Anonymous wrote:Consider Parkmont
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“ Right now he is making homemade pizzas with his sister and telling her about Linux.”
I love this. He sounds great.
OP, I think you’re just gonna have to drop the rope with this one. Possibly you could get him into a private SN school that will give him passing grades. Or maybe you just have to wait and see.
Can you intervene to physicalmy get him to do some of the work?
Are you in MoCo? Could he transfer to the GT/LD program?
Tell me you are 70 and kids raised without telling me you are 70 with the kids raised. GT/LD is MCPS paper tiger. It is a complete shadow of its former self. The county doesn’t do away with it formally because your gen touts it as an option. It’s a taxed program not worthy of a referral- unless Walter Johnson is your home school.
How about a night school option (with job in the mornings?). Colleague had child like yours become a bag handler at Dulles and went to public high school at night. Recharged everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would read up on Pathological Demand Avoidance.
Maybe think about a Sudbury School?
DP. Since her son is basically unschooling himself, a place like Sudbury may make sense. I think the goal sounds like it’s to keep him from failing highschool. Going back to homeschooling but more on an unschooling model might help too, but with tutors instead of OP doing it.
Anonymous wrote:“ Right now he is making homemade pizzas with his sister and telling her about Linux.”
I love this. He sounds great.
OP, I think you’re just gonna have to drop the rope with this one. Possibly you could get him into a private SN school that will give him passing grades. Or maybe you just have to wait and see.
Can you intervene to physicalmy get him to do some of the work?
Are you in MoCo? Could he transfer to the GT/LD program?
Anonymous wrote:Op, he sounds bright but deeply ADHD Inattentive to me. At what age was he evaluated as level 1 autism? Is a re-assessment warranted? He sounds just like my brother who has an extremely well paying job in the computer industry. Do whatever you can to feed his interests at school and home. He sounds like a self learner. He may be more interested in school when he realizes that college is more freedom and more interesting things to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He is very kind and polite. He has a normal IQ... he just sort of hangs out and reads computer coding manuals or plays with his siblings. Right now he is making homemade pizzas with his sister and telling her about Linux... ..is in a social skills group that he enjoys.
He is on a mountain biking team that he likes...
OP, forgive me but your son sounds like a great kid who is just a bad fit for traditional school. He seems to be able to get along with people, with siblings and seems to have interests. Reading a coding manual in his free time and making pizza with a sib is great. Is there a vocational program in your county that he could enroll in or is his schedule flexible enough that you could load him up on computer classes?
Anonymous wrote:I would read up on Pathological Demand Avoidance.
Maybe think about a Sudbury School?