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Letter to classroom parents re: Celiac
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Linda



Joined: 20 Aug 2005
Posts: 398
Location: Calgary, AB, Canada

PostPosted: Mon Sep 04, 2006 10:03 pm    Post subject: Letter to classroom parents re: Celiac Reply with quote

Hi Everyone,

School starts tomorrow and I've just realized I can't find the sample letter I had seen to send home with other kids. I am sure I saw someplace a sample of a letter that a mom sent home with the other kids saying something like what treats are GF in case they send something for birthdays/valentines, etc. or to please notify me in advance if they will be sending cookies, muffins, etc. so I can have an alternative to send in for Ty.

Any thoughts on how to word such a letter?

I should have organized this sooner. Embarassed
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Mom of Ty (he's eight) who was diagnosed by bloodwork June 2005, biopsy August 11, 2005, notified on & started GF August 18, 2005
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gluten-free-mike



Joined: 07 Sep 2006
Posts: 349
Location: Cleveland, OH

PostPosted: Fri Sep 08, 2006 8:55 am    Post subject: Letter for schoolkids - celiac party considerations etc Reply with quote

Linda,

Are you a teacher sending a letter to other students' parents, or are you the mother of a child in a classroom that wants to get the word out to the other parents?

I would assume the school nurse or such would have a standard letter regarding food allergy considerations these days, especially with all the peanut allergies, celiac, and many more. Perhaps just ask them if they have one. If not, the toughest thing about informing others of what to avoid when Celiacs are in the target food-consumption group is educating them on what Celiac is -- since, many I have run into find it hard to even understand that it is a Wheat allergy (I start there since most can understand wheat)... but even then, I have people say "oh, no problem, I use white bread and not wheat bread", not understanding that white bread is wheat flour. From there you move on to Rye, Barley, and all the derivatives (like malt flavoring in darn near everything, and soy sauce with wheat in it, and on and on).

Good luck. But, the setting is right: school. School is a place for educating, and it just happens you will need to educate others for them to ever understand what is and is not safe for your child.
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GF Since 2003
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Linda



Joined: 20 Aug 2005
Posts: 398
Location: Calgary, AB, Canada

PostPosted: Fri Sep 08, 2006 11:06 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi Mike,
I'm a parent trying not to have my child feel left out when someone shows up with a bunch of cookies/timbits/cupcakes for birthday. He does have a stash of treats in the teacher's desk, but sometimes it's nice if everyone gets the same thing. The school nurse is there MAYBE once a week. There is no info sent to parents re:allergies, just that the school "discourages" peanuts/peanut containing food.

Here's the letter so far. Note how I mention "including all-purpose flour" so people know flour is made from wheat.
--------------
Dear Team 2C Parents:

My son, Ty, is in your son or daughter’s class. He has been diagnosed with Celiac and is on a restricted diet, and I would like to request that if you are going to be sending treats to class with your child that you please notify me (in advance if possible) so that I may send a treat with him so he doesn’t feel left out.

He cannot eat anything with wheat (including all-purpose flour), rye, oats, barley or malt. This means he can’t have cookies, cupcakes, pretzels, crackers, Rice Krispie squares, Smarties, Twizzlers licorice or anything like that.

He CAN have:
Hershey’s Kisses
snack-size Aero bars
Dare Fruit Gummies
Starburst candy
Jolly Rancher candy
Tootsie pops and Tootsie rolls
Rockets
Classic, Sour Cream & Onion or Wavy Lay’s chips
Hawkin’s Cheezies
Jello, Healthy Choice and Hunt’s pudding & jello snack packs
Dentyne, Trident and Wrigley’s gum.
Sun-Rype Fruit-to-Go and Energy-to-Go
Minute Maid juices
Sun-Rype juices
Five Alive
Pepsi/Coke
Sprite/7-Up
Canada Dry ginger ale
Carnation hot chocolate

Thank you,
Linda S.
-------------------
I didn't want to say celiac "disease" in case a lot of the ESL families might think it's contagious or something. Disease....oh....better move Johnny out of there in case he gets it.
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Mom of Ty (he's eight) who was diagnosed by bloodwork June 2005, biopsy August 11, 2005, notified on & started GF August 18, 2005
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gluten-free-mike



Joined: 07 Sep 2006
Posts: 349
Location: Cleveland, OH

PostPosted: Fri Sep 08, 2006 11:51 am    Post subject: school celiac note Reply with quote

Linda,

I like the idea of listing *specific* things he can have, vs. things he can not. That should make life easier on everyone. Good job.

I got to the part where you said that "disease" may make people worry about contagiousness or such... and laughed openly, both because it was funny (to those of us who know Celiac is NOT contagious), and because yeah, I could see people worrying about it just because of the word "disease".

