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Children usually are best able to cope with their
disease and treatment if they know as much as possible about it.
Medical personnel usually tell parents and the child about the
diagnosis, methods of treatment and progression, and some families
go on to do their own research.
However, it isn’t prudent to assume the child has been
told everything about his or her disease. Some parents don’t
address such topics as life expectancy and increasing disability
until the child asks about them. Talk to parents about the approach
they’re taking to informing the child, so you can support
it at school.
When a teacher shows sincere interest and feels comfortable speaking
with the child about his or her abilities and challenges, the
child likely will feel comfortable asking questions and expressing
feelings.
Accurate information also enables peers to cope with a classmate’s
disease. (However, sometimes a child is reluctant to have the
disease discussed, and some parents may be hesitant for others
to know about it. Discuss this preference with the family before
giving information to classmates.)
It can help a class to know about the type of neuromuscular disease
that affects their classmate; the nature of treatments such as
physical therapy and prednisone; and the ways the disease may
affect a child’s appearance, abilities and behavior. With
accurate knowledge, peers are less likely to tease and more likely
to defend their classmate when teasing does occur.
When a student with a neuromuscular disease misses a lot of school
due to surgery or illness, maintain his or her social connection
with the class by having students send notes, get-well cards and
other friendly tokens.
Disability Education Activities
Be sure to discuss this topic with the child’s family first,
and invite them to take part if they wish.
Some classroom activities can enhance your students’ knowledge
of disabilities and their acceptance of people who are “different.”
- a presentation by the student (and family members) about the
disease and how he/she handles it
- lectures and presentations of various types of adaptive equipment
(your local MDA office may be able to help you with this)
- experiential presentations (for example, a wheelchair obstacle
course to show the importance of an accessible environment)
- group discussions of stereotypes and attitudes toward people
with disabilities
- a lesson on “person first” language when speaking
about disabilities (i.e., saying “a boy with a disability”
instead of “a disabled boy” puts the person first,
not the disability)
- awareness-raising projects, such as walk-a-thons or carnivals,
that also can be school fund raisers for MDA
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