Plus in DMV - big state units do reportedly admit CC students in junior year in large numbers. It also saves a ton of money. MCCC is excellent for starters. |
I want to know if all these CC boosters sent their own kids to CC first. |
We did not for older CC with ADHD but certainly will consider for younger DC with ADHD. I am not a booster per se but observed many CC students transferred into DC’s big public in junior year and did really well, in addition to saving a ton of money. |
NP here. Any things you wish you knew/did when your kid selected the study abroad program? My kid is at a SLAC and appears to be doing okay. They want to study abroad and I am worried about the challenges. |
I require all of my accommodated students to meet with me to make sure that I understand what they really need (lots of times, for example, the boilerplate accommodations letter names notetaking technology that the student doesn't actually use). I also ask them if any small tweaks in the way that I do things could be helpful for them and therefore for all students. I've gotten some great little tips over the years about how to communicate homework and how to prioritize PowerPoints. I give out slides, handouts, and study guides; I make myself endlessly available for meetings, and I sign agreements to record my class even when I feel uncomfortable about it, because students deserve to have what they need. But what worries me is that pretty much all of my students, accommodated or not, don't seem to know what to do with all of these resources. We are pouring information into them in multiple different formats and situations (add in a textbook and supplemental readings as well, depending on the topic and level), but in order to learn they have to a) participate in the whole reading and notetaking process and b) integrate the knowledge. Neither the accommodated students nor the unaccommodated ones are arriving at college with those capacities, and we don't teach these things in our courses. They're a step above "study skills" and a step below the actual learning, but they are essential. BTW, on the lecture notes, our school has potential accommodations for transcription software, including some pretty exciting new tools that link multiple media at the same time. Maybe DC could get something like that instead. I can promise you on an anecdotal level that no one would want my lecture notes. They contain way more information than I actually present in class (me wanting to be ready to answer questions, me not having cut my material down enough) and would really intimidate and confuse a student (not the difficulty level so much as the density and overabundance of detail). I redact and summarize as I talk, rather than reading, so even following my notes in real time would be very hard for anyone but me. |
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If your ADHD student is willing to advocate for their accomodations, I think they'll do fine anywhere. It's the kid who won't that ends up in trouble.
Also, I strongly suggest EF coach to work with them, not a parent. Parent can't go with them to college, EF coach can (and the wean off). |