Did you share your child’s DX. We did with a very similar profile and most would either waitlisted our child or said no simply out of precaution because they don’t want to counsel us out later on…curious if your NT private is in the DC area. We also hired an education advocate- fairly well known one too but that didn’t do much as far as admission.
Anonymous wrote:There's been some very good advice already. I would only add a few things having gone through this recently with a kindergartner who's now happily in a NT private school and had a similar profile in preschool. One is that the dysregulation at home for us was essentially an early warning system that even though things seemed okay at school, our kid was probaby hanging on by a thread and just couldn't keep it together anymore by the time they got home; hence the dysregulation. So they actually needed more support in school than they were getting. The second is that when you're looking at NT private schools, be sure to find out about whether the administrators are open to working with OTs and speech therapists. It's such a common need now among all kinds of kids (especially little ones) that it's arguably a best practice and what you'd want for any child, ND or not. We hired an educational consultant to identify schools that have that reputation since it's not everyone unfortunately. You may be able to manage just doing your own tours and asking. But better to be ready in a school that you know gets it, if and when you need their support. This way no one is walking on eggsheels.
Anonymous wrote:Kindergarten is the easiest time in elementary for a child who is ND to be in a NT school, and it will get harder every year at least until the very end of elementary. So if you have doubts now that it will work, save yourself some grief and go look at ND schools, because you may end up switching there anyway.
In the end it will come down to the actual school options you have.
Also, I'm not sure "masking" is a useful term with kids that young. it's more like he can act appropriately in a structured class setting where expectations are very clear, and he won't necessarily understand how to behave in a situation when there is more flexibility or ambiguity. That's to be expected and a reason to look for a school that is quite explicit in its expectations.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you for that perspective. I think he will get in to at least one NT and ND school. He’s unbelievably smart, performs well on assessments, and can follow a classroom routine. I’m worried about what happens after acceptance. If he goes to an ND school for 2E students, he’ll thrive academically with other students like him and potentially be spared from bullying. On the other hand, he won’t have any NT peers and will he be able to grow in his social skills, handling ambiguous situations, etc. if he’s too comfortable?Anonymous wrote:Kindergarten is the easiest time in elementary for a child who is ND to be in a NT school, and it will get harder every year at least until the very end of elementary. So if you have doubts now that it will work, save yourself some grief and go look at ND schools, because you may end up switching there anyway.
In the end it will come down to the actual school options you have.
Also, I'm not sure "masking" is a useful term with kids that young. it's more like he can act appropriately in a structured class setting where expectations are very clear, and he won't necessarily understand how to behave in a situation when there is more flexibility or ambiguity. That's to be expected and a reason to look for a school that is quite explicit in its expectations.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you for that perspective. I think he will get in to at least one NT and ND school. He’s unbelievably smart, performs well on assessments, and can follow a classroom routine. I’m worried about what happens after acceptance. If he goes to an ND school for 2E students, he’ll thrive academically with other students like him and potentially be spared from bullying. On the other hand, he won’t have any NT peers and will he be able to grow in his social skills, handling ambiguous situations, etc. if he’s too comfortable?Anonymous wrote:Kindergarten is the easiest time in elementary for a child who is ND to be in a NT school, and it will get harder every year at least until the very end of elementary. So if you have doubts now that it will work, save yourself some grief and go look at ND schools, because you may end up switching there anyway.
In the end it will come down to the actual school options you have.
Also, I'm not sure "masking" is a useful term with kids that young. it's more like he can act appropriately in a structured class setting where expectations are very clear, and he won't necessarily understand how to behave in a situation when there is more flexibility or ambiguity. That's to be expected and a reason to look for a school that is quite explicit in its expectations.
Anonymous wrote:Kindergarten is the easiest time in elementary for a child who is ND to be in a NT school, and it will get harder every year at least until the very end of elementary. So if you have doubts now that it will work, save yourself some grief and go look at ND schools, because you may end up switching there anyway.
In the end it will come down to the actual school options you have.
Also, I'm not sure "masking" is a useful term with kids that young. it's more like he can act appropriately in a structured class setting where expectations are very clear, and he won't necessarily understand how to behave in a situation when there is more flexibility or ambiguity. That's to be expected and a reason to look for a school that is quite explicit in its expectations.
Thank you for that perspective. I think he will get in to at least one NT and ND school. He’s unbelievably smart, performs well on assessments, and can follow a classroom routine. I’m worried about what happens after acceptance. If he goes to an ND school for 2E students, he’ll thrive academically with other students like him and potentially be spared from bullying. On the other hand, he won’t have any NT peers and will he be able to grow in his social skills, handling ambiguous situations, etc. if he’s too comfortable?Anonymous wrote:Kindergarten is the easiest time in elementary for a child who is ND to be in a NT school, and it will get harder every year at least until the very end of elementary. So if you have doubts now that it will work, save yourself some grief and go look at ND schools, because you may end up switching there anyway.
In the end it will come down to the actual school options you have.
Also, I'm not sure "masking" is a useful term with kids that young. it's more like he can act appropriately in a structured class setting where expectations are very clear, and he won't necessarily understand how to behave in a situation when there is more flexibility or ambiguity. That's to be expected and a reason to look for a school that is quite explicit in its expectations.