Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The outside reading tutor was 2 -3 times per week all year.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC has quite severe dyslexia and dysgraphia and ADHD. He is in HS. He has a ton of accommodations to be successful. Teacher notes, extended time on assessments, calculator, scribe and reader on assessments, priority seating, drawing not required- uses computer, has about half a dozen programs on his computer that help (eg Kurzweil, Co-writer), electronic textbooks (this has been the hardest to get in a timely manner- start early), no foreign language.....
Middle school was the worst of the three (ES,MS,HS) in terms of understanding his needs and the legal ramifications of not providing for them. HS has been great.
He also has just a few outside activities, so he has enough time for homework and relaxation. He took his first AP last year and scored a 5. He is take three this year- all science/math. Next year he will take 3 or 4. He gets almost all A's.
OP: That's so glad to hear, PP. And, so glad your son is doing well. That is very inspiring! And, also thank you for sharing your specific accommodations as well. Do you feel that these accommodations were key to his success? Or do you feel that as some of the other PPs stated that maturity along the way helped as well? I'm also curious if you do outside tutoring for writing, executive functioning, etc.? Also, it sounds like your son did well with just a 504 plan? Is that the case? Or do you have an IEP as well?
Thanks, all who have responded so far!
He has had an IEP since 2nd grade and will have one until graduation. We did an outside reading/writing tutor from 2nd grade to mid-7th grade. Maturity has something to do with it and he has the persistence gene from his father that helps, but he would be lost without the accommodations. They are key. His anxiety and OCD tendencies are also helpful right now- that is a balancing act- to keep them at bay.
Wow, I'm impressed that you did all this and got him that much accommodation - I know so many kids who struggle yet their parents cannot see or cannot financially justify the extra tutoring, or haven't managed to negotiate successfully with the schools.
Anonymous wrote:The outside reading tutor was 2 -3 times per week all year.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC has quite severe dyslexia and dysgraphia and ADHD. He is in HS. He has a ton of accommodations to be successful. Teacher notes, extended time on assessments, calculator, scribe and reader on assessments, priority seating, drawing not required- uses computer, has about half a dozen programs on his computer that help (eg Kurzweil, Co-writer), electronic textbooks (this has been the hardest to get in a timely manner- start early), no foreign language.....
Middle school was the worst of the three (ES,MS,HS) in terms of understanding his needs and the legal ramifications of not providing for them. HS has been great.
He also has just a few outside activities, so he has enough time for homework and relaxation. He took his first AP last year and scored a 5. He is take three this year- all science/math. Next year he will take 3 or 4. He gets almost all A's.
OP: That's so glad to hear, PP. And, so glad your son is doing well. That is very inspiring! And, also thank you for sharing your specific accommodations as well. Do you feel that these accommodations were key to his success? Or do you feel that as some of the other PPs stated that maturity along the way helped as well? I'm also curious if you do outside tutoring for writing, executive functioning, etc.? Also, it sounds like your son did well with just a 504 plan? Is that the case? Or do you have an IEP as well?
Thanks, all who have responded so far!
He has had an IEP since 2nd grade and will have one until graduation. We did an outside reading/writing tutor from 2nd grade to mid-7th grade. Maturity has something to do with it and he has the persistence gene from his father that helps, but he would be lost without the accommodations. They are key. His anxiety and OCD tendencies are also helpful right now- that is a balancing act- to keep them at bay.
The outside reading tutor was 2 -3 times per week all year.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC has quite severe dyslexia and dysgraphia and ADHD. He is in HS. He has a ton of accommodations to be successful. Teacher notes, extended time on assessments, calculator, scribe and reader on assessments, priority seating, drawing not required- uses computer, has about half a dozen programs on his computer that help (eg Kurzweil, Co-writer), electronic textbooks (this has been the hardest to get in a timely manner- start early), no foreign language.....
Middle school was the worst of the three (ES,MS,HS) in terms of understanding his needs and the legal ramifications of not providing for them. HS has been great.
He also has just a few outside activities, so he has enough time for homework and relaxation. He took his first AP last year and scored a 5. He is take three this year- all science/math. Next year he will take 3 or 4. He gets almost all A's.
OP: That's so glad to hear, PP. And, so glad your son is doing well. That is very inspiring! And, also thank you for sharing your specific accommodations as well. Do you feel that these accommodations were key to his success? Or do you feel that as some of the other PPs stated that maturity along the way helped as well? I'm also curious if you do outside tutoring for writing, executive functioning, etc.? Also, it sounds like your son did well with just a 504 plan? Is that the case? Or do you have an IEP as well?
Thanks, all who have responded so far!
He has had an IEP since 2nd grade and will have one until graduation. We did an outside reading/writing tutor from 2nd grade to mid-7th grade. Maturity has something to do with it and he has the persistence gene from his father that helps, but he would be lost without the accommodations. They are key. His anxiety and OCD tendencies are also helpful right now- that is a balancing act- to keep them at bay.