All posts by jcjosAdmin

One of these kids is doing thier own thing…

Can children be atheists ?

My youngest got confronted and hassled about her not believing in “God” by one of her classmates and the classmate said that god could make her belief in God and my daughter said God could not.

The classmate counter that God could do anything and again my daughter said God can not, the classmate then listed all the things God has done saying God can do anything and there were no other Gods.

My daughter retorted that the class mate was wrong that her God could not make a 4 cornered triangle and could not make her believe in him.

This she relayed to me with a smug grin on her way home

Needless to day after this exchange on the schoolyard the teacher had a stressful afternoon with the class the majority of whom are meant to be making their first holy communion in a few months.

I HATE pink tech

I do, worse then hello kitty tech is pink tech, esp generic tech pinkified to make it susposedly female friendly.

The latest offender is this item

pinktech

Ok I know it is a product that part of the money from it goes to fund breastcancer awareness and research
but really, come one it is the ‘bling’ that just pushes me over the edge tbh.
Nice of them to be positioned on the ‘right’ side of the clip just encase a female gets confused while pluging it in her self as the tech savy male in her life might refuse to.

/headdesk.

If you really want one you can get them here

    http://www.engadget.com/2008/01/08/national-breast-cancer-foundation-cat5-cable-in-pink-with-cry/

Yes scentence appealed.

The Court of Criminal Appeal has ruled that a Central Criminal Court judge erred in principle when he imposed a non-custodial sentence on a man found guilty of raping a mother of three in her own home in 2005.

Adam Keane from Barnageeha, Daragh, Co Clare, had his sentence increase from three to ten years today following an appeal from the DPP.

The appeal court said today in its 28-page written judgment that the appeal of the leniency of the sentence by the DPP was well founded.
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It said that the well-established principle that a custodial sentence be handed down for the offence of rape should have been followed.

The judgment also found that Mr Justice Paul Carney did not attach sufficient weight to the location and circumstances in which the rape took place.

Mary Shannon was raped as she slept in her own bed in May 2005, her three children also in the house at the time.

Originally he was found guilty of the rape but given a suspended sentence but did not even get home to the small town in which him and his victim lived with out breaking the conditions of his probation, by flicking a cigarette at his victim and making a “triumphalist gesture” at her. The judge did place any restriction on him in regurds to distancing himself from Mary Shannon.

No wonder there is such a low level of reporting to the garda / police in this country.
Out of all the sexual assulats and rapes the rape crises centers deal with less then 10% will
file a report, and out of that 10% only 5% will be taken to court, so that is .05% and the convictions rates are in Ireland some of the worse in Europe.

bollixs

http://www.paulkidby.com/news/index.html

AN EMBUGGERANCE
Folks,

I would have liked to keep this one quiet for a little while, but because of upcoming conventions and of course the need to keep my publishers informed, it seems to me unfair to withhold the news. I have been diagnosed with a very rare form of early
onset Alzheimer’s, which lay behind this year’s phantom “stroke”.

We are taking it fairly philosophically down here and possibly with a mild optimism. For now work is continuing on the completion of Nation and the basic notes are already being laid down for Unseen Academicals. All other things being equal, I
expect to meet most current and, as far as possible, future commitments but will discuss things with the various organisers. Frankly, I would prefer it if people kept things cheerful, because I think there’s time for at least a few more books yet :o)

Terry Pratchett

PS I would just like to draw attention to everyone reading the above that this should
be interpreted as ‘I am not dead’. I will, of course, be dead at some future point, as
will everybody else. For me, this maybe further off than you think – it’s too soon to tell.
I know it’s a very human thing to say “Is there anything I can do”, but in this case I
would only entertain offers from very high-end experts in brain chemistry.

:(

yesterday boards.ie was fun and play,
and now it’s gone so grey and gehy,
oh cant it be like yesterday ?

Suddenly, it’s not half the lulz it used to be,
There’s all this PC shadow hanging over me.
Oh, yesterday ended suddenly.

Why they had to go make the site googible, they woldn’t say.
I think thats were it went wrong, now I long for yesterday.

