Below is a post that another parent posted to a special ed e-group. I didn’t see the article she referred to but will post it once I find it. I’ve met all of these people at one time or another. How about you?
Recently in the MCPS Special Edition various types of parents were highlighted. In turn I think it important to highlight the different types of educators that we all have encountered.
The Clairvoyant: This is an educator who can tell a child and their needs just by reading the child’s name on the IEP. A 15 minute observation is more than enough for them to fully assess a child. This educator knows all about the child both past, present and future. They have no doubt as to what is best for the child. They come into IEP meetings with a set agenda that must be followed. They have lost the ability to listen to others on the IEP team or to consider anything other than their preset agenda. They often are condescending and rude to parents. They have been known to use the phrase that “they are the professional” and “they know best” frequently. Students affected by these Clairvoyants are often placed in inappropriate placements, unless they have parents who are active advocates. Students without advocate parents, learn to survive being placed in different schools every year because the clairvoyant fails to determine the most appropriate placement.
The Realist: This educator knows what is possible and what is not. They acknowledge that things will not change and that they have to make due with what they have. They accept that they can’t meet the needs of the kids, because that is just the way it is. They have to deal with it so do the students and parents. To them it is more important to get planning time in than to get a physically disabled child off the bus. They frequently use the term “limited pot”. They tend to quote policies, which they believe to be true, that in fact do not exist. They know the realistic limits of a child’s potential. They will do what they can and if things don’t get done oh well it is just a job. Children with the teachers are afraid to take chances because they know they will fail, so why bother trying.
The Burnout: This educator once held lofty ideals and strived to provide the best for their students. They have been disillusioned by the system and have given up trying to make a change in the system. Instead they take whatever burden that is given to them and try to be everything to every child. Like an abused spouse, they are convinced that if they leave and go elsewhere that no one else will take care of their students. They are resentful when a parent asks for their child to have any additional need addressed, and think the parent should realize they are doing the best they can already. They have a strong sense of martyrdom and don’t realize how their enabling behavior perpetuates the cycle. Children in this situation do not have
their needs met and tend to feel guilty because they know their teacher is stressed and blame themselves. These students learn to be victims.
The Snake: This educator doesn’t think twice about telling parents whatever it takes to get rid of them. This includes bald lies, misinterpretations, and intimidation. They schedule IEPs and “forget” to notify the parents. They fail to return phone calls from parents and are hard to reach. They put things into a child’s folder without the parents knowledge. They change documents in order to achieve the results that they want. They take suggestions from other professionals and parents as deliberate insults to their abilities. They blame the failings of the student on the student or the parents rather than review their own teaching skills. They are the nemesis of parents and create the most outspoken parent advocates. The unfortunate students who have this type of educator, are made to feel like failures and trouble makers. These children learn that lying and manipulating are OK. They learn to get by with what ever means necessary.
The Professional (also know as angels): These are educators who accept students for what they are. They see the inner potential of their students. They encourage students to have dreams and to go after them. They see even the most severely disabled students first as human beings, deserving of basic dignity and respect. They are able to listen to students, both verbal and nonverbal communication and to interpret this communication. They are willing to learn and seek out information on how better to meet the needs of their students. They are willing to find out how to get additional resources that their students need and to enlist the parents’ help in getting those resources. They accept the parents as they are the good and the bad, without labeling. They understand that while they may have a child for a year or two, the parents will always be this child’s parents and are in it for the long haul. The students in this situation learn to take chances. They learn to be independent and how to self advocate. They learn to be caring independent adults.
Re: Clairvoyants, Realists, Burnouts, Snakes, and Profession
I don’t know who originally came up with this, but it wasn’t me. Pass it on. If it keeps getting passed on, maybe the orginator of this will see it and claim credit.
LJ
Re: Clairvoyants, Realists, Burnouts, Snakes, and Profession
Thanks, LJ…I’ll make sure to note that the author is “unknown” but we’d LOVE to “virtually” meet him or her! “My kinda person…”
Re: Clairvoyants, Realists, Burnouts, Snakes, and Profession
Wonderful! I will pass it on to my address book friends, too!
A little creative writing./
Some of us have been all of those depending on what time of day it is. YOu start the day as a professional and you work with that group of three kids and it goes well. THen it’s your planning period, only you can’t plan because you have an IEP meeting. THey told you about it yesterday because this kid just moved in from out of state and no, they don’t know where the paperwork is so you become the clairvoyant. (Consider the alternatives. MOst would result in using more time that doesn’t exist AND getting reamed out by your supervisor.) Then you dodge back into class where the aide’s been covering while you finished that meeting and you grit your teeth and think the thoughts of the Realist. You don’t like them. You fight the urge to stop thinking of creative ways to stretch that reality while you find a way to remediate four kids at the same time. You know if you keep working at it, it will at least be better than if you resigned to become a full-time Realist.
Lunch time, and you squeeze in a call to a parent and find yourself being a Snake because you are well aware that this parent wants waht you cannot give. (For the purposes of this story, it doesn’t even matter whether it’s what a kid needs or wehther it’s the kind of parent who really does make unreasonable demands.) If you’re going to give any of the other 29 kids on your caseload anything approaching what they need, you have to cut your losses here. Slither, slither. YOu don’t like the feel of your scales against the desk at all.
By afternoon you’re playing the Burnout role. There are two versions of this. The one described is really a “pre-burnout” role. YOu can’t try to be everything to everybody for but so long. But it is true — if you walk out the door, heaven only knows what will walk in. You know who else is in your department already! They aren’t even in the descriptions here — the Parasite and the Coddler. The one who really is putting in an appearance and doing what it takes to collect the paycheck and thinks this is a pretty good joke on society (but has some trouble looking in the mirror) and the one who thinks it’s a real mission to just watch over these poor kids, and those silly parents who actually want to push, push them are just pathetic folks in denial, and of course the Temp — who needs a job, any job, and this was open and even though s/he doesn’t have training, s/he’ll fake it because they need a warm body here.
But you manage, until that last class. Then you’ve become the other Burnout. You can’t quit — by now you’ve made enough mistakes that you don’t trust anybody to give you any kind of recommendation (though you’re probably wrong — they’ll do it to move you down the line!). You have to figure out just how to legally cover your backside… make those IEPs look like the real thing…
At 4:45 you toss a bunch of stuff into your bag (what you’ll be doing from 8 to 10 that night) and head home.
Tomorrow is another day~!
THANK YOU LJ…THIS WAS WONDERFUL! Now I know why we had such a terrible year last year…my son’s teacher was a clairvoyant, as she ‘knew’ him totally after 7 days in her class! Lucky for both of us, all signs tell my gut that we have a professional this year!
Could I reprint your post on another forum (www.dyslexiatalk.com)??? I would LOVE to put this in our “Parent Support — No Limits Sharing & Discussion” thread.
Thanks again, and may you have only “professionals” in your child’s future (unrealistic, but I like to wish BIG!)
Best wishes,
Elizabeth