Anonymous wrote:Thank you to everyone for their feedback. I will definitely check out Bethesda. I will also look at Ivymount, although like I said, I don't know that we could afford private. Someone mentioned Rolling Valley, is that also private?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haven't you already posted about this a couple of times before? If you didn't get answers you probably won't find them here. Look up yahoo groups for SN for the individual counties.
OP here, I posted once about the quality of Mont Co schools compared to Fairfax County. I will look up a yahoo group, but I have never heard of a special needs yahoo group for Fairfax County (just Mont Co). I am simply trying to get information for my special needs child. While you may not be abe to help me, I have to imagine that there is a mom out there that is able to help me.
Anonymous wrote:Does Katherine Thomas serve these kids well?
What about Phillips in Annandale or Alternative Pathways in Alexandria?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure what you mean by mid-level, but Bethesda Elementary in MCPS has a reputation for doing fantastic inclusion. I know a couple of families with kids with milder issues who are fully included, and whose parents are really happy. They also have a School Community Based classroom (program for kids with Moderate to Profound ID, possibly with other issues) for kids who need more support but still benefit from inclusion.
For private, many, although not all, of the kids at Ivymount have ID, but it's crazy expensive and there is no inclusion component.
Thank you for your post. I am not sure that my child could handle full inclusion. By mid-level I actually mean her skills are low and I am not sure how much real "curriculum" she could handle, but that she does not belong in a profound ID program either.
Yes, I think Private would be too expensive.
Thanks for your feedback.
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure what you mean by mid-level, but Bethesda Elementary in MCPS has a reputation for doing fantastic inclusion. I know a couple of families with kids with milder issues who are fully included, and whose parents are really happy. They also have a School Community Based classroom (program for kids with Moderate to Profound ID, possibly with other issues) for kids who need more support but still benefit from inclusion.
For private, many, although not all, of the kids at Ivymount have ID, but it's crazy expensive and there is no inclusion component.
Anonymous wrote:Haven't you already posted about this a couple of times before? If you didn't get answers you probably won't find them here. Look up yahoo groups for SN for the individual counties.