All About Autism
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Is it true that CEL only refers children to EIPIC run by VWOs? They should also refer children to private EIPIC centres since the queue for the VWO-run EIPIC centres is rather long.
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Early intervention and detection will save your child.
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helplessmum3:
My son will say \"mommy , love , love \" n ask to hug hug him
i wish my boy can do that. -
Karkar:
helplessmum3:
My son will say \"mommy , love , love \" n ask to hug hug him
i wish my boy can do that.
Ya lor. Mine didn't like to hug at 3 yrs old. -
Hi Mummies,
i need your opinion on below
My fren’s son is in Montessori school. he was vomiting and coughing and going through a difficult time at the school before the class started. His teachers saw it but none of them offered any helping hand to him. The boy’s grandma was holding him and helping him, teachers who walked past him again didn’t say a word.
to me, teachers are not caring at all. even though this is not a childcare centre, but if teachers know a boy is under distress, and yet they ignore him, is it common in enrichment class/school? I thought the basic that a teacher can do is to ask what happen to him, whether they need any help or anything? even outside in shopping mall, passer-by would stop and offer a helping hand, not to mention that the kid is already in his school and the teachers all know him.
When i know about this, i am very disheartening. it shocked me further that my fren was told that usually enrichment teachers ignore all these as there are so many kids having the same problems every now and then. If so, you shouldn’t call yourself teachers and your school shouldnt be running, or you need to let parents know about this at enrolment. I want to find out what’s the normal practice in today’s preschool.
Thanks. -
Hi Karkar
First, you need to find out if the Montessori is indeed an “enrichment” centre as described by your friend. If it is, it is technically not a “preschool”, though it runs programme for young children. It would be considered a private school, similar to tuition centers. As private schools, the bottom line is profit making. The teachers have classes to take and even if they want to help, they would have their own children in the class to take care of. Besides, the grandma is there to help, and I think that could be one of the reasons why they did not come forward, since there is already an adult with the child. Not trying to speak up for the centre or anything, but this was the feeling I get when I interact with tuition centres/enrichment centres - efficient, fast-paced and profit driven. My kids are in kindergartens.
But having said that, I would think that if the grandma or the child had requested for help, one of the teachers or staff might have come over. What you have described was also not clear, whether it was a once off incident or it happened daily. I believe that might explain their reaction (or non-reaction). -
hi huaywenandkenneth,
Thanks for reply. that was one off incident. his son was only with school for less than 3 weeks. what it happened, the class had not started. I guess i need to warn my friend the difference between enrichment and preschool.
They might not help because grandma was there. However, out of humanity, teacher should just have asked. My friend said teachers didn’t care and continued to make jokes among themselves in the reception even though one of the teachers saw him vomiting. I can feel for my friend, and I would rethink about sending my kid to enrichment centre, esp our kids are specialit’s the Montessori morning playgroup, 2 hrs type. -
They are not into passionate kind for these teachers .
They are profit or money driven n want elite kids to make their school have the name n get more sales…
Some preschool teachers r like that too. Always boil down to individual but at enrichment school there are more such teachers.
Can check w Double E, her son goes berries Chinese .
Karkar,
Double E 's son is more connect… He can express hee!
My son just know how to requests n ask to hug n kiss.
Express not as good… -
I would think it all boils down to the fundamentals of a human being. It doesn’t matter if the school is profit driven or charity driven. Even if a stranger is vomiting, it’s down to whether a person has compassion to offer even a tissue or stare and walk away. So even if a school is profit driven, a teacher with even the most basic humanity would be concerned. Moreover, if the teachers were joking and talking among themselves at that time…
If a kid, say, falls during lesson time, would the teacher press ahead with the syllabus because other kids have a timeline to meet? Or would she spare some time to attend to the kid or ask a receptionist to put an ice pack for the kid? -
helplessmum3:
They are not into passionate kind for these teachers .
They are profit or money driven n want elite kids to make their school have the name n get more sales..
Some preschool teachers r like that too. Always boil down to individual but at enrichment school there are more such teachers.
Can check w Double E, her son goes berries Chinese .
Karkar,
Double E 's son is more connect.. He can express hee!
My son just know how to requests n ask to hug n kiss.
Express not as good..
I think it depends on the nature of the person. Can't say because is enrichment centres, all the teachers there have no compassion and all are profit driven.
At Berries I didn't encounter any situation similar to Kar Kar's friend, so I can't really comment. But based on my observation, the teachers and the admin persons at Berries are professional and friendly. Before I enroll my son, I told them about his condition. They agreed to take my boy in after observing him during trial class.
My boy is with Berries for the 3rd term already and there are times that he does not sit still and wants to stand up when the teacher is teaching. The form teacher is very kind to assign another teacher to sit with my boy to manage him. My boy is learning and he has been able to read all the chinese characters taught by Berries. Now is really up to me to speak mandarin with him more often to put the words he learned into practice.
Personally, I feel that Berries is very value for money. The fees is $300plus for a term (12 weeks), they do not have term break (only once a year), the class is 1.5 hrs and comes with a lot of teaching materials which are within the course fees. More importantly, they have made learning Chinese interesting. My boy looks forward to his Berries class.