Anonymous wrote:MCPS is a failure at dyslexia. They willfully on purpose ignored our child’s disability and our advocacy. It almost ruined my kid. You will definitely need tutors and remediation that the county will not provide. We pulled child for private.
It is long hard process. I second Decoding Dyslexia. They are so nice and helpful. We also did six months of intense Lindamood Bell. Very expensive but before LMB, my child could not read.
Wishing you all the best. Hang in there, you are not alone.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have advice on how to get appropriate support for dyslexia through MCPS? My child is in MS - but dyslexia was not identified until late in ES when we did a Neuropsych that clearly showed dyslexia. He is a bright kid and so used other strategies to hide it, which worked fairly well until the reading and writing expectations became more demanding. Finally last year (5th grade) he was getting good support - until DL when everything fell apart. Now in MS they are really not doing much. He is in an academic literacy class for weak readers but it does not provide the type of decoding and fluency work that kids with language based learning disabilities need. They seem to go around the virtual room reading a story or article - each kid reads about one paragraph per class and then they do comprehension- which my child does not struggle with. How is it that MCPS does not seem to have any teachers who are specifically trained in working with kids with language based learning disabilities? Dyslexia is quite common, but they don’t seem to have resources in place to help kids with dyslexia. Any advice or suggestions? I assume getting a private placement would be very difficult. My child gets good grades - though we end up helping a lot with homework - and dealing with lots of tears and frustration.
Anonymous wrote:OP you may also want to post on the Special Needs board
Anonymous wrote:Does your child have an IEP? You could request a periodic meeting to discuss and identify a different reading class. Most middle schools have several reading programs; there should be at least one geared towards the phonics that would better suit your child. Best would be if there were an Orton-Gillingham class. MCPS has been training teachers in Orton-Gillingham over the past couple years, but more at the elementary level, though some are at MS. Best option is probably to get your child an Orton-Gillingham tutor to work with them several times a week.