Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, not needed. After acceptance, your child contacts the office of disabilities and works with them to get needed accommodations. True at a public and private schools (2 kids with disabilities, both in different colleges, both thriving)
This is not accurate. I see this far too often. Parents think their own experience is universal - but it's not - and they give wrong advice based on their own limited experience. The right answer is it depends on the school. Some colleges require updated testing, while others do not. You have to check with the school.
- special education attorney who really hates to see inaccurate advice given
Anonymous wrote:Nope, not needed. After acceptance, your child contacts the office of disabilities and works with them to get needed accommodations. True at a public and private schools (2 kids with disabilities, both in different colleges, both thriving)
Anonymous wrote:DD was diagnosed with ADHD (inattentive type) very late (in 9th grade). With an IEP and medication, she has done exceptionally well in high school. But next year, she is heading to college, and I am trying to figure out if she needs another (expensive!) neuropsych exam.
Any experience with the transition from HS to college? Do the accommodations carry over? TIA!
Anonymous wrote:If you're on Facebook, follow this group: https://www.facebook.com/share/g/1BtwTS8xWk/?mibextid=wwXIfr
There's so much misinformation out there (ie, the pp saying updated testing is never needed) and the admin of this group makes sure her advice is accurate.
Anonymous wrote:check with the college's office of whatever-it's-called now. DD's testing needed to be within 3 years. So she needed to have it redone. We did find a solo practitioner who did less extensive/less expensive testing and simply "updated" the big expensive report done in 10th grade.