Good lord you show up on every single thread and I truly don’t understand your motivation in posting this nonsense. I have a kid who got in unprepped, first round, at a high SES school w no diagnosis and I don’t see any peers who got in on appeal as less than. Your comments are offensive to 2E kids. Additional testing/diagnosis is not a backdoor. |
NP, that's exactly what it is when it is limited to a subset with the knowledge and means to get the diagnosis. |
I have one gen ed kid and one committee placed kid. What you wrote is why test scores matter. Our neighborhood base school has a very high SOL pass and pass advanced rate. I think our child there is getting a really good education. Other near by schools have much lower scores. There are parents at the center who wanted to keep their kids local, but moved because of what you and PP describe. |
That’s not what backdoor means. Now you’re talking about equity, which is something different. |
You are leaving out "and actually have an LD or ADHD or disability that is diagnosed by a professional through testing." |
Sure, but getting a 2E diagnosis requires knowledge and resources. |
Sure, but appealing is just a sheet of paper. You don't need a new 2E diagnosis for that. |
I have no idea what point you’re trying to make. Are you arguing that kids with disabilities shouldn’t receive any supports bc these children can only access a diagnosis with parents who are knowledgeable and have resources? |
Not really. Parents can request that the school evaluate their child if the parents are concerned about possible learning issues or ADHD or any type of issue. They contact the school requesting an evaluation. The school has a certain amount of time to call a meeting to discuss the parents concern and then to conduct testing. The process at the school can be time consuming and may not find that there is an issue. Some parents prefer to use private screenings because they provide more direct information to the parents and the parents don't trust the school to conduct the proper testing because the school may not want to provide services for the child. That said, if parents bring a private evaluation to the table, the school will still require that the child be tested by the school. If there are different results then an IEP meeting can be very interesting. ADHD can actually be diagnosed by a Pediatrician and doesn't require specialized testing. Many parents start with their Pediatrician and may move to a specialist dependent on their kids needs. But any parent can request their child be evaluated and kick off the process. Our son was tested by the school and ended up with an IEP. We didn't use any type of private resources. A WiSC, because you want your child to be admitted to AAP, is not something that you can request through the school. That is totally separate from the process of diagnosing a learning issue. |
PP actually believes that you can just waltz into a Psychologist's office, slip them a little extra money for a falsified WISC, and then guarantee AAP admissions with that WISC. They refuse to believe that the psychologist is not going to risk their license by falsifying test results, and that the AAP appeals committee largely is ignoring the WISC these days. |
It’s mostly GBRS if your kid has stellar GBRS and borderline scores… in. 99th percentile score and bad GBRS… out. So hope and pray you get a good mesh with the second grade teacher, otherwise just keep trying if that’s your thing. |
The closest thing there is to a "back door" is being a volunteer or PTA mom, sucking up to the principal, AART, and 2nd grade teacher, and giving nice x-mas gifts. GBRS and work samples are much more important than test scores, and having the school administration view you and your child positively will do a lot more to help your child get into AAP than psychologists and WISCs. The high GBRS + good work samples kids get in on the first round, though, so it doesn't fit PP's narrative that the handful of appeals kids are less worthy than "first round" kids. |
100% this. The person constantly posting about getting in through the “backdoor” in reference to appealing with additional testing data needs to give it up. |
Couldn’t agree more. |
The centers have a mix of Gen Ed and AAP classes but the the classes that are AAP have mostly AAP kids and sometimes some principal placed kids. Some schools offer local level IV services which is AAP. Check the school to see. Typically, these are the kids that have a higher aptitude for math but can have behavioral issues. One year my kid had a classmate that destroyed a teachers property and threatened the teacher- and that child had to move away. This year my kid has a very chatty child that is disruptive. I will say my experience pre Covid for my kids and après Covid have been overall positive but my friends with kids in Gen Ed have not experienced the same thing. Things are normalizing though very quickly. As for moving from Md to Fairfax: don’t do it for the schools. All schools are dealing with craziness and AAP doesn’t mean you’re going to have less crazy. It’s just different crazy. |