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by Martha M Jablow

Start by marking Cara, Growing with a Retarded Child as Want to Read . The book is a personal success storythe author admits to a "mother's pride"because Cara benefited from programs that gave her extensive practice in motor and other skills.
Start by marking Cara, Growing with a Retarded Child as Want to Read: Want to Read savin. ant to Read. Not all the parents' dealings with doctors and educators have been good, however. The Jablows frequently encountered stereotypes of how little potential Down's syndrome children have, yet they also faced bureaucratic Catch-22s over Cara's developmental successes, as when Cara's speech tested too close to age level for her to receive state-funded speech therapy.
Jablow, Martha Moraghan. Books for People with Print Disabilities. Internet Archive Books.
Despite the fact that Cara Jablow was born with Down's syndrome, formerly known as 'mongolism', she was reading before she was five. This book presents a personal success story in which the author admits to a 'mother's pride' because Cara benefited from programs that gave her extensive practice in motor and other skills.
Cara : Growing with a Retarded Child. By (author) Martha Moraghan Jablow.
Author: Cara, Growing With a Retarded Child, 1982.
The book is a personal success story the author admits to a 'mother's pride' because Cara benefited from programs that gave her extensive practice in motor and other skills. Author: Cara, Growing With a Retarded Child, 1982.
1Martha Moraghan Jablow is the author of, Cara, Growing With a Retarded Child (Temple University Press, 1982) and three other non-fiction books. The Child Who Never Grew. I. I HAVE BEEN A long time making up my mind to write this story. It is a true one, and that makes it hard to tell. Several reasons have helped me to reach the point this morning, after an hour or so of walking through the winter woods, when I have finally resolved that the time has come for the story to be told
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Find nearly any book by Martha Moraghan Jablow. Loving Your Child Is Not Enough. by Nancy Samalin, Martha Moraghan Jablow. ISBN 9780670813629 (978-0-670-81362-9) Hardcover, Viking Adult, 1987. Find signed collectible books: 'Loving Your Child Is Not Enough'.
Introduction by Martha M. Jablow1
Introduction by Martha M. Jablow1. THE CHILD WHO NEVER Grew was published first as an article in the Ladies Home Journal in May, 1950, and a year later in hardcover by The John Day Company. Why would anyone care to read a four-decade old book about a mentally retarded child who was born in 1920? Why would a publisher reissue such a book? Even with a Pulitzer and Nobel prize-winning author, a foreword by James Michener, and an attractive new cover, surely a book written more than forty years ago must be outdated. Outdated and Pearl Buck do not belong in the same sentence.
Mothers and fathers record dialogues between them and their small children and bring the transcripts to Samalin for analysis. Readers will laugh, perhaps nervously, at examples of familiar aggravations. In one case study, Chip starts an argument with his mother, demanding that she be the one to dress him. She loses patience; the battle escalates. Soon parent and tot are "discussing" on the same level: his.
Martha Moraghan Jablow. Are you sure you want to remove Cara, growing with a retarded child from your list?
Martha Moraghan Jablow. Cara, growing with a retarded child. Are you sure you want to remove Cara, growing with a retarded child from your list? Cara, growing with a retarded child. by Martha Moraghan Jablow. Published 1982 by Temple University Press in Philadelphia.
The book is a personal success storythe author admits to a "mother's pride"because Cara benefited from programs that gave her extensive practice in motor and other skills. Not all the parents' dealings with doctors and educators have been good, however. The Jablows frequently encountered stereotypes of how little potential Down's syndrome children have, yet they also faced bureaucratic Catch-22s over Cara's developmental successes, as when Cara's speech tested too close to age level for her to receive state-funded speech therapy.
There is a great deal of family dynamics here: how parents support each other in times of severe stress; how they break the news of a retarded baby to friends and doting grandparents; how their normal children relate to the retarded one.
There are, of course, many special difficulties in raising a retarded child, but the book also points out that raising a normal child isn't all that different. The many family photos vividly evoke this. Like other families, the Jablows celebrate, suffer, and act silly. For professionals and parents, Cara's school life is illustrated with photos, test results, and educators' comments on her development.