Let us all know how well the letter is recieved. Thanks
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ostrich



Joined: 30 Mar 2006
Posts: 4059
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PostPosted: Fri Sep 08, 2006 1:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I agree, the list is an excellent idea. Gives parents some more ideas for treats. Smile

Just MHO, but you might want to add something about your son gets sick. I'm worried that the teacher/parents won't take this seriously, or they might think you're being picky otherwise. Something like "If Ty ingests even a small amout of gluten he (insert symptoms)."
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Fidissimus



Joined: 17 Mar 2006
Posts: 1463
Location: Portland, OR.

PostPosted: Fri Sep 08, 2006 1:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think if I were a parent I might be concerned that you were telling me I couldn't let my kid bring his/her food to school on a daily basis. Maybe you could alter the following sentence to something like, " I would like to request that if you are going to be sending treats to class with your child for special occasions like birthdays or other food related holidays that you please notify me..."

Otherwise it sounds great! I like the idea of listing specific foods too so that everyone can be included... except you forgot M&M's! Laughing
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Free of wheat, barley, rye, oats, rice, dairy, eggs, almonds, pineapple and brewers yeast.
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Valerie



Joined: 23 Sep 2006
Posts: 2

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 12:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Fidissimus wrote:
I think if I were a parent I might be concerned that you were telling me I couldn't let my kid bring his/her food to school on a daily basis. Maybe you could alter the following sentence to something like, " I would like to request that if you are going to be sending treats to class with your child for special occasions like birthdays or other food related holidays that you please notify me..."

Otherwise it sounds great! I like the idea of listing specific foods too so that everyone can be included... except you forgot M&M's! Laughing



Hi! I feel that sending a letter to your child's teacher with the foods he/she is able to eat is a great idea. I also keep in constant touch with my daughter's teacher and she always lets me know about her special activities. Also, most teacher send a weekly letter or calendar were they post the special activities for the week or the month. This will also help you out in preparing the special snacks for your child
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Linda



Joined: 20 Aug 2005
Posts: 398
Location: Calgary, AB, Canada

PostPosted: Sat Sep 23, 2006 9:29 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks everyone for your input. I did change the letter to say "bringing treats for a birthday or other special event".

I didn't put in M&M's because the school discourages peanuts/traces of peanuts foods because of anaphylactic allergies.

I also didn't say anything about how Ty gets sick, because he doesn't (on the outside). The teacher is familiar with Celiac, one of her cousins has Celiac and she did some research as well.

The whole thing was a mostly useless effort on my part anyway. The teacher had to run it past the office, and they said we couldn't send it out. The teacher did promise to mention it to parents when they came in for parent/teacher interviews and she kept the list so if she decides to give treats away for some reason, she knows what kind to send out.

Actually, there are TWO GF kids in the class. The second one doesn't have celiac, she has Down Syndrome but her mom put her and her autisitc sister on the diet for fun and she's grown a lot and can focus on her tasks a bit easier, so the list is good for everyone - peanut free/gluten free. Oh...except the teachers a vegetarian and doesn't eat eggs. We'll all have to eat apples from now on.
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keefdawn



Joined: 07 Oct 2006
Posts: 2

PostPosted: Wed Oct 11, 2006 2:10 pm    Post subject: freeze cupcakes Reply with quote

my daughter is 6 and in the first grade and she has celiacs I send a letter to the teacher at the begining of the year and lots of snacks she can have I also make up cupcakes and freeze them that way if she wants to have a cupcake like everyone else the teacher just takes one out in the morning. The freezing does not hurt them and they taste the same good luck
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melffr04



Joined: 13 Oct 2006
Posts: 6
Location: Falkville, AL

PostPosted: Fri Oct 13, 2006 10:21 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hey...My name is Melissa and I have a 8 year old daughter who we just found out last month has CD. Our lives have been turned upside down, as I am sure yours was as well! I have two other children that are fine (we think).

The school has not wanted to coperate with us at all! Her teacher says it is too much responsibility for her to keep up with and her friends won't play with her cause she has a DISEASE. Which I know comes from a parent!

I sent letters to the school for the teacher, school nurse, counsler and lunch room staff. Kimberleigh still has days that after she eats she is in pain and not feeling well. Her doctor wanted her to continue home bound school until we could get her symtoms under control, school said NO!

Does anyone have any advise how to deal with these people?
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Thanks for the input!
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ostrich



Joined: 30 Mar 2006
Posts: 4059
Location: Nebraska

PostPosted: Fri Oct 13, 2006 10:24 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yikes Mel, sorry this is happening! But outta curiosity....if the school is being so difficult, why don't you just homeschool her? The public school has no authority over you last time I checked. Wink I'd simply thumb my nose at them and pull her out. Her health is more important than some stupid administration.
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aklap



Joined: 02 Oct 2004
Posts: 8350
Location: WI, USA

PostPosted: Fri Oct 13, 2006 10:32 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi Melissa,

I am sorry to hear that. I think by law, they have to. I would look into a 504 plan for her. We have talked about this before, I'll find the posts. We've got some posters here that have some experience with this (TEC?? any suggestions?).

