Crystal Calhoun

Crystal Calhoun, M.S.
Founder, Educational Advocate, Certified School Psychologist & Behavior Analyst


Union City, GA 30291 (Location)
404-692-4334 (Office)


heartandsouladvocacy@gmail.com (Email)

http://www.heartandsouladvocacy.com/ (Website)

http://www.facebook.com/heartandsouladvocacy (Facebook)

https://twitter.com/HartSolAdvocate (Twitter)

http://www.linkedin.com/in/crystalcalhoun (Linkedin)

"We have your child's best interest at HEART & SOUL"



Wednesday, November 6, 2013

DOES RETAINING A STUDENT REALLY HELP? NO!!!


 
 
I believe it hurts rather than helps. Retention is a devastating blow to a child’s self-esteem. It makes a child feel like a failure without any hope. Students I’ve known who were retained tended to give up on school, lose motivation, fall into depression and perform worst academically than the year before. It is shameful to be left back when all of your peers are moving forward; because of this, many students endure constant ridicule. These kids are usually the oldest and tallest in their class and/or grade level, which may also cause them to stick out like a sore thumb and feel embarrassed. After being retained, some students become behavior problems at school and home. Boys in particular exhibit anger, agitation and hostility, which are signs of depression in children and adolescents. These students feel isolated and lonely although they may have friends, their friends can’t relate to what they’re going through. The emotional well-being of a child has a significant impact on their school performance. Just like adults, what we think and feel influence our behaviors.

When a school or educator recognizes a child’s struggles, interventions and support should be provided to the child immediately. This is usually offered by the teacher first by way of afterschool tutoring, differentiated instruction strategies, and suggested online resources that may be used at home. If there is little to no improvement at that point, the student should be referred by the teacher to the school’s student support team (SST), where other interventions are implemented and the student’s progress is monitored. After several different interventions have been tried and the child still has not made adequate progress, the student should then be referred to the school psychologist for a psycho-educational evaluation to determine if the student has a disability that requires special education services through the development of an IEP or a 504 Plan. More than likely, this is frequently the case.

Unfortunately, this is not what usually happens to struggling students. It’s sad to say that many inner city students in particular are often retained more than once as a first line of defense, although it may be clear as day to an educator that the student’s academic struggles are beyond their control. This has to stop! Students who have lived this reality sometimes become so discouraged and self-defeated that they drop out of school, become a teenage parent who now has to depend on the government for assistance, turn to drugs and alcohol to cope with their failures, and develop mental health disorders from prolonged feelings of stress, anxiety and/or depression that go untreated; as well as get involved with gangs in order to feel a sense of belonging and respect, have difficulty finding a decent paying job, become homeless, hustle for money in the streets, live a life a crime, and end up in jail or the grave. Who knew that retaining a student could lead to all of this?
 
If your child is facing retention, Crystal Calhoun, Educational Advocate and Founder of Heart & Soul Psycho-Educational Advocacy Services, Inc. may be able to help save your child from this self-defeating reality. Call 404-692-4334 or view our website at www.HeartAndSoulAdvocacy.com for more information.
 
We have your child's best interest at HEART & SOUL...

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

HEART & SOUL ADVOCACY HAS CONTRACTED SERVICES WITH STANDARD OF CARE

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






Heart & Soul Psycho-Educational Advocacy Services, Inc.
 
 
 
 is now contracting services with 



 
 
 
Standard of Care Psychological Services, LLC.


















www.StandardofCarePsychological.com







 
 
 
 
 
 
 
As a result, Crystal now offers the following additional services:
  • Counseling (children & families)
  • Psychological Evaluations
  • Psycho-Educational Evaluations​
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Call for more information or to schedule an appointment with Crystal at
  
 
 
 
 
 Standard of Care Psychological Services, LLC.
 
 
 
 
678-973-2491
 
 
 
 
3915 Cascade Road, Suite T-90, Atlanta, GA 30331
 
 
 
 
 
 
The following insurance is accepted for Testing and Therapy​:
  • Aetna
  • Amerigroup
  • Blue Cross/Blue Shield
  • Cenpatico
  • Coventry
  • Medicaid
  • Medicare
  • Tricare
  • Wellcare

















 
For information about Educational Advocacy Services call Crystal at
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Heart & Soul Psycho-Educational Advocacy Services, Inc.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
404-692-4334
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
P.O. Box 52, Union City, GA 30291


Wednesday, June 12, 2013

GOD IS MY SOURCE!

