Last week I had the good fortune to offer a workshop for educators
that I called, “Parents as Partners: Working with Parents in Jewish Special
Needs Education”. It was one of five
sessions offered through the MetroWestABLE Inclusion series, “Creating Meaningful
Jewish Experiences”.
I was well aware, from the start of the workshop, that the educators
assembled wanted pointers on how to handle difficult conversations with
parents. They were eager to help their
students, but seemed to feel great apprehension around how to potentially
develop open and supportive communication with parents.
Open and supportive communication with parents is
essential for a successful Jewish supplemental school experience for any child,
especially those with special learning needs. However, my goal in this workshop was to encourage
a “bigger picture”, more reflective approach to such dialogues, rather than
just diving in to the challenging conversations.
Here are the key points that I feel can help to build the
foundation for meaningful, supportive and productive relationships with
parents:
It’s all about relationships:
All of the work that we do in synagogues is relationship
based. Building strong, lasting
relationships with congregants is at the center of the work of rabbis, cantors,
educators and other synagogue professionals.
It should also be at the center of the work of our teachers in
supplemental schools. Strong
relationships are built on trust. Our
parents need to trust that we are really here to support their children and
that we really want to take this journey with them. All the more so for families of children with
special needs, which leads me to my second key point.
Parents of children with special needs can spend many hours
of their days in “battle”. They often struggle
with doctors, insurance agents, therapists, secular school teachers and so
on. When they join a faith community,
what I believe they most want is to find a place where they don’t have to fight,
where they can be accepted as they are and where their family can come for
respite and rejuvenation. It seems
logical that they should be able find this in a synagogue community. The most significant thing that synagogue
professionals can say to parents and family members of those with special needs
or disabilities is, “Yes, we can meet “Jonah’s” needs…now help me understand
how to do that.” Or “Yes, of course your
family can worship here and be a part of our community…please help me
understand how we can make that possible for you.” I am not suggesting that every request can
and will be met with “yes”, but we have to start by opening the door and
building the relationship, so that if there are things that are not possible, we
can speak about them openly and honestly.
When we start with yes, we rely on our trusting relationships to guide
us.
Parents of children with special needs need to grieve:
When parents learn of a child’s disability, they need to
grieve…not for the child, but for the idea of what they thought parenting would
be. They have to process through the
grief of what they may not be able to have, while coming to terms with the new
reality of what they can have. This is
not easy. But isn’t this the very nature
of the work of a religious community?
Aren’t we in the business of pastoral care? Too often I think that educators believe that
grief counseling is the work of clergy. Too
often we compartmentalize our congregant’s needs into “clergy stuff’ and
“school stuff”. But when a child with
special needs significantly struggles in Religious School, parents can be
thrown back into the grief cycle, this time wondering if they will have to give
up on their idea of bar/bat mitzvah (not to mention Confirmation, Jewish
marriage or any other Jewish life cycle events). When educators focus on a student’s
limitations, they may inadvertently put a family back into a stance of
defensiveness. Again, I am not
suggesting that we don’t ever discuss a child’s limitations, but rather that we
need to do this in the context of supporting relationships that begin with
“yes”. When we honor the grief process
and support our families, we develop trusting and lasting relationships.
Fostering relationships leads us to build community and enables us to open our doors, our congregations, our schools and our hearts so that all will be welcome.
Very well stated and extremely important! Yishar koach!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Lisa. Excellent. We need more of this to move us all forward.
ReplyDelete