Anonymous wrote:Also did not think the eval we did 4 years ago at Mindwell was good. We went back to a different practice this year and much happier with the report and process. I felt like Mindwell did not care to learn about my child.
Anonymous wrote:I can't speak to CAAT, but we used Dr. Varia at Mindwell for our initial diagnosis of dyslexia/dyscal/dysgraph about 4 years ago. Report was OK. She didn't give us a ton of school/Assistive tech recommendations. Plus she left out a HUGE section asking for math accommodations (e.g., use of calculator). We asked for her to put something in. She was just OK. Her office was nice an open.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We worked with Dr. Kraper at CAAT last summer. She was good, patient and kind to our DD (6 at the time). It did take a couple months to get our full neuropsych assessment but she provided an executive summary and we moved on her initial suggestions. She also mentioned willingness to be part of our IEP committees and allowed us to have a follow up meeting about a year out to discuss our progress and provide confirmation/guidance.
Awesome! Thanks for the feedback! Did you feel like her assessment was thorough and accurate? Did she really seem to "get" your child? Were the suggested interventions helpful? We are less on the learning disability path with our DS who is 7 (doing fine in school so far, testing on grade level, and probably wouldn't qualify for an IEP right now even if we tried). Our issues are more behavioral.
We are seeking the evaluation/diagnosis somewhat preemptively - to better understand him, and to know what we can do at home or in private therapy settings to offer more support. Although there are probably some 504 school accommodations that could be helpful right now. DS is somewhat complex because he doesn't neatly fit into any boxes and works really hard to effectively mask at school. ADHD, anxiety, Autism (or all of the above) have been suggested, but none of them seem like the "perfect" fit. We want to work with a psych who will keep an open mind and take a wholistic approach.
Good question as we are also slated to work with her in the coming months...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We worked with Dr. Kraper at CAAT last summer. She was good, patient and kind to our DD (6 at the time). It did take a couple months to get our full neuropsych assessment but she provided an executive summary and we moved on her initial suggestions. She also mentioned willingness to be part of our IEP committees and allowed us to have a follow up meeting about a year out to discuss our progress and provide confirmation/guidance.
Awesome! Thanks for the feedback! Did you feel like her assessment was thorough and accurate? Did she really seem to "get" your child? Were the suggested interventions helpful? We are less on the learning disability path with our DS who is 7 (doing fine in school so far, testing on grade level, and probably wouldn't qualify for an IEP right now even if we tried). Our issues are more behavioral.
We are seeking the evaluation/diagnosis somewhat preemptively - to better understand him, and to know what we can do at home or in private therapy settings to offer more support. Although there are probably some 504 school accommodations that could be helpful right now. DS is somewhat complex because he doesn't neatly fit into any boxes and works really hard to effectively mask at school. ADHD, anxiety, Autism (or all of the above) have been suggested, but none of them seem like the "perfect" fit. We want to work with a psych who will keep an open mind and take a wholistic approach.
A private neuropsych is a big waste of $$ and time just for behavioral issues at that age. Spend the money on a child psychologist trained in empirical behavioral methods like PCIT.
Nobody asked how to save money or what to do instead. OP wanted feedback on 2 practices.
OP, in CAAT, can you get Dr. Pat Ullanet? I think she is the most senior neuropsychologist for early and elementary age (other than the owner, Dr. Black).
Yes CAAT will gladly take OP's money and provide little of value. That's for sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We worked with Dr. Kraper at CAAT last summer. She was good, patient and kind to our DD (6 at the time). It did take a couple months to get our full neuropsych assessment but she provided an executive summary and we moved on her initial suggestions. She also mentioned willingness to be part of our IEP committees and allowed us to have a follow up meeting about a year out to discuss our progress and provide confirmation/guidance.
Awesome! Thanks for the feedback! Did you feel like her assessment was thorough and accurate? Did she really seem to "get" your child? Were the suggested interventions helpful? We are less on the learning disability path with our DS who is 7 (doing fine in school so far, testing on grade level, and probably wouldn't qualify for an IEP right now even if we tried). Our issues are more behavioral.
We are seeking the evaluation/diagnosis somewhat preemptively - to better understand him, and to know what we can do at home or in private therapy settings to offer more support. Although there are probably some 504 school accommodations that could be helpful right now. DS is somewhat complex because he doesn't neatly fit into any boxes and works really hard to effectively mask at school. ADHD, anxiety, Autism (or all of the above) have been suggested, but none of them seem like the "perfect" fit. We want to work with a psych who will keep an open mind and take a wholistic approach.