I was a school psychologist for 7 years and loved it until I moved to Georgia where I witnessed corruption within the school system against students, parents and educators, including myself. I began to hate my job, cry/pray over situations ...where students w/special needs were being neglected from receiving needed support, parents taken advantage of due to their lack of knowledge and educators like myself targeted for attack when they speak out against the unethical and illegal practices that plagued the school system. I felt trapped, physically sick, stressed out, overwhelmed with a heavy workload, and of no value to anyone who needed my help (including my own children). My job was destroying my spirit until God revealed my purpose through all the adversity I went through while repeatedly telling me in a still small voice, "that job is not your source, I am." Although I was riddled with fear, I resigned and started my own biz as an educational advocate where I now use my knowledge, training and experience to help parents of students with disabilities or at-risk for failure obtain the necessary support services from school. I now earn significantly less, my income is unstable, and I provide free services to many people who can't afford my fees, but I've learned to trust God for my needs to be met and he has never let me down. In reality I should have lost my home, car and been living on the streets with my children, but my faith in God is more powerful than anything I see, hear or feel on this earth. Nothing I've done makes logical sense to most people in the world, but it makes faith. God is my source, with him all things are possible!

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

You Are Predestined by God.

God is the designer of your destiny. No one else can dance your dance, sing your song, or write your story. You’re an original; one of a kind; his master piece in the making. Take comfort in knowing, the work he has begun in you, he will definitely complete. So stop looking at your circumstances and place your eyes on his anointed word. What you see in the world may deceive you into believing a lie, but his word is always true and real. Walk by faith and not by sight!

Sunday, May 5, 2013

DANCE 4 A CHANCE WITH HEART & SOUL ADVOCACY

Have you ever wanted to be in a FLASH MOB DANCE VIDEO? If so, here's your chance!

FLASH MOB DANCE VIDEO!
FRIDAY 5/17/13 @ 7PM in Union City, GA 30291

We are looking for dancers to participate (ladies ages 18-60 & kids ages 10-17).
Dance Practice: 6:30-8pm (Wed 5/8, Fri 5/10, Mon 5/13, Wed 5/15) at Ronald Bridges Park 5285 Lakeside Drive, Union City, GA 30291.

It's for a good cause!
 
For more info view & "Like" our page at https://www.facebook.com/heartandsouladvocacy or call Crystal Calhoun at 404-692-4334.
 
Peace & Blessings,
Crystal Calhoun, Founder
Heart & Soul Advocacy
www.HeartAndSoulAdvocacy.com

Sunday, April 7, 2013

A GEORGIA EDUCATOR’S CRY FOR HELP!


In Georgia, nobody has much respect for educators anymore! Many people think they are all fraudulent and out to harm children, when that is the furthest thing from the truth. No educator gets into this selfless field of work with the intent to do harm--this is a helping profession. Unfortunately, educators in Georgia have been placed in the middle of a crooked system as the scapegoat. Upper-level administrators give orders to make things happen by any means necessary or suffer the consequences of their raft. Oh, but they are not stupid by no means. These orders are never put in writing as this may be incriminating, yet it is implied with the fullest of understanding. Those who don’t adhere to these orders, will and have been used as an example of a hard lesson learned that no educator wishes to experience.

Georgia has a system that is old and outdated, but in this state change is like a foreign language that nobody wants to learn. When observed, you will find an immense lack of efficiency and waste of manpower. Here in the Metro-Atlanta area there is a wealth of knowledge from educators that have moved here from many different states that are far more progressive like California, New York and Florida. However, these progressive educators have little to no influence over the old ways of the south. The process and procedures for completing tasks in Georgia school systems can be equated to taking a long walk around the corner, when it’s easier and more productive to just walk across the street. If you inquire as to why things operate in such a manner, you will find there is no rhyme to the reason or method to the madness. Things function the way they do simply because it’s always been done this way.

Because of decade old practices like this, educators are so bombarded with paperwork that they spend more time documenting what’s not happening than actually making something happen, and are overwhelmed with heavy workloads that they are under compensated for. In addition, educators lack resources, tools, training, support and manpower needed to be effective in their jobs. The system forces educators to prove on paper that they are doing something for students they simply can’t do. The pressure for educators has become unbearable, as they are blamed for everything wrong with the school system. Yet they are not the ones who make the rules, layoff teachers and support staff, increase class sizes, create additional paperwork that prevents them from actually doing the work of teaching students, reduce school funding, eliminate training programs for educators and take away extra-curricular activities that motivate students to attend school and strive for better grades.

The problem is a system problem that is hurting educators just as much as students. What happens at the top of an organization trickles down. Therefore, when educators don’t feel supported, appreciated, compensated and equipped for the job they are facing on a daily basis, they become angry, frustrated and yes—eventually lose hope. How can a hopeless educator instill hope in a student? How can an educator who has lost their desire to teach inspire students to want to learn? Educators are not failing students here in Georgia, the school system is failing both students and educators. Truthfully, they are in the same boat--victims of the same dysfunctional system. No Child Left Behind, is doing just that—leaving students behind.

