The RenewaNation Review 2017 Volume 9 Issue 2 | Page 36

“We will never regret giving our son the opportunity to learn under teachers who loved, prayed for, and invested in his life by pointing him to Jesus Christ every single day.” Jesse dissecting   We enrolled him in our little mission school where he entered kindergarten. His teacher and I developed a system. She would give me his worksheets ahead of time, and I would braille them for him, writing in print above the braille letters and numbers so that his teacher could check his work. He loved every minute of his school day. I recently watched a home video of his first day of school. I could hardly believe we actually had the courage to send him to a school where he was the only blind student and the only kid fluent in English! Thankfully, our mission school was using English textbooks, and Jesse’s teacher taught both in English and Tagalog (the basis of a standardized national language of the Philippines) making it possible for him to follow along with the lessons.   Years later, it didn’t take any genius on my part to real- ize that high school algebra could very possibly destroy my relationship with Jesse, now age fourteen. Algebra just wasn’t my forte. This was one of many times when I simply asked God to help me figure out another way. A short time later, a good friend of mine who happens to be an educator, came to me and offered to be Jesse’s math tutor for high school. This was an enormous answer to prayer! It worked beautifully, and Jesse excelled under her teaching. I could write a book on the many times God came through for us as we chose to step outside the norm in the education of our special needs student. 36 a pig in science cl ass. TRIAL AND ERROR Third, I would encourage parents not to fear the trial and error approach when helping your special needs child to succeed in school.   We returned to America in time to enroll Jesse into the sixth grade. We chose to send him to a small Christian school instead of the local public school. We felt that the benefit of a biblical worldview instruction outweighed the challenges we’d face getting him the services he needed.   Jesse was the first blind child to attend this school. Obvi- ously, funds were not available to acquire all the special services that may have been offered to us in a public school. Also, the Christian-based curriculum Jesse’s school used was not readily available in braille or audio. For the next seven years, we worked together with the principal and teachers in this wonderful school to give Jesse the best educational experience possible. I won’t pretend it was always easy or perfect. If something didn’t work, we simply scrapped that idea and began implementing another.   I put all my braille skills to use and brailled important study guides and tests for him. He utilized a small, handheld recorder for the classroom and reading assignments. This worked wonderfully. Reading textbooks onto this recorder for Jesse to listen to at his leisure became a family affair. My husband and I, Jesse’s grandmother, one of his cousins, and even his younger sisters made this happen. On most school