Rothesay mom begs for son with autism to be held back a year - Action News
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New Brunswick

Rothesay mom begs for son with autism to be held back a year

A Rothesay woman is fighting to hold her son back a grade level after she was told he would be promoted to Grade 2, despite her arguing heisn't ready.

Tanya White is fighting to have her son kept in Grade 1, and feels the school system is failing him

Tanya White has been struggling to keep her son Nikki in Grade 1 this fall, but was told by educational support services, that it's not possible. From left to right: Eldest son Drew, 25, Tanya, Patrick, Luke, 16, Liam,14. Second row: Zachary, nine, Nikki, six, and Teehan,11. (Judith Mattie/Submitted)

A Rothesay woman is fighting to hold her son back a grade level after she was toldhe would be promoted to Grade 2, despite her arguing he isn't ready.

Tanya White says she's desperate for her six-year-old son Nikki, who has high-functioning autism spectrum disorder and is developmentally delayed, to repeat Grade 1.

She believes Nikki's designation as a Grade 1 student was improper to begin with, and that in essence the school wants to promote him from kindergarten to Grade 2.

"There's lots of evidence of kids graduating without functional literacy levels, and that is my fear,"saidWhite, who has six children, four of whom have autism spectrum disorder.

In January, 2020 she was told by Nikki's school, which White did not feel comfortable naming, thather son would repeat kindergarten.

There was no curriculum.Therecouldn't have been,we were all dealing with, 'Daddy's going to die.'- Tanya White

Then the pandemic hit and her husband Patrick was facing terminal cancer and several medical emergencies.

A few months later she was toldNikki would be pushed into Grade 1 come September of 2020.

"I wasn't able to battle a battle last year, when I was told in late spring he would be promoted to Grade 1," she said.

Nikki missed eight and a half months of school. White said, because of his dad's health issues,the family has been living on a roller coaster since last May, "surviving moment to moment, day by day."

Nikkireturned to school in January, 2021, and his fatherdied a month later.

"There was no curriculum," she said. "Therecouldn't have been,we were all dealing with'Daddy's going to die.'

Promoted to Grade 2

When he returned to school this year, Nikki returned to a kindergarten class, even thoughon paper he was in Grade 1.

"We started the process to retain him again and let him actually do the Grade 1 curriculum," she said.

But she was told this spring Nikki would be promoted to Grade 2 in the fall, even though he has never been taught Grade 1 inside a classroom by a licensed Grade 1 teacher.

"Six weeks after my husband died, Ihad to fight," she said.

White said she was tolda plan would come together for the next academic year to get the support he needs.

"There's nothing noting exactly what that will be," she said.

'I know what can be possible for Nikki'

She asked to appeal thedecision and received documentation about why it was made, but she said the informationwas "vague" and based on a broader inclusive policy.

White alsocalled the school.

"They wouldn't speak to any of it," she said. "They wouldn't tell me who made the decision, why the decision was made and what was behind that decision in terms of any policy."

While she believes in the inclusivepolicy, White said she'sdisappointed it doesn't allow parents the right to make any choices on their children's behalf.

Nikki and Patrick, one month before his dad died in February. (Tanya White/Submitted)

White said she and her husband have always supported their sons' development and believe parents should have a say in their child's best interest in school.

She said her son Luke, 16, who was retained in grade 5, now has a 92 per cent average.

"He's now absolutely academically excelling, but he was on the same path Nikki's on right now," said White, whohas a Masters in social work.

"I know what can be possible for Nikki."

White said it made sense to push her son through the system in the pandemic to prevent the system from being clogged with students entering the same grade level.

But she saidit does not hold in the 2020-21 school year.

"We're not jamming up a system."

Province explores inclusion policy

Education Minister Dominic Cardy said hedoesn't have the authority to hold back a student in a particular grade and that it's up to each school district to make such decisions.

CBC News has asked the Anglophone South School District for an interview and is waiting for a response.

Cardy did say discussions are happening right now to create a broaderinclusion policy.

"It's actually being ramped up as we speak," he said. "The goal is to look at areas like this."

Early last year,Cardy called for a review of New Brunswick's inclusive education policy while on a province-wide tour seeking feedback on his green paper on education reform.

On the tour, parents expressed concerns about schools not having the proper supports and resources in place for children with special needs.

Education Minister Dominic Cardy has been saying it's time to take a closer look at classroom composition in New Brunswick. (Maria Jose Burgos)

New Brunswick's inclusive education policy was last updated in September 2013.

Cardy, who said the policy discourages students from beingheld back a year,has heard of students getting passed to a higher grade level before they're ready, causing behavioural issues, stress and depression down the road.

"That is not inclusion," he said.

Cardy said New Brunswick's public school system needs to meet the needs of each student.

"I can't really say we're doing that if we're not giving them the tools to read and write."

Although Cardy hasn't spoken directly with White, he didwelcomeher to take part in an ongoing conversation about the inclusion policy.

"There's pretty clearly some failings in the system, where some kids are being left to fall through the cracks year after year after year, which is the definition of the opposite of inclusion," Cardy said. "This is exclusion."

With files from Marie Sutherland, Information Morning Saint John