Anonymous wrote:My son is exactly the same. Starting this year (2nd grade) he receives adaptive PE. The adaptive PE teacher comes to his PE class. She's really great. He is in a regular PE class. it is part of his IEP. His goals on the IEP that the service is related to are sequential movements and catching and releasing. His adaptive PE teacher goes to 11 schools.
You should get him assessed by the school for an IEP to get OT and adaptive PE, possibly assistive tech for writing if writing remains an issue. Hypotonia would qualify him under OHI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since it is a new school will you have a meeting with the special ed team? I would make it clear there before going to the principal.
Her post wasn't clear as to if there was a special ed team already in place. She mentioned OT and PT, but not whether her child was receiving those services at school. [/quote
I'm the OP, we don't have a team, all therapy is private, I've never pursued an IEP because the issues don't really impact him academically other than having poor handwriting
Anonymous wrote:Since it is a new school will you have a meeting with the special ed team? I would make it clear there before going to the principal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Definitely talk with the school. At certain grades, there are state standards they are required to test and grade.
That's what the Pediatrician is concerned about... Also not that grades in elementary school PE matter, he has received "2s" in PE and that bothers him as a kid that gets all 3s and 4s.
So, should I just approach the school? Who at the school? It will be a new school for us because he is doing AAP next year.
Anonymous wrote:Definitely talk with the school. At certain grades, there are state standards they are required to test and grade.