What all of this really comes down to is the basic principle--survival of the fittest. You either sink or swim in this system. To sink is to be righteous but to swim is to become corrupt. If I as an educator stand up for what is right, will anybody stand with me? The answer is no! Everybody is out for themselves and too afraid to speak the truth because history has taught us here in Georgia that those who stand up get knocked down, stomped to the ground, and squashed like a worthless bug. There are no unions for educators here in Georgia, but what we do have are associations that we pay to join for counsel and legal defense, if necessary. However, there is just one problem with these associations, many top level school administrators are board members of these associations. So tell me, how can an educator receive fair impartial representation from an organization that is run by the very same individuals in positions of power within the school systems they are going up against? There is no real justice in this scenario any way you look at it.  Educators in Georgia are crying out for help, I am giving them a voice—so listen.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

ARM YOURSELF FOR YOUR CHILD’S NEXT IEP MEETING!


  • MAKE ALL REQUESTS TO SCHOOL OFFICIALS IN WRITING W/A COPY FOR YOURSELF (i.e., sending letters via email allows you to conveniently notify all involved parties and maintain a copy for your own records; there is usually a timeline educator’s must adhere to when responding to certain requests related to special education services and IEP’s; the date your email was sent starts the clock ticking and serves as proof of school compliance or violation of legal timeline).
  • REQUEST A DRAFT COPY OF YOUR CHILD’S IEP FOR YOUR UPCOMING MEETING (i.e., ensure that you receive a copy at least 1-week before your meeting date; this allows you the ability to review what services the school is proposing in advance so you can be on equal footing with school meeting participants; you can determine what you agree and disagree with and suggest changes).
  • REQUEST A COPY OF YOUR CHILD’S PSYCHO-EDUCATIONAL EVALUATION REPORT IF APPLICABLE (i.e., this is a comprehensive evaluation that is required once every 3-years; you should understand the meaning of your child’s assessment scores, evaluation results and strengths & weaknesses from reviewing this report; having access to this report in advance helps you have time to digest the findings).
  • MAINTAIN COPIES OF ALL SPECIAL EDUCATION PROGRESS REPORTS (i.e., these reports are usually accompanied by your child’s school report card; this will help you know whether the services your child is receiving are effective over time and determine if a different service or intervention should be implemented).
  • MAINTAIN A COPY OF YOUR CHILD’S PREVIOUS IEP (i.e., use this document as a reference point to determine your child’s progress made from his/her IEP goals).
  • FIND SOMEONE KNOWLEDGEABLE TO REVIEW AND EXPLAIN MEETING DOCUMENTS FOR YOUR OWN CLARITY PRIOR TO YOUR UPCOMING MEETING IF NECESSARY (i.e., preferably someone outside of your child’s school such as an Advocate or Special Education Attorney).
  • RESEARCH INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR CHILD’S DISABILITY ON THE INTERNET (i.e., the internet can help you understand the nature of your child’s disability, how you and educator’s can help your child and what services and support should be made available to your child at school).
  • MAKE A LIST OF ALL YOUR QUESTIONS AND CONCERNS THAT NEED TO BE ADDRESSED AT YOUR UPCOMING MEETING (i.e., this list will serve as a useful reminder of the issues most important to you, as it is easy to become distracted by other matters brought up by teachers and forget your own agenda).
  • ENSURE THE IEP MEETING MINUTES ARE READ TO YOU AT THE MEETING (i.e., this allows you the opportunity to confirm that your important requests, comments and/or concerns are documented and ask staff to remove information that is not accurate and/or misleading).
  • REQUEST TO TAKE HOME DOCUMENTS PRIOR TO SIGNING CONSENT (i.e., don’t be pressured into signing anything you don’t understand just because school staff may want to wrap up your child’s case at the meeting; it is your right and very  important that you review and seek guidance if necessary before giving consent to matters concerning your child).
  • NEVER LEAVE THE IEP MEETING WITHOUT COPIES OF ALL DOCUMENTS (i.e., sometimes educators will ask if they can send papers home the next day or week so they can complete and copy it later in the interest of time; you may risk not receiving the documents as promised, and/or finding some information in the documents to be different than what was agreed upon at the meeting/left out entirely).
  • SEEK AND FIND A LOCAL ADVOCATE IN YOUR AREA WHO CAN ATTEND YOUR CHILD’S IEP MEETING WITH YOU (i.e., an advocate can speak on your behalf, protect your rights, ensure that your child receives appropriate services and support, and help you become a fully informed meeting participant with an equal voice in decisions concerning your child’s education).
  • ALERT THE SCHOOL THAT YOU WILL BE ACCOMPANIED BY AN ADVOCATE (i.e., knowing an advocate will be present at an IEP meeting causes staff to handle your child’s case appropriately and with integrity; educator’s will usually invite upper level school administrators to provide support and expert knowledge regarding your child’s case; administrators monitor the services provided to your child by educators more closely to ensure that policies and procedures are followed).
Remember, at Heart & Soul Advocacy we have your child’s best interest at HEART & SOUL…