A private neuropsych is a big waste of $$ and time just for behavioral issues at that age. Spend the money on a child psychologist trained in empirical behavioral methods like PCIT.
Nobody asked how to save money or what to do instead. OP wanted feedback on 2 practices.
OP, in CAAT, can you get Dr. Pat Ullanet? I think she is the most senior neuropsychologist for early and elementary age (other than the owner, Dr. Black).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We worked with Dr. Kraper at CAAT last summer. She was good, patient and kind to our DD (6 at the time). It did take a couple months to get our full neuropsych assessment but she provided an executive summary and we moved on her initial suggestions. She also mentioned willingness to be part of our IEP committees and allowed us to have a follow up meeting about a year out to discuss our progress and provide confirmation/guidance.
Awesome! Thanks for the feedback! Did you feel like her assessment was thorough and accurate? Did she really seem to "get" your child? Were the suggested interventions helpful? We are less on the learning disability path with our DS who is 7 (doing fine in school so far, testing on grade level, and probably wouldn't qualify for an IEP right now even if we tried). Our issues are more behavioral.
We are seeking the evaluation/diagnosis somewhat preemptively - to better understand him, and to know what we can do at home or in private therapy settings to offer more support. Although there are probably some 504 school accommodations that could be helpful right now. DS is somewhat complex because he doesn't neatly fit into any boxes and works really hard to effectively mask at school. ADHD, anxiety, Autism (or all of the above) have been suggested, but none of them seem like the "perfect" fit. We want to work with a psych who will keep an open mind and take a wholistic approach.
A private neuropsych is a big waste of $$ and time just for behavioral issues at that age. Spend the money on a child psychologist trained in empirical behavioral methods like PCIT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We worked with Dr. Kraper at CAAT last summer. She was good, patient and kind to our DD (6 at the time). It did take a couple months to get our full neuropsych assessment but she provided an executive summary and we moved on her initial suggestions. She also mentioned willingness to be part of our IEP committees and allowed us to have a follow up meeting about a year out to discuss our progress and provide confirmation/guidance.
Awesome! Thanks for the feedback! Did you feel like her assessment was thorough and accurate? Did she really seem to "get" your child? Were the suggested interventions helpful? We are less on the learning disability path with our DS who is 7 (doing fine in school so far, testing on grade level, and probably wouldn't qualify for an IEP right now even if we tried). Our issues are more behavioral.
We are seeking the evaluation/diagnosis somewhat preemptively - to better understand him, and to know what we can do at home or in private therapy settings to offer more support. Although there are probably some 504 school accommodations that could be helpful right now. DS is somewhat complex because he doesn't neatly fit into any boxes and works really hard to effectively mask at school. ADHD, anxiety, Autism (or all of the above) have been suggested, but none of them seem like the "perfect" fit. We want to work with a psych who will keep an open mind and take a wholistic approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We worked with Dr. Kraper at CAAT last summer. She was good, patient and kind to our DD (6 at the time). It did take a couple months to get our full neuropsych assessment but she provided an executive summary and we moved on her initial suggestions. She also mentioned willingness to be part of our IEP committees and allowed us to have a follow up meeting about a year out to discuss our progress and provide confirmation/guidance.
Awesome! Thanks for the feedback! Did you feel like her assessment was thorough and accurate? Did she really seem to "get" your child? Were the suggested interventions helpful? We are less on the learning disability path with our DS who is 7 (doing fine in school so far, testing on grade level, and probably wouldn't qualify for an IEP right now even if we tried). Our issues are more behavioral.
We are seeking the evaluation/diagnosis somewhat preemptively - to better understand him, and to know what we can do at home or in private therapy settings to offer more support. Although there are probably some 504 school accommodations that could be helpful right now. DS is somewhat complex because he doesn't neatly fit into any boxes and works really hard to effectively mask at school. ADHD, anxiety, Autism (or all of the above) have been suggested, but none of them seem like the "perfect" fit. We want to work with a psych who will keep an open mind and take a wholistic approach.
Anonymous wrote:We worked with Dr. Kraper at CAAT last summer. She was good, patient and kind to our DD (6 at the time). It did take a couple months to get our full neuropsych assessment but she provided an executive summary and we moved on her initial suggestions. She also mentioned willingness to be part of our IEP committees and allowed us to have a follow up meeting about a year out to discuss our progress and provide confirmation/guidance.