Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again - I should add my husband (whose father is the one with Dyslexia, btw) is super resistant to this. He thinks she's making great progress. She went from reading at a late K level at the beginning of second grade to an early second grade level at the end of second grade - is that great progress? He thinks I'm nuts and doesn't want me to spend all this money on testing, this has been some of the hesitation.
If you don't agree on spending the money on testing, put that the money towards a tutor instead. Start it right now. See where she's at by winter break.
Anonymous wrote:OP again - I should add my husband (whose father is the one with Dyslexia, btw) is super resistant to this. He thinks she's making great progress. She went from reading at a late K level at the beginning of second grade to an early second grade level at the end of second grade - is that great progress? He thinks I'm nuts and doesn't want me to spend all this money on testing, this has been some of the hesitation.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, thank you. I am planning to call Mindwell soon to try to get a test either before school starts or at the beginning of the school year - is that who people in Fairfax County typically recommend for this sort of thing? I don't think my health insurance will cover the testing and I'm not sure we want to wait a year to get medical testing anyway, right?
Also, will the dyslexia testing alone cost the $3000-4000 that everyone says this costs or will that be less since we're not testing for ADHD?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a neuropsych under medical if you can - we went to Kennedy Krieger...eventually cost 600 bucks (I think 3500 to 4000 without insurance). Know that if you are in public school all of them use a wait to fail model. Meaning they won’t do anything until 3rd grade - and even then, teachers are not neurological geniuses. They just want the easiest day possible in public schools (they are union members after all). So, after the neuropsychology results come back you will need to move towards tutoring - depending on severity this will mean 3x a week or more. To find a pro tutor go to the Atlantic Seaboard Dyslexia Educational Center (ASDEC). They are in Rockville - of course MCPS doesn’t use them for teacher training - but they are great. You can find a tutor or take classes yourself to help your child. My advice - hire a tutor. So much emotional suffering comes from not keeping up with your peers you are going to have to be a good source of nurturing for your child. Then donate to Decoding Dyslexia- so they can keep up the long fight against our criminally corrupt public school systems.
Schools may try to do this, but the law says you do not have to wait to see what the RTI is -- response to instruction.
I agree that if you suspect dyslexia or other language disorders early (i.e. before 3rd grade), don't wait -- get as much private tutoring as early as you can afford. The ripple effect of falling behind really has a lifelong impact both academically and in terms of social interaction (both peers and teachers) and self-worth.
Anonymous wrote:Get a neuropsych under medical if you can - we went to Kennedy Krieger...eventually cost 600 bucks (I think 3500 to 4000 without insurance). Know that if you are in public school all of them use a wait to fail model. Meaning they won’t do anything until 3rd grade - and even then, teachers are not neurological geniuses. They just want the easiest day possible in public schools (they are union members after all). So, after the neuropsychology results come back you will need to move towards tutoring - depending on severity this will mean 3x a week or more. To find a pro tutor go to the Atlantic Seaboard Dyslexia Educational Center (ASDEC). They are in Rockville - of course MCPS doesn’t use them for teacher training - but they are great. You can find a tutor or take classes yourself to help your child. My advice - hire a tutor. So much emotional suffering comes from not keeping up with your peers you are going to have to be a good source of nurturing for your child. Then donate to Decoding Dyslexia- so they can keep up the long fight against our criminally corrupt public school systems.
Anonymous wrote:I have a rising third grader who is a struggling reader (reading at beginning 2nd grade level, so almost a full year behind) and has a dyslexic grandparent which I just found out about. With this new knowledge, I am wondering if the school saying "oh, it's okay, we'll just keep working hard" is all wrong and we need to get her tested ASAP. What do we do? I don't trust the school, they've told us all along that everything was fine, she's just a little behind. She does have a tutor she meets with weekly, which has helped a lot but I imagine a diagnosis would get her more help in school, but I've read that FCPS will not diagnose dyslexia so we need to go private. I'm very confused and could use your guidance!