SarahBear
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- Oct 12, 2011
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Hello,
As far as I can tell so far, I'm not the parent of a child with a disability, but I'm thinking about how to respond if my kid asks a question or makes a comment within earshot of a child with a disability. How would you hope a parent would react to her child in the following situations or others that you have faced:
Violet hasn't come across too many kids with disabilities (that I can think of or that I know of) or kids that look significantly different, so I don't know how she would react. I think with open discussion about what's different, she'd be fine, but I'd want to do it in a way that felt respectful to the child and parent.
As far as I can tell so far, I'm not the parent of a child with a disability, but I'm thinking about how to respond if my kid asks a question or makes a comment within earshot of a child with a disability. How would you hope a parent would react to her child in the following situations or others that you have faced:
- A direct "why" question related to a child's disability.
- Stating "That kid is weird."
- Saying something along the lines of "I don't like that kid" (Violet will say something about not liking someone if there's something about them that makes her uncomfortable or if she's feeling shy)
- Drawing attention to a visible disability by telling you to look at whatever it is that is different.
- Saying something like "that kid is mean." Based on when she's said similar things, I could see her saying something like that if a person had significantly different facial features such as can happen with Craniosynostosis.
Violet hasn't come across too many kids with disabilities (that I can think of or that I know of) or kids that look significantly different, so I don't know how she would react. I think with open discussion about what's different, she'd be fine, but I'd want to do it in a way that felt respectful to the child and parent.