| [By Dawn Ziegenbalg
in the Winston-Salem Journal, AP]
Winston-Salem, N.C. - Seven little boys sit
cross-legged on the
floor, wiggling in their places and raising their
hands as their teacher holds up
flash cards.
"A stands for ... what?" the teacher
asks, calling on one boy.
"Ac-know-ledge my an-ger," the child
sings out.
He is just 5 years old.
He's here because he's had a tough time behaving
in kindergarten.
Teachers and day-care workers can refer 3- to
5-year-olds to the
Therapeutic Classroom, run by CenterPoint Human
Services, for a variety of
behavioral problems. Some children throw chairs
at their teachers, fight
with their classmates or have frequent temper
tantrums; others can't sit
still for 30 seconds and don't listen to directions.
The children are so little that their behaviors
hardly seem
threatening.
"But wait until they get older," said
Chris Barger, the program's director. "This
is the prime time to catch these kids before it
gets bigger and badder."
The program started as the Preschool Enrichment
Program about 20
years ago, but since then it has focused more
on behavioral therapy. Now, it
works to identify children's difficulties in an
effort to improve their behavior.
The program also offers education and counseling
to the children and their
parents.
Some of the children act out because they struggle
to deal with a
parent's death, drug abuse or mental disabilities,
Barger said. Others are
abused, neglected or have difficulty dealing with
stress. And still more have teen-age parents who
are not equipped to deal with the challenges of
raising them.
Over the years, as the number of children facing
these kinds of problems has grown, the program
has struggled to keep pace. It doubled its capacity
two years ago, with money from a federal grant
administered by the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County
Schools, and it now serves 32 children. Teachers
easily could fill another classroom with the need
that exists, Barger said.
"The biggest complaint is that we can't get
kids in fast enough,"
she said.
Rochester Damon Jr., one of the program's teachers,
opens his class every day with a song. Sometimes,
he personalizes each verse for the children.
"Christopher, Christopher. Christopher, Christopher,"
he and the children sing.
"We like you. We like you.
"You are very special. You are very special.
"Hip hooray. Hip hooray."
The boys beam and giggle as, one by one, they
enjoy their moment of fame.
"We do a lot to build self-esteem,"
Barger said. "All these kids have been screaming
children in other classrooms, but here, in a small
classroom, they do well."
The program, which moved into rented space in
an open wing at Cook
Elementary School this year, offers two morning
sessions and two afternoon
sessions for eight students each -- most of them
boys.
Two teachers and an assistant work in each class
because so many of
the children need highly individualized attention.
They spend a lot of time teaching anger-management
techniques. The children can recite the strategies
by heart -- "ignore distractions,"
"stay on task," "when you're getting
mad, walk away." When the children get
frustrated in class, the teachers help them apply
the techniques.
In one activity, children use breathing exercises
to blow their
angry feelings into an imaginary balloon that
they release into the air. In
another, students jump around to "get their
wiggles out." Teachers alternate the games
with traditional class work including handwriting
practice and vocabulary lessons.
"My goals are different for each individual
child," Damon said.
"For some, it could be to sit in their seat
for 30 seconds. For some, it's to stay on task
or to walk in class instead of run. For some,
it's to express how they feel. My goal, truly,
is to plant seeds and water those seeds and have
other people nurture them as time goes by."
Some of those nurturers will be the children's
parents. The program offers counseling and classes
to teach parents how to reinforce their children's
positive behavior at home.
"If we have us working, the parents working
and the teachers working, the children can do
well," Barger said. "A lot of times
these kids just need socialization. They're bright
kids who develop bad habits."
But not all parents are involved, and some of
those who are involved
may also struggle with overwhelming family problems
or poverty.
One boy came to class last week wearing pants
that he couldn't zip
because they were a size too small. The boy's
teacher gave him a new pair from a closet stocked
with donated clothes.
Principals say they've seen the program work wonders.
"It's real cute to see the children come
back and share what they've learned with other
children in their classes," said Tobie Arnold,
the principal of Old Town Elementary. "They'll
say, 'You could have made another choice,' or
'That's not right to say that to your teacher."'
The children attend the program Monday through
Thursday and then go to their own schools Fridays.
The program's teachers visit them there and work
with them in their classes.
"It helps them deal with some issues that
we can't deal with as well here," Arnold
said. "But with a little bit of extra help
in smaller classes, they can express their feelings
and learn different tools on how to get along
in class.
"There are so many children that could benefit
from the tools they're learning. Sometimes we
just have to say, 'Who needs this the most?"'
The program already needs more money to meet the
need that exists,
directors say.
This year, it has a $502,000 budget. Most of that
comes from tax dollars, fees and Medicaid reimbursements
for children's mental-health treatment. More than
$140,000 comes from an annual federal grant from
the Safe Schools/Healthy Students Initiative,
administered by the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County
Schools.
The grant runs out after this year, and the classroom
will need additional money to continue operating
at its current capacity, said Ron Morton, the
director of CenterPoint.
Morton says he is confident CenterPoint will find
the money to keep or even expand the program because
it has a unique strength -- it helps children
when they're young, before their problems become
more severe and
harder to handle.
"There's never been quite enough of this,"
he said. "And there
aren't so many things out there today that are
so hopeful. People just turn immediately to these
kinds of things." © Copyright 2001,
The News & Observer
http://www.feat.org/
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