Anonymous wrote:My daughter may need tutoring service in the fall because she performs below average on reading/writing and math. She is at K, but I suspect that she has learning issues since she was little. She wants to learn a foreign language with her friends together in the fall, and I think it will be too much for her to do tutoring on math/reading in the morning and attending a foreign language school in the afternoon for a few hours. Both happen to be on Saturdays for the next school year If I have to pick one, I and DH want her not to consider learning a foreign language. Her friends can speak and write, but she knows nothing about that foreign language. Any thoughts? I feel like academic is more important than learning a new language.
Anonymous wrote:What's the foreign language? Some 'learning issues' make foreign language very hard. She needs to start now as they even make her take it in college.
I didn't know how to read and write in K. I still don't know, but I took 7 languages total and I was good at math.
Anonymous wrote:You really have to stop equating LDs with low IQ or low functionality.
I have a kid who was born with delays, needed speech therapy, had an IEP in school for years, severe ADHD, mild autism, dysgraphia (learning disability in writing), dyscalculia (learning disability in math)...
... but he's bilingual in our native language, took Latin to the AP level, graduated with a nearly perfect ACT score and took a dozen AP courses. Oh, and pushed himself to take AP Calculus BC in 12th grade despite his math disability.
It's tricky to raise a child with any sort of divergent brain or special needs. But don't you dare close doors for her! Life will do that anyway. Your job is to get her the diagnoses and the support she needs (a process that takes several years), and push her to achieve as much as her potential allows.