Anonymous wrote:Try a day camp and a daily reading tutor
Anonymous wrote:https://goodsensorylearning.com/pages/camps-for-dyslexia. Just cutting and copying below...
Camp/Summer Program Location
The Yale Center for Dyslexia and Creativity - Massachusetts
Camp Spring Creek - North Carolina
The Gow School Summer Program - New York
Landmark School Camp - Massachusetts
Ridgewood Learning Camp - New York
Brehm Summer Scenarios - Illinois
PRIDE Learning Center Reading Camp - California
Durango Mountain Camp - Colorado
Dunnabeck at Kildonan - Connecticut
Eagle Hill Summer Program - Massachusetts
Grand River Summer Academy - Ohio
Linden School Summer Program - Toronto, Ontario
Rocky Mountain Camp - Colorado
Horizon Academy Summer Programs - Kansas
Anonymous wrote:I know it’s not the same as sleepaway, Siena has a summer camp that combines academics and activities.
FWIW - OP, I have a DS with dysgraphia and a reading disorder that is not dyslexia, but probably due to underlying ADHD Inattentive and executive dysfunction. I sent him to sleep-away camp every summer for 4 weeks from age 7-16. Those 4 weeks were his brightest joy every year - he didn’t have to read, he didn’t have to think about doing something academic, his friends didn’t see him doing something daily that he was bad at. He had total control over what he was doing every day and he could pick the things he was good at and gave him joy. When he was older, he told me so.
Anonymous wrote:I know it’s not the same as sleepaway, Siena has a summer camp that combines academics and activities.
FWIW - OP, I have a DS with dysgraphia and a reading disorder that is not dyslexia, but probably due to underlying ADHD Inattentive and executive dysfunction. I sent him to sleep-away camp every summer for 4 weeks from age 7-16. Those 4 weeks were his brightest joy every year - he didn’t have to read, he didn’t have to think about doing something academic, his friends didn’t see him doing something daily that he was bad at. He had total control over what he was doing every day and he could pick the things he was good at and gave him joy. When he was older, he told me so.