie
has intuitively known that there is something special about Boo and has
accepted her without conditions. I automatically assumed that she would
recognize and accept it in another child. Second, Allie attends enough of Boo’s
therapy appointments to see other children like this boy. I was completely
astounded that she even had to ask, or worse in her mind label this boy as “weird”.
Allie has been a staunch defender of Boo. She would never
let one of her friends use that term with her sister, so why did she do it with
a boy she just met? Have I failed in some way in to prepare and nurture her to
accept all others like she does Boo?
Of course, I asked Allie! Not that specifically, but why she
did she not understand that this boy was special. She thought because he was so
big and not little like Boo he was just a boy. I asked
(just to make sure) that she hadn’t made fun of this boy. She was quick to say no,
but that she wished that the teacher had told her because the other boys in the
class did. Allie was so cute, telling me that she would make sure it didn’t
happen again! We had a long talk about Boo and how would Allie feel if one of
her classmates called Boo “weird”.
But it made me think, is inclusion working? Are the teachers
and other parents explaining to their children that not all children can run,
read, speak like others. Whose responsibility is it really? Mine, in some way because
while I can educate/prepare Allie and she can then teach her peers. But neither
Allie, her dad or I can go into Boo’s class and wake up the other children/parents.
I can only be responsible for the children who interact with Boo in my
presence.
Is it the teacher’s responsibility? Certainty, but how can
they do this without embarrassing (not the right word, but hopefully you get my
point!) the child in question. Allie thought the teacher should have let the
kids know.
I think the biggest obstacle is that the other parents are
not on the playground or in the classroom with their children. So they might
not even be aware, like me, that their child may be prejudging some one. Think about
it, if you do not have a special child would you think to educate your ‘typical’
child about a child with Downs, CP, and autism or like Boo one who is
undiagnosed? I will admit that before Boo I cannot honestly say I would have
said something to Allie until she asked/made a comment in my presence.
I think as children get older they may become more aware
(and yes, mean). But at Allie’s age it is just a sense of innocence where they
don’t really notice differences in others until the difference is glaringly
obvious.
Boo is in an integrated preschool with a not so equal ratio
of special/typical kiddos. Even there I notice that some parents look at us
askew when Boo is not participating like their ‘typical’ kid in the class. Once
a child asked their mom what was wrong with Boo and the mother, instead of
educating, told the child to ‘hush’.
So I don’t know what the answer is, if integration is worth
it or how to educate the world at large that Boo just has a different sense of
typical.
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