Anonymous wrote:She has all A’s and B’s, so it’s hard to prove an educational impact that substantially limits a major life activity.
The definition of a disability is:
Have a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities; or
Have a record of such an impairment; or
Be regarded as having such an impairment.
I would go to Catholic school where there are more textbooks, workbooks, and clearer firm deadlines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our kid was diagnosed with inattentive ADHD and dyslexia in 7th grade. She was having panic attacks in school when she was asked to read out loud. APS refused to give her a 504 or an IEP because she is an A student. They said there was no evidence that she was having trouble accessing the curriculum. We only got some light reading supports after the Swanson reading specialist independently confirmed that she was, in fact, dyslexic. We were told that she would not qualify for any supports at Yorktown based on her grades. This is all likely illegal, but I am too tired to fight APS. We enrolled her in O’Connell for high school, and they have been wonderful. What I love about DJO is that they are committed to helping every student reach their full potential, as opposed to APS that just wants to get every kid to benchmark— which is so, so low.
You didn’t do independent testing?
Anonymous wrote:Our kid was diagnosed with inattentive ADHD and dyslexia in 7th grade. She was having panic attacks in school when she was asked to read out loud. APS refused to give her a 504 or an IEP because she is an A student. They said there was no evidence that she was having trouble accessing the curriculum. We only got some light reading supports after the Swanson reading specialist independently confirmed that she was, in fact, dyslexic. We were told that she would not qualify for any supports at Yorktown based on her grades. This is all likely illegal, but I am too tired to fight APS. We enrolled her in O’Connell for high school, and they have been wonderful. What I love about DJO is that they are committed to helping every student reach their full potential, as opposed to APS that just wants to get every kid to benchmark— which is so, so low.
Anonymous wrote:She has all A’s and B’s, so it’s hard to prove an educational impact that substantially limits a major life activity.
The definition of a disability is:
Have a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities; or
Have a record of such an impairment; or
Be regarded as having such an impairment.
I would go to Catholic school where there are more textbooks, workbooks, and clearer firm deadlines.
Anonymous wrote:She has all A’s and B’s, so it’s hard to prove an educational impact that substantially limits a major life activity.
The definition of a disability is:
Have a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities; or
Have a record of such an impairment; or
Be regarded as having such an impairment.
I would go to Catholic school where there are more textbooks, workbooks, and clearer firm deadlines.
Anonymous wrote:My inattentive ADHD kid has extra time on tests and the option to test in a separate room. He can also use noise-cancelling headphones.
He's not my kid in APS, but just to give you an idea of things to request.
Anonymous wrote:A’s and B’s mean an IEP is unlikely. You should expect a 504. It may be worthwhile to get your own executive functioning coach; there are teachers who do this. Another option is instructional studies- there is a non-IEP version of the class that can be helpful but I can’t remember what it’s called.
Anonymous wrote:Did they approve her for an IEP? Or are you still at the evaluation stage?