Here's the threads on 504 Plans
http://www.celiacforums.com/viewtopic.php?t=736


Here' some more info that might be of help:

http://www.justice.gov/crt/ada/childq&a.htm
http://twincitiesrock.org/documents/Title3complaint.pdf

How to create a Health Care Plan for Celiac Disease: http://twincitiesrock.org/documents/HealthCarePlan.pdf
Celiac Disease Handbook for School Professionals: http://twincitiesrock.org/documents/EducatorHandbook.pdf

I found these documents here:
http://twincitiesrock.org/


I found this a the Dallas ROCK site

http://www.dallasrock.org/

Section 504 Information The information contained in this document is presented by Theresa Werner, M.Ed., J.D., Associate Professor, Special Education Outreach Coordinator, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA. She explains the steps to take with the public school system in order to have your child accommodated when it comes to receiving a gluten-free meal in public school. She also has her contact information there if you have questions.
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“We cannot all do great things, but we can do small things with great love.” Mother Teresa
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The Edifying Conscience



Joined: 29 Aug 2005
Posts: 2385

PostPosted: Fri Oct 13, 2006 11:14 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

melffr04 wrote:
The school has not wanted to coperate with us at all! Her teacher says it is too much responsibility for her to keep up with and her friends won't play with her cause she has a DISEASE. Which I know comes from a parent!

I sent letters to the school for the teacher, school nurse, counsler and lunch room staff. Kimberleigh still has days that after she eats she is in pain and not feeling well. Her doctor wanted her to continue home bound school until we could get her symtoms under control, school said NO!

Does anyone have any advise how to deal with these people?


I'm sure the classroom teacher is completely overwhelmed. Just think how you feel trying to deal with this and then add a bunch of kids, some other parents, hours of class prep and paperwork. The key is to go to the principal and REQUEST a 504 Plan. If you request it he has to follow up with you. When you meet with him, you'll need to bring a letter from your daughter's MD that states her condition.

Al has offered some good links and has bumped up some other threads that offer specific information that you can request in a 504 Plan. Take a look at them and you'll have a better idea what the school can do to make your daughter receive the education that she's entitled to. It's important to remember that the school only has to make reasonable accomodations with a 504 plan.

As a former teacher and someone who has CD, I'm not sure what the benefit to your daughter is to be schooled at home if she is on a gluten free diet. Now if she isn't gluten free then by all means she should be at home. Having said that the 504 Plan would/could accomodate her needs whether or not she's GF.

If after your daughter eats she has pain then she's probably not completely gluten free or she has other food related issues. How are you determining if the food she eats is GF? It may be beneficial for your daughter to keep a food journal. Mark what she eats and how she feels a little while later.

Lastly, you mentioned that you sent a letter to the school lunch person. The cafeteria probably serves lunch to hundreds of kids a day and the lunches are most likely gluten heavy. Even if the cafeteria is willing to create a GF meal for your daughter it's most likely not in her best interest due to the cross contamination issues. As far as reasonable accomodations and the cafeteria, I would request a special table or a table shared with kids who have food allergies and her choice of a lunch buddies.

If your daughter is enrolled in a private school, then she isn't eligible for the 504 Plan.
TEC
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Kathie



Joined: 27 Jan 2006
Posts: 715
Location: Florida

PostPosted: Fri Oct 13, 2006 11:43 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

TEC wrote:
Lastly, you mentioned that you sent a letter to the school lunch person. The cafeteria probably serves lunch to hundreds of kids a day and the lunches are most likely gluten heavy. Even if the cafeteria is willing to create a GF meal for your daughter it's most likely not in her best interest due to the cross contamination issues. As far as reasonable accomodations and the cafeteria, I would request a special table or a table shared with kids who have food allergies and her choice of a lunch buddies.TEC


I'm with TEC on this one, I would encourage any parent to send lunch from home. I worked in a school cafeteria for a couple of years. We baked our own cookies, rolls etc. Flour dust stays in the air and contaminates everything. Besides which its cafteria style serving and most of us wouldn't dream of eating at a smorgasboard any more. My health improved greatly when I quit and got an office job. I might suggest that you send her an extra napkin to cover her place at the table and some of that hand sanitizer for when she is finished eating.
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Linda



Joined: 20 Aug 2005
Posts: 398
Location: Calgary, AB, Canada

PostPosted: Fri Oct 13, 2006 4:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Melissa - try this link for info Al found for teachers.I'm going to print them for Ty's teacher.

http://www.celiacforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=28586#28586

if the link didn't work it's twincitiesrock.org.
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