Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Auburn has small classes and is focused on HFA kids. Although they don't specialize in LD support, they would be able to be very flexible in curriculum and approach. It may or may not be a perfect fit but is worth a look.
my son has both moderate ASD and a language-based disability. We were at Auburn and I can tell you definitively they can not support this profile and (at least in our DS's classroom), they did not modify the curriculum to meet his needs and I don't believe their curriculum specialist is skilled enough to understand how to modify instruction. And no SLP there at all, just an SEL person but that isn't enough. The right teacher there could collaborate with a private provider (maybe?) but that's a lot of money to spend and you still might not get the right support.
Our kid is now back to special ed classroom in public and though he's not really well supported there, we are not paying private school money for something that isn't meeting his needs. For now this plus therapy and tutoring is better than what Auburn can offer.
How old is your child?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Auburn has small classes and is focused on HFA kids. Although they don't specialize in LD support, they would be able to be very flexible in curriculum and approach. It may or may not be a perfect fit but is worth a look.
my son has both moderate ASD and a language-based disability. We were at Auburn and I can tell you definitively they can not support this profile and (at least in our DS's classroom), they did not modify the curriculum to meet his needs and I don't believe their curriculum specialist is skilled enough to understand how to modify instruction. And no SLP there at all, just an SEL person but that isn't enough. The right teacher there could collaborate with a private provider (maybe?) but that's a lot of money to spend and you still might not get the right support.
Our kid is now back to special ed classroom in public and though he's not really well supported there, we are not paying private school money for something that isn't meeting his needs. For now this plus therapy and tutoring is better than what Auburn can offer.
How old is your child?
Anonymous wrote:Auburn has small classes and is focused on HFA kids. Although they don't specialize in LD support, they would be able to be very flexible in curriculum and approach. It may or may not be a perfect fit but is worth a look.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are you and what grade level? Are there any behavioral issues in play?
No behavioral issues. We are in Chevy Chase. This would be for next year, 3rd grade…. Although we were contemplating repeating 2nd.
Anonymous wrote:Auburn has small classes and is focused on HFA kids. Although they don't specialize in LD support, they would be able to be very flexible in curriculum and approach. It may or may not be a perfect fit but is worth a look.
Anonymous wrote:I think Diener is too much for a mild or high functioning autistic kid. McLean would be a good fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are you and what grade level? Are there any behavioral issues in play?
No behavioral issues. We are in Chevy Chase. This would be for next year, 3rd grade…. Although we were contemplating repeating 2nd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That profile is really difficult to find a private school. The dyslexia-specific/language based disability schools won't take autistic students and the autism schools don't have the expertise for learning disabilities. We did a combination of public school (with an IEP that targeted both) and private schools that supported her social needs and outside tutoring for the learning disability.
12:11 here and I agree. You kind of have to figure out whether you want to focus on support for ASD or support for LD and pick a school based on the primary focus with outside support to compensate. From what I've seen, schools for kids with ASD will usually have more latitude for behavioral issues so long as they're mild and mitigated by the ASD supports in school whereas schools for kids with LD won't touch behavioral issues with a 10 foot pole even if they're motivated by the learning environment. Our DS did public school (placement in a non-categorical room) with outside tutoring for dyslexia because we couldn't afford both a SN school and tutoring and an LD school wasn't a good placement because of sensory dysregulation issues.
Anonymous wrote:Where are you and what grade level? Are there any behavioral issues in play?
Anonymous wrote:That profile is really difficult to find a private school. The dyslexia-specific/language based disability schools won't take autistic students and the autism schools don't have the expertise for learning disabilities. We did a combination of public school (with an IEP that targeted both) and private schools that supported her social needs and outside tutoring for the learning disability.