Last week I got a note that said he pulled the OT's hair.
I am a little concerned now. You have to realize that Micah is not a violent kind of kid. He does not randomly choose people to beat up, nor does he get his kicks out of torturing teachers. I'm getting the picture that he's being pushed into this kind of behavior and it's a defense tactic for him.
Let me also clarify that Micah hates OT. It wouldn't take much to push him to frustration. He frequently throws pencils across the room when we ask him to do homework in the evening. But it's a far stretch from throwing a pencil to physical harm. And there are also ways to therapize so as to avoid as much frustration as possible while still getting the job done.
I figured that two incidents are now a pattern and something needs to be said. The problem is that I don't know who to say that something to. Do I say something to his teacher, or go directly to the principal? And which principal would I talk to? We are in a district that is so small that it does not have a Life Skills class for Micah. They bus him to a larger district for school. So we have 2 principals on his IEP team.
After a bit of debating I decided to start with the principal in my district. He's not as directly involved as all that and could point me in the right direction. Plus I wanted a reason to stop in and
The principal wasn't in, but the principal-in-training was. He seemed like a nice enough guy at first meeting. And it was a bit impressive that he knew who I was right away. In fact, he was just reading over Micah's IEP the other day.
Bonus. The guy is doing his homework.
I discussed the problem with him and asked what I needed to do to change OT's. He assured me that he'd look into things for me and see what he could do. Then? He said that he was a Special Ed teacher in high school before being hired here.
Total score. The guy will be a keeper.
He called back the next day (another brownie point for the new guy) and gave me the number of the company that the OT is hired through. I was to call them and request a new therapist. He would also call and let them know what was going on. And miracle of all miracles, there was no red tape or paperwork involved. Micah will have a new OT next week.
Wow. If only all the world's problems would be that easily solved.

(Ignore the road rash. Apparently he has his mother's coordination.)