Yesterday, before the lolcat came play.
Now I feel the need for private forum to hide away.
Oh, I believe in boards.ie as it was yesterday.

The “hooks” of autism

This was posted in a parents support group and honestly it explains it so well.
I have been through this exact same thing with my son, but thankfully ‘tray fall’ days have becomes less frequent.

FYI– about students with Autism/ Asperger’s
by Lenore Gould (1996), Carbon-Lehigh Right to Education Task Force,
Schnecksville, PA
Distributed by Autism Services Center, Huntington, WV, by kind permission of the author

Those of us who have daily contact with children with autism sometimes have trouble explaining to regular education teachers or administrators the “hooks” of autism; especially the kinds of support they need. You’re always trying to explain the basics, “no, moving the pencil sharpener’s location in the classroom is not what upset him. You have to understand that…” Then I came up with this analogy. Perhaps it will help others to visualize the support needed.

Try to imagine the child balancing a large serving tray on one upturned hand. Every distress for that child is like a liquid-filled glass you are putting on this tray. The “distress glasses” are unique to each kid; but generally include things like auditory or visual over-stimulation, social interaction, “surprises” or unexpected changes in the schedule, lack of clear leadership, the number of people in the room; whatever is sensitive for that child. (Don’t forget the ability to read the body English and anxiety of the adults around them!) The size and weight of the “glass” for that child varies. Some things are merely shot glass size, while others can be a 2-liter jug. At some point the tray is going to start to wobble– the liquid will start spilling out of the glasses on the tray. The cues that this is happening will vary from kid to kid: just as the cause and size of a “glass” varies kid to kid, but will generally include regressive behavior, avoidance or shutting down, giggling or minor acting out to get attention.

Hopefully, someone will help the kid rebalance the tray, or remove some glasses. Perhaps taking a break, or allowing time to refocus or process will work; again, techniques are unique to each kid. If there’s no intervention, the addition of one more “glass” will topple the tray to the floor. The cause is not the most recent “glass” you added, but the fact that the tray was full or too heavy (the latter is why the child seems so unpredictable to some people.) Our efforts should be that the kid learns to hold a bigger tray, or to do minor correction of the tray’s balance somewhat independently, but they will always carry that wobbling tray. Ignoring cues can be disastrous, from classroom disruptions to a major regression. When an autistic kid’s tray comes crashing to the floor, it is always a major event.

That’s why, if I hear my son got highly upset over a moved pencil sharpener and acted out, I do not want to hear that he has to learn to accept change. The sharpener is immaterial, if I learn that day he’d dealt with a substitute teacher, a fire drill just as Reading was starting, dead calculator batteries halfway through math, a crashed computer in the middle of English, a late bus so that he missed part of home room and some fluorescent lights in the class are half out- his tray was already fill.

All of the distresses are unavoidable and he’d dealt with them without a hitch; but each was another glass on his tray.

Autistic kids need someone around who is familiar with them; to sense how full the tray is getting and read the cues, so there’s intervention before that wobbling tray topples to the floor. that is why the type of support for these kids is critical, not just a “hot body” nearby– but the “right hot body” whom they can trust will help balance and who knows the “hooks”.

Aquatic centre needs €2 million a year to stay afloat.

Honestly I am not surprised and I am not surprised that it only had half a million visitors and that includes those who
signed up for membership of the gym and sport teams that have used it.

Yes the Dublin 15 is a big area and has no other swimming pool you think there would be more local people using it and school having swimming classes organised for children. It could have families going there every weekend teaching their children how to swim but lets face it most families will not be able to afford the price of the 40 euros family pass every week. It is not the price alone, the fact that it is that much means people will try and make the most of it and children will put pressure to eat in the heavily sponsored food venues and the fact that there are M&M statues everywhere is off putting to parents again.

If the family pass more reasonable or was not an all day pass say 3 hours for somewhere between 20 and 30 euro they would get a lot more people in the door on a regular bases. For as it stands D15 does not have a public swimming pool.