I’m sure they do. I think that’s pretty much the core group that’s there. |
| What about KTS students? I have a current 8th grade girl and we are considering KTS. What is the current 8th grade class like at KTS's middle school? |
The individual classes are so tiny at KTS that it's really not fair to talk about them in an online forum. The kids are wonderful and shine each in their own ways. If you tour, you will see the whole class. |
This is true for all of these schools. The classes and schools are very small. |
| Before you get your heart set on any of them, call their admissions director to make sure they have room in these grades for next year. I don’t know about Diener but Ivymount and KTS are very tight for spaces. |
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What other schools would you look at for an elementary student (ideally with a middle school option) with minimal behavior issues? Has low frustration with school work, transition, but doesn't act out at school. In upper elementary 2 years behind in most academics standards, very good reading compression though (when read to or multimedia performance closer to grade level), capable or improvement and learning but at a slower pace likely will stay a year or more behind depending on reading progress.
So, we don't want to be in a school with major behavior issues constantly or for DC to shove our kid in a classroom without any real academics. Lost here. |
If you are looking for public funding you need to cross Diener off your list. They don’t accept kids with public funding. |
What's the diagnosis? If autism, your choices are limited. If SLD, there are many choices. |
If you are depending on public funding. Your choices are really limited. |
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https://osse.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/osse/publication/attachments/Nonpublic%20Approved%20List%20DAY%20121222.pdf Private pay just Google and click admissions |
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I have a student at Ivymount and we were also accepted to KTS. Both are excellent schools and a spot in either would be a huge bump for your child. A few other posters have offered advice, but here's a bit based on my experience -
1. KTS fills classes by grade while Ivymount fills based on level. At the beginning of this year, KTS had an open seat in 5th and we were offered it. However, Ivymount couldn't tell us if they had space until the reviewed then entire package to see if they could accommodate him in a setting of kids at his educational level. Kids in his classroom range in age from 10-12ish. Because Ivymount tailors things so aggressively, it's harder to know if they have spots available. 2. Neither school will provide a tour unless you have public funding or declare intent to pay on your own. However, I found the admissions directors to be extremely kind and flexible and they acted very fast once we secured the placement. 3. Both can cater to a child with ASD/ADHD, but Ivymount is very much an autism school. It is very structured and integrates ABA throughout the curriculum. The place runs like clockwork. KTS is also very well-run, but doesn't have the same methodical feel IMHO. Depends on what your kid needs. Mine loves his very tightly-managed day. 4. Neither school can handle significant behavior issues, so don't present any in the application package. The students in my son's class at Ivymount are better behaved than those in his general education classroom in public school. |
I would look at tutors or a more self-paced environment like Fusion. You're not getting a private placement with that profile. |
Another Ivymount parent here. Depending on the program, Ivymount can handle behaviors. They are amazing at reducing them in a gentle way that works. |
| OP here...thank you for the responses regarding Ivymount! |