Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what school that are half way decent are accepting kids?
KKI Powder Mill. We chose another school but I was very impressed with the faculty and program.
We are at a different campus but love our KKI school. Warning though the powder mill campus is TINY like 60 kids.
It is, and that's definitely a drawback if you want a bigger atmosphere. The program itself ultimately didn't feel like as good a fit as others, but I loved the school. Great facility, lots of activities for the kids, two full-time nurses, and all the things you expect with a newer building. I would very much encourage people to list it along with KTS and Ivymount.
What kinds of kids are best served at Kki powder mill (similar to ivymount and KTS?) (also is it similar to their fairmount campus?) thanks!
My kid attends KKIMC and we really like it. They have awesome activities monthly (festivals, popcorn/movie day, etc) that still allow my kid to be a kid. I really like how small it is. Every single adult in the school knows my child by name and can always tell me a funny story or a little snippet about my kid. It’s really amazing. We feel like dc is making progress and is in good hands. I think they serve kids along the same line at Ivymount - they are built to service kids with autism. From what I’ve seen at pickup and at activities it seems mild to moderate but I’m not positive about that. I don’t know anything about Fairmount though. Hopefully someone else can help you there.
Thanks for the info! Are most of the kids at this school placed by Montgomery county (not many Dcps kids?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what school that are half way decent are accepting kids?
KKI Powder Mill. We chose another school but I was very impressed with the faculty and program.
We are at a different campus but love our KKI school. Warning though the powder mill campus is TINY like 60 kids.
It is, and that's definitely a drawback if you want a bigger atmosphere. The program itself ultimately didn't feel like as good a fit as others, but I loved the school. Great facility, lots of activities for the kids, two full-time nurses, and all the things you expect with a newer building. I would very much encourage people to list it along with KTS and Ivymount.
What kinds of kids are best served at Kki powder mill (similar to ivymount and KTS?) (also is it similar to their fairmount campus?) thanks!
My kid attends KKIMC and we really like it. They have awesome activities monthly (festivals, popcorn/movie day, etc) that still allow my kid to be a kid. I really like how small it is. Every single adult in the school knows my child by name and can always tell me a funny story or a little snippet about my kid. It’s really amazing. We feel like dc is making progress and is in good hands. I think they serve kids along the same line at Ivymount - they are built to service kids with autism. From what I’ve seen at pickup and at activities it seems mild to moderate but I’m not positive about that. I don’t know anything about Fairmount though. Hopefully someone else can help you there.
Thanks for the info! Are most of the kids at this school placed by Montgomery county (not many Dcps kids?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what school that are half way decent are accepting kids?
KKI Powder Mill. We chose another school but I was very impressed with the faculty and program.
We are at a different campus but love our KKI school. Warning though the powder mill campus is TINY like 60 kids.
It is, and that's definitely a drawback if you want a bigger atmosphere. The program itself ultimately didn't feel like as good a fit as others, but I loved the school. Great facility, lots of activities for the kids, two full-time nurses, and all the things you expect with a newer building. I would very much encourage people to list it along with KTS and Ivymount.
What kinds of kids are best served at Kki powder mill (similar to ivymount and KTS?) (also is it similar to their fairmount campus?) thanks!
My kid attends KKIMC and we really like it. They have awesome activities monthly (festivals, popcorn/movie day, etc) that still allow my kid to be a kid. I really like how small it is. Every single adult in the school knows my child by name and can always tell me a funny story or a little snippet about my kid. It’s really amazing. We feel like dc is making progress and is in good hands. I think they serve kids along the same line at Ivymount - they are built to service kids with autism. From what I’ve seen at pickup and at activities it seems mild to moderate but I’m not positive about that. I don’t know anything about Fairmount though. Hopefully someone else can help you there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what school that are half way decent are accepting kids?
KKI Powder Mill. We chose another school but I was very impressed with the faculty and program.
We are at a different campus but love our KKI school. Warning though the powder mill campus is TINY like 60 kids.
It is, and that's definitely a drawback if you want a bigger atmosphere. The program itself ultimately didn't feel like as good a fit as others, but I loved the school. Great facility, lots of activities for the kids, two full-time nurses, and all the things you expect with a newer building. I would very much encourage people to list it along with KTS and Ivymount.
What kinds of kids are best served at Kki powder mill (similar to ivymount and KTS?) (also is it similar to their fairmount campus?) thanks!
MC and we really like it. They have awesome activities monthly (festivals, popcorn/movie day, etc) that still allow my kid to be a kid. I really like how small it is. Every single adult in the school knows my child by name and can always tell me a funny story or a little snippet about my kid. It’s really amazing. We feel like dc is making progress and is in good hands. I think they serve kids along the same line at Ivymount - they are built to service kids with autism. From what I’ve seen at pickup and at activities it seems mild to moderate but I’m not positive about that. I don’t know anything about Fairmount though. Hopefully someone else can help you there. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what school that are half way decent are accepting kids?
KKI Powder Mill. We chose another school but I was very impressed with the faculty and program.
We are at a different campus but love our KKI school. Warning though the powder mill campus is TINY like 60 kids.
It is, and that's definitely a drawback if you want a bigger atmosphere. The program itself ultimately didn't feel like as good a fit as others, but I loved the school. Great facility, lots of activities for the kids, two full-time nurses, and all the things you expect with a newer building. I would very much encourage people to list it along with KTS and Ivymount.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what school that are half way decent are accepting kids?
KKI Powder Mill. We chose another school but I was very impressed with the faculty and program.
We are at a different campus but love our KKI school. Warning though the powder mill campus is TINY like 60 kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what school that are half way decent are accepting kids?
KKI Powder Mill. We chose another school but I was very impressed with the faculty and program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that OSSE can deny private placement after DCPS approves it is ridiculous.
The fact that OSSE can not place children who can not be served within DCPS and these children need to wait is further denials of FAPE.
Where is the Attorney General making sure that DC is following federal law?
What is osse supposed to do if the student gets denied from the schools they applied to? They just keep sending the file out. There isn’t anything else they can do. They can’t force a school to take kids over their student programming limit. People think nonpublic placement is so easy and it’s a snap. It’s not
I forgot to add. OSSE can say no and it doesn’t matter. If the iep team agrees to nonpublic then they can overrule osse. Osse is just pretend gatekeeping. But if there are no available seats in a nonpublic school there are no seats and they have to keep looking. These schools are tiny.
Anonymous wrote:So what school that are half way decent are accepting kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that OSSE can deny private placement after DCPS approves it is ridiculous.
The fact that OSSE can not place children who can not be served within DCPS and these children need to wait is further denials of FAPE.
Where is the Attorney General making sure that DC is following federal law?
What is osse supposed to do if the student gets denied from the schools they applied to? They just keep sending the file out. There isn’t anything else they can do. They can’t force a school to take kids over their student programming limit. People think nonpublic placement is so easy and it’s a snap. It’s not
Anonymous wrote:The fact that OSSE can deny private placement after DCPS approves it is ridiculous.
The fact that OSSE can not place children who can not be served within DCPS and these children need to wait is further denials of FAPE.
Where is the Attorney General making sure that DC is following federal law?