Some Thoughts on a Very Very Very Bad Idea
I was going to take this week off from posting, but here I am, drawn out once again by the world’s inexplicable desire to humiliate children with disabilities. When news stories come out detailing the mistreatment of special needs kids, I tend to think that the best thing we can do is shine a light on them, to try to force change through awareness. I’m not always sure that actually works, though; when you turn on the lights, the roaches scatter and run under the fridge, but they don’t actually go away. Maybe I’m just helping give the roaches a little exercise.
The basics of the story are pretty straightforward, even as it sounds like something from The Onion. An eight-year-old blind student at a Kansas City elementary school was punished for bad behavior by having his white cane taken away and replaced, and I’m not even kidding here, with a pool noodle. These basic facts aren’t in dispute; a spokesperson for the school district confirmed the confiscation of the white cane, which she said was school property that was given to the boy when he enrolled. She said the white cane was taken from him after he hit another student with it, in order to prevent him from hurting himself or another student. She did not confirm that she and her school are actually located in the year 2014, but I’m assuming as much, despite the evidence to the contrary.
A pool noodle. Take a moment and imagine an eight-year-old blind child trying to navigate the world with a pool noodle.
This is why disability advocacy, particularly as a parent, can feel like a constant two steps forward, one step back affair. If you’re lucky.
So what should a teacher do in a situation like this? It’s the path you take to get there that matters, and it matters a very great deal. As an educator or caretaker, you have to begin with a simple question. If you have a student with a disability who requires disciplinary action and you’re mulling over the possibilities, is the punishment you’re considering consistent with that which a non-disabled student would appropriately receive?
If you’re considering a disciplinary action that depends on exacerbating the effects and obstacles of the student’s disability, that’s your red flag. That’s where you need to stop and seriously rethink your approach. If the student has an IEP or a 504 that even mentions the assistive piece you’re considering messing with, you’d be smart to contact your school district’s attorney. And perhaps update your resume.
A kid without a disability who hits another student isn’t strapped into a straightjacket. A child who runs in the hall isn’t punished by being tied up in a chair. And a kid who speaks out of turn in class or is disruptive shouldn’t expect to be gagged or to have a big piece of duct tape slapped across his mouth.
When Schuyler was just beginning to use an AAC speech device, way back in our Austin days, she had a summer school teacher who found the sound of Schuyler’s device to be distracting. So, after consulting with and receiving instructions from a member of the special education team (let THAT soak in for a moment), she simply turned the voice output off when Schuyler was in her classroom. She muted Schuyler. And as awful as that hopefully sounds to you, it is one of the most common complaints from parents of kids who use this technology. Teachers treat it like an optional item, one that can be taken away if the teacher is uncomfortable with it or as a way to punish a kid.
Should kids with disabilities face consequences for their actions? Of course they should. But that punishment must treat the student as a whole person, and the entirety of that person includes the medical and technological devices that are a necessary part of their lives. If Schuyler were to speak out in class or start dropping F-bombs with her iPad (and given her parentage, I’d say the chances of that happening one day are at least even), she should be punished, but in the same way any kid who speaks out in class would be.
It’s not just about fairness, although fairness is very much a part of it. It’s also about being empowered. I’ve spoken to parents and even speech language professionals who refuse to let their kids program curse words into their speech devices. But the key to avoiding inappropriate language or behavior isn’t to remove those options, any more than you’d give your child brain surgery to limit their vocabulary. It’s about ownership, not just of the medical devices but of the capabilities that they unlock.
Part of learning how to live with adaptive devices like AAC or wheelchairs or a white cane is finding the appropriate manner in which to use them. Young people using adaptive technology are learning how to use these accommodations to become the complete persons they’ve got the potential to be. The tools they use for access and mobility and communication aren’t luxuries. They’re not gifts that can be taken away.
You don’t teach non-disabled kids how to function appropriately in the world by limiting their abilities. I cannot imagine why you’d do so with kids with disabilities.
And the pool noodle? Now someone’s just being a dick.
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Amen! Eloquent. Nothing more to say…
Well written.
Unfortunately I hear stories which make me gasp very regularly. Last week a parent told me that their son’s class teacher had told all the children in the class to cover their ears while she shouted at their son. That is terrible enough for a ‘neurotypical’ child but this one has severe autism 🙁
Another school where a child’s walker can’t fit through a door into the classroom, school’s who still say they can’t allow a young child to use their electric wheelchair in school because of health and safety.
