Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you want to pick your child up mid day, go to therapy and bring her back to school, depending on timing? That isn’t uncommon and often what families have to do, at least initially, as after school time slots often have very long waitlists. My son was able to do therapy via zoom, so while he missed some class time, it was lessened due to not having to travel back and forth.
No. I want to do what we did last year, which was having the SLP come to her school.
I don’t understand why her school allowed it last year and not this year.
It may be a space issue. May be a supervision issue. But, it’s really not their responsibility to handle an outside private provider.
It is their responsibility to tend to their students’ educational needs, though, and they recommended speech therapy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you want to pick your child up mid day, go to therapy and bring her back to school, depending on timing? That isn’t uncommon and often what families have to do, at least initially, as after school time slots often have very long waitlists. My son was able to do therapy via zoom, so while he missed some class time, it was lessened due to not having to travel back and forth.
No. I want to do what we did last year, which was having the SLP come to her school.
I don’t understand why her school allowed it last year and not this year.
It may be a space issue. May be a supervision issue. But, it’s really not their responsibility to handle an outside private provider.
It is their responsibility to tend to their students’ educational needs, though, and they recommended speech therapy.
A private school casually recommended speech therapy in K is very different than a public school determining there is an academic need for support services in the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you want to pick your child up mid day, go to therapy and bring her back to school, depending on timing? That isn’t uncommon and often what families have to do, at least initially, as after school time slots often have very long waitlists. My son was able to do therapy via zoom, so while he missed some class time, it was lessened due to not having to travel back and forth.
No. I want to do what we did last year, which was having the SLP come to her school.
I don’t understand why her school allowed it last year and not this year.
It may be a space issue. May be a supervision issue. But, it’s really not their responsibility to handle an outside private provider.
It is their responsibility to tend to their students’ educational needs, though, and they recommended speech therapy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you want to pick your child up mid day, go to therapy and bring her back to school, depending on timing? That isn’t uncommon and often what families have to do, at least initially, as after school time slots often have very long waitlists. My son was able to do therapy via zoom, so while he missed some class time, it was lessened due to not having to travel back and forth.
No. I want to do what we did last year, which was having the SLP come to her school.
I don’t understand why her school allowed it last year and not this year.
It may be a space issue. May be a supervision issue. But, it’s really not their responsibility to handle an outside private provider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you want to pick your child up mid day, go to therapy and bring her back to school, depending on timing? That isn’t uncommon and often what families have to do, at least initially, as after school time slots often have very long waitlists. My son was able to do therapy via zoom, so while he missed some class time, it was lessened due to not having to travel back and forth.
No. I want to do what we did last year, which was having the SLP come to her school.
I don’t understand why her school allowed it last year and not this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you want to pick your child up mid day, go to therapy and bring her back to school, depending on timing? That isn’t uncommon and often what families have to do, at least initially, as after school time slots often have very long waitlists. My son was able to do therapy via zoom, so while he missed some class time, it was lessened due to not having to travel back and forth.
No. I want to do what we did last year, which was having the SLP come to her school.
I don’t understand why her school allowed it last year and not this year.
Anonymous wrote:So you want to pick your child up mid day, go to therapy and bring her back to school, depending on timing? That isn’t uncommon and often what families have to do, at least initially, as after school time slots often have very long waitlists. My son was able to do therapy via zoom, so while he missed some class time, it was lessened due to not having to travel back and forth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would look for a provider who can do after school hours.
Is she getting reading services? While the same underlying issue can cause speech articulation and reading issues, you need providers for both. Articulation therapy doesn't fix the reading issues.
Yes, she has a separate reading tutor. This is for the SLP.
Get a good evaluation. Normal is to take your child to the slp. Sone might come to your home but most of those don’t take insurance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would look for a provider who can do after school hours.
Is she getting reading services? While the same underlying issue can cause speech articulation and reading issues, you need providers for both. Articulation therapy doesn't fix the reading issues.
Yes, she has a separate reading tutor. This is for the SLP.
Anonymous wrote:I would look for a provider who can do after school hours.
Is she getting reading services? While the same underlying issue can cause speech articulation and reading issues, you need providers for both. Articulation therapy doesn't fix the reading issues.