Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was put off by them during an initial introductory call. I was admonished for sharing a few details about my child's situation and speaking approx 1 min longer than the 15 mins permitted by their policy. Shame on me for thinking the details should be important to them, and that the exchange of information was relevant to ensuring they would be a good match and my money would be well spent. My motto is "if you're too big for the small things, then you're too small for the big things." Special needs families have enough challenges to deal with. I don't need Weinfield's team to pile on.
Are there other educational consultants anyone can recommend who you've had a positive experience?
We liked Liz Capone. She was very responsive even coaching me that if the school attempted to pull me out of a kiss and ride line for an impromptu meeting, I should call her immediately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was put off by them during an initial introductory call. I was admonished for sharing a few details about my child's situation and speaking approx 1 min longer than the 15 mins permitted by their policy. Shame on me for thinking the details should be important to them, and that the exchange of information was relevant to ensuring they would be a good match and my money would be well spent. My motto is "if you're too big for the small things, then you're too small for the big things." Special needs families have enough challenges to deal with. I don't need Weinfield's team to pile on.
Are there other educational consultants anyone can recommend who you've had a positive experience?
Anonymous wrote:I was put off by them during an initial introductory call. I was admonished for sharing a few details about my child's situation and speaking approx 1 min longer than the 15 mins permitted by their policy. Shame on me for thinking the details should be important to them, and that the exchange of information was relevant to ensuring they would be a good match and my money would be well spent. My motto is "if you're too big for the small things, then you're too small for the big things." Special needs families have enough challenges to deal with. I don't need Weinfield's team to pile on.
Ours did as well. I assumed something personal was up - but they needed to share that they were unavailable as opposed to commit and deliver a flawed document that I needed to edit because they clearly cut and paste content.Anonymous wrote:I know people who had great experiences, but I personally had the same experience as you, OP. I think it depends on which advocate you're working with. Ours just fell off the face of the earth at times.
Anonymous wrote:We have started working with them in the summer, and I don't know if we just got a super busy staffer, but emails don't get returned within 2 days, even with simple questions. We are not a very prolific client (at least not yet), so maybe those with a ton of hours and lawsuits in the picture are attended to better, but I just want to get a sanity check - is this a par for the course when working with this shop? The kiddo is 4, with HF ASD in MCPS.
PS: If you switched to an advocate who is better and more attentive - please recommend yours.
Anonymous wrote:We have started working with them in the summer, and I don't know if we just got a super busy staffer, but emails don't get returned within 2 days, even with simple questions. We are not a very prolific client (at least not yet), so maybe those with a ton of hours and lawsuits in the picture are attended to better, but I just want to get a sanity check - is this a par for the course when working with this shop? The kiddo is 4, with HF ASD in MCPS.
PS: If you switched to an advocate who is better and more attentive - please recommend yours.