The list is endless 🙁
Hi, This has been shared to the Facebook page of National Organization of Parents of Blind Children, which is a division of the National Federation of the Blind. I am on the board of the NOPBC and the mother of two blind sons and one sighted son. Thank you for every thought-filled and empathetic word you have written. It does not require personal experience with a white cane to understand that a blind child should not be disciplined or punished in this manner. I have one very important request to ask of you. Please add the word “white” before every instance of “cane” in your blog. The word “white” is what differentiates the white cane used for autonomous white cane travel (commonly called orientation and mobility) by a blind individual, from the cane used by an individual needing a cane for physical support. If you want to know more about white cane use please visit nfb.org. We are the experts. smile. Thank you so very much, Jennifer
I can absolutely do that. Thanks for pointing it out!
Yay!
My thought is as a mother, thinking of how I would approach the situation. I have a child with a disability and would have most certainly taken the cane away. He was not using it the way it was intended anyway. Yes, after some time return the cane but he has to lose it to feel the effect of the consequence and I think that consequence is the one that makes sense here. ( I do agree the pool noodle is ridiculous however) Now, if he were expected to go walking he should need all the equipment necessary to make that possible. As an alternative consequence, maybe move him to an area that does not provide the opportunity for him to whack anyone else. That is only fair to the other students trying to learn.
The problem was that they didn’t just take it away for the duration of the bus ride, which would have been appropriate, they sent him home without it. They said he couldn’t have it back for two weeks and would have to somehow get around with a floppy pool noodle. That is the cruel and unjust part of this story.
Anne, if your seeing child hits an other child with his hand, do you take his hand away?
I had a teacher who found the communication books the students used looked messy on their desk so she put it across the room so the kids would have to get up and walk across the room if they could and get the book to respond to questions asked in calendar. How stupid.
What did the other kid do that made the blind kid want to hit him? Why do people assume the kid with the disability is the only cause of the problem.
That’s what I was wondering! What if the other kid had been picking on him, and he was defending himself as best he could? Unfortunately, I’ve had enough experience with school buses and mean kids to think of lots of ways for bullies to aggravate a blind child to fury.
Yes, he DOES need to learn not to hit people with his cane, but if he was being provoked, the kid who was harassing him should have been punished, too.
If he was the aggressor, I can see taking the cane from him for the length of the bus ride, because he wouldn’t need until it was time to get off the bus. All other factors aside, a two week punishment is developmentally inappropriate for an eight-year-old.
A parent of a child using a speech generating device phoned one day to tell me how pleased she was that her daughter was given after-school detention for talking too much in class. She was so happy that her daughter was chatting using her device and the punishment was as any other child would receive. So there are some good stories too, and great teachers out there. Consequences can be tricky though.
I read this story thinking no one could think this was right, but sadly know that this happens to lots of disabled people. My daughter is blind and a white long can user, as a child with no sight unfortunately as she learns she is bound to bump or tap people with her white cane. People do make comments like does she really need that! Some people are so kind and generous but others have no tolerance or understanding.
Love your post. I am an O&M instructor and when I saw this story my first thought was similar to yours, don’t take his cane away – give him lunch detention or whatever the standard punishment is for kids who misbehave in this way. Hopefully the O&M instructor for that school (I’m assuming the person who put the white cane on the IEP in the first place) will do a training with the school staff and bus driver so they can learn that a white cane and a poodle don’t work the same way.
*pool noodle* not poodle. Lol.
Poodle worked, too!
I’m in the UK and hadn’t heard about this story – I am just flabbergasted that anyone could think that it is appropriate to remove a child’s support in this way. Words fail me!
The outrageous stupidity of certain individuals in the educational field makes me wonder why they’re in the educational field. And what hope exists for a brighter future. Didn’t you once have to be *smart* to be a teacher?
The micromanaging of public school teachers which followed the publication of ‘A Nation At Risk’ kept a lot of bright people from entering the profession in the first place. Why go into a field in which non-educators are prescribing what and how you should teach in insulting detail– and blaming you for any poor results?
“And a kid who speaks out of turn in class or is disruptive shouldn’t expect to be gagged or to have a big piece of duct tape slapped across his mouth.”
Well I know of a teacher who bragged about doing this. Her name is Michelle Rhee and she used to be head of DC public schools. She now is the head of some school reform think tank called….wait for it….Student’s First.