the network for radical unschooling families
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Permalink Reply by Victoria L Sweeney on January 18, 2010 at 6:54am
Permalink Reply by Carrie Labinski on January 18, 2010 at 11:15am Children with special needs do so well with structure! It's also helpful if it puts YOUR mind at ease. You have a huge job ahead of you and you need to do what is comfortable for both of you. So go ahead and do just what you are doing. Who knows- this may work for now, later on something else may sound better and you may want to switch to that. Later something else will pop up and you'll even want to change to that instead- it's okay. It's okay to change your mind several times! Enjoy each step, yet don't be afraid to change up each time you find something better. After all, we learn, things change, things improve, things get worse- in other words, life is constantly changing and we do well to adjust along the way, right?
I have a child with Landau-Kleffner Syndrome and two "typical" kids. They've been schooled and unschooled quite differently from one another and I've changed my methods along the way several times, each time changing according to what I thought was best for them at the time. Looking back, I have no regrets.
Permalink Reply by sarina on January 18, 2010 at 1:12pm
Permalink Reply by Meredith on January 18, 2010 at 5:43pm
Permalink Reply by Victoria L Sweeney on January 19, 2010 at 11:34am Hi Victoria,
Thank you for your email! I clicked on the first "Reply to This" and I hope this reply gets to you ok - I'm brand new to the Network. Maybe you could be so kind as to let me know that you got it so I know that I'm doing things correctly. :)
Your words were very encouraging! I don't know anyone else doing unschooling and raising a special needs child - thank you so much for your response. How long have you been unschooling your typical children? I've been unschooling my daughter for 1 year - she just turned seven. It's getting easier and easier I think.
Can you tell me what Landau-Kleffner Syndrome is? How old is your child with this syndrome? I've been learning more and more about other things out there that affect our children. I'm also seeing the blessings too! Look forward to hearing from you.
Victoria L Sweeney said:Children with special needs do so well with structure! It's also helpful if it puts YOUR mind at ease. You have a huge job ahead of you and you need to do what is comfortable for both of you. So go ahead and do just what you are doing. Who knows- this may work for now, later on something else may sound better and you may want to switch to that. Later something else will pop up and you'll even want to change to that instead- it's okay. It's okay to change your mind several times! Enjoy each step, yet don't be afraid to change up each time you find something better. After all, we learn, things change, things improve, things get worse- in other words, life is constantly changing and we do well to adjust along the way, right?
I have a child with Landau-Kleffner Syndrome and two "typical" kids. They've been schooled and unschooled quite differently from one another and I've changed my methods along the way several times, each time changing according to what I thought was best for them at the time. Looking back, I have no regrets.
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