My letter to the principle

May 25th, 2008

Dear Mrs. Cully,

My name is Gina Minks. I am a Florida native, although I now reside in New England. I am a product of Florida public schools in Okaloosa county. My Undergrad degree in Information Studies in from Florida State University, and I am currently pursuing a Master’s Degree in Instructional Systems from the Educational Psychology and Learning Systems Department at FSU. Currently I work as a Senior Technical Education Specialist at a global information company.

However, my most important role is as the mother of two children. My children also started their educational careers in the public school systems of Florida. One of those children was diagnosed as having Asperger’s Syndrome four years ago, right before she headed off to college.

I am writing to express my shock concerning a story that is circulating about one of your kindergarten teachers,  Wendy Portillo. From what I can gather from the stories, she used a student’s constant trips to the office as a way to enhance a classroom lesson on tallying. She had the boy stand at the front of the class, and had each student vote on whether the child should be allowed to return to class. Once the class voted him off for being annoying and disgusting, she had the boy figure out where he should spend the rest of his day, since “no one in the office liked him either” and he could not go home since his mom was at work.

As an educator,  I cannot fathom ever treating a student in this fashion. In fact, I would lose my job if I were to try this sort of instructional method with an adult. Apparently the boy’s behavior was disruptive enough to merit you recommending that he be tested for an ASD. I applaud you for sending this boy to testing so early, I would have given anything if my daughter had been diagnosed at that age.

Unfortunately, my daughter had to endure 12 years of taunting and teasing before we figured out why she was different. That bullying never came at the hands of the teachers, however. The teachers my daughter had always tried different ways to reach my daughter, and were receptive to trying different methods I found as we narrowed in on the cause for her different ways of behaving and thinking.

As a parent, I am just floored and speechless over the methods of this teacher. I cannot imagine what I would have done if either of my children had been treated in that manner, or if they had been instructed to participate in this type of group project. I fear your staff member has not only made an irreparable mark on the student who was “voted off the classroom”, but also has made lasting marks on the peers of this boy.

Please act immediately to repair the damage that has been done. I can’t imagine that a woman who teaches five-year-olds could have initiated this activity because she hates children. I believe she probably thought at the time that this was a good learning lesson. As a mom, I strongly suggest that your team gets training on what autism is, how it presents in children, the different ways that girls present, and what are the best ways of engaging these children in the classroom. The methods this teacher used had the opposite effect of what I believe the teacher was intending.

Please do the right thing by this boy and all of the other different minded children in your school. Please make sure your teachers understand that this sort of lesson is completely inappropriate for any child. Please use this as a teaching moment for the children in that class, so that they can learn about bullying and the effects it has on other people.

Sincerely,

Gina Minks
http://www.ginaminks.com

The case of the very, very bad teacher

May 24th, 2008

Bev at Asperger’s Square 8 posted this story about a 5-year-old (that would make him a kindergartener I think..) who was voted out of the class by his peers.

Seems he got sent to the office for being disruptive. Once the boy came back to cliass the teacher, Wendy Portillo, asked the other students if they were ready for him to return. She had the little boy stand in the front of the class, and one by one the other kids told him what they thought of him. They called him “disgusting” and annoying”. Then they voted whether or not he should get to stay in class. They voted him off the classroom, and the boy spent the rest of the day in the nurse’s office.

She claims she did this because the class was learning about tallying (WORST.SCAFFOLDING.EVER!!).

Oh, did I tell you that the boy is being evaluated for an autism spectrum disorder? The same one my daughter has?

The Autistic Self Advocacy Network has the list of who (and how) you can contact to voice your shock and disgust about this issue. Details here. I’ll write one and post it later. I am too upset and angry to do anything respectful at the moment.

If Alex’s family happens to read this: I am a Florida native (now living in New England). I know how bad the schools are for kids on the spectrum, but we didn’t experience anything horrible until middle school. Please love your baby and let him know he IS special, and no one is ever allowed to tell him any differently.

MEH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Ridin’ Qwerty

May 22nd, 2008

kitty
more cat pictures

kiss kiss

May 18th, 2008

kiss kiss

Originally uploaded by gminks


I love this picture of us. :)

Brianna’s Graduation

May 18th, 2008

Brianna is an official college graduate. I have the pictures to prove it!

Brianna walking!

People should learn to use email

May 17th, 2008

This story is via Asperger Square 8

So, some guy in Canada decides to “run for autism”. He invites some autistic folks, who politely decline. Mostly because the guy publicly spoke about how autism is a terrible burden and we must find a cure!!

The autistic folks explained they couldn’t support his run because of those statements, and what response do they get?

“Haha oh sh*t” (sent from a Blackberry).

That kids needs to learn how to use email. He obviously meant to forward that message, not reply to it. But it shows how much he knows about autism, and also how much he really cares about this cause.

This seems to be the kid’s media contact:

Alex Bittner at: alex.bittner@runthedream.ca, 888-507-5885 ext. 4

Here is the main website: Run the Dream

Here is his blog 

There is a facebook group

We’re in Albany

May 17th, 2008

Today is pretty nice, hopefully at least for the first part of the day tomorrow it will be nice. Brianna is being very aspie about the change - but she’s aware of it, and we’re aware of it, so we’re all trying to deal.

It’s the first time my mom has really seen how it is, so we had to explain to her that it will be ok.

Today we are going shopping. Oh joy.

I’m officially on vacation

May 14th, 2008

We are not going anyplace exotic — I mean I personally don’t consider Albany NY exotic. But I’m off for a week and a half, we’re going to see Brianna graduate. It should be nice. :)

Cure autism?

May 11th, 2008

So I am watching Vh1’s Rock the 80s hour - a commercial comes on about VH1’s autism campaign.  People need to really start thinking CRITICALLY about what these cure autism campaigns are telling you:

  •  All of a sudden all of these kids are being diagnosed
  •  No one knows where it comes from
  •  THERE IS NO CURE

So, does that mean perhaps in previous generations, autistic kids were misdiagnosed with something else? Do the kids grow out of it? Is it possible autism is genetic? Is it possible there is no cure because it’s a different way of being?

The site is actually better than the commercial - which is very horrible. We need to stop thinking in terms of a cure, and start thinking in terms of education about differences. We need the full spectrum of people in order to have a fully functioning society.

Velvie

May 7th, 2008



050708_20121.jpg

Originally uploaded by gminks


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