Out of School Club

Hi, Just looking for some advice or words of wisdom. My son is 8 and has ASD, he is pretty high funtioning and as such needs minimal support in school. Many of his difficuties are at playtime/lunchtime etc but the school are working on this.

Both my husband and I work full time and my son goes in before and after school club. He has now been excluded twice from the club with little notice as his behaviour was unacceptable and put other children at risk of injury etc. School can't intervene as out of school is run separately. I feel at the end of my tether with the situation and am on pins in case he plays up again and gets excluded.

He is clearly struggling and when he goes into a meltdown he does tend to run off or can just lose it and throw things around. I know that all behaviour is communication but if I'm not there and they are not watching him then they may well be missing the cues. I feel trapped in a helpless situation and totally at the mercy of the woman who runs the club and who will just phone me and say she's not going to accept him for the rest of the week etc.

 

Parents
  • I just wanted to add that my daughter goes to a holiday club and it's the unstructured aspect of it that she struggles with most of all. It's very noisy a lot of the time and from what I can gather the kids can choose what activity they'd like to do, so it's very free and easy, not very good for someone who needs structure and routine.

    I can imagine after a long stressful day at school it would all be too much for your son.

    Also echoing what IntenseWorld said, my daughter finds it nearly impossible to speak up if she's struggling in any way, so the staff need to be aware of this if it is the case with your son.

Reply
  • I just wanted to add that my daughter goes to a holiday club and it's the unstructured aspect of it that she struggles with most of all. It's very noisy a lot of the time and from what I can gather the kids can choose what activity they'd like to do, so it's very free and easy, not very good for someone who needs structure and routine.

    I can imagine after a long stressful day at school it would all be too much for your son.

    Also echoing what IntenseWorld said, my daughter finds it nearly impossible to speak up if she's struggling in any way, so the staff need to be aware of this if it is the case with your son.

Children
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