Throughout school I had assistants who specifically worked with me and I found that very challenging to deal with (the aide would sit next to me in the classroom and tell me what to do much of the time). It is probably the worst thing that happened to me as it tended to create a ‘freeze response’, feelings of inadequacy, a feeling of being out of control & a lack of regard for my intelligence. It was almost a daily occurrence, and for hours during the day. There is also a sense of shame around my lack of intelligence as integration aides aren’t a particularly common occurrence and it was done in front of my peers, so nothing was discrete about the experience either. I feel that it was unnecessary for the most part as I was able to get high grades (just with extra time for tests and exams) in high school but I do admit that the very early stages of schooling would have been difficult without one as I hadn't developed the foundations and behavioural skills. I have been informed that public schools consistently get paid by the government every time a child with a diagnosis gets funded for an aide and that staff often make out that the student is less capable than they actually are in order to give the child as many hours with an aide as possible. That, to me is very deceiving to the child.
I feel extremely hurt and sometimes suicidal and worthless in instances where I feel incompetent and although my life is a lot better now, and I am free of specialised support, there are set backs in which I feel like an idiot.
Thank you for reading!
I feel extremely hurt and sometimes suicidal and worthless in instances where I feel incompetent and although my life is a lot better now, and I am free of specialised support, there are set backs in which I feel like an idiot.
Thank you for reading!