Anonymous wrote:How high is her IQ? Big difference between 130 and 145+. Is her verbal IQ lower than her perceptual reasoning? Or are they both high?
Anonymous wrote:OP here...nutshell history is,
- issues started on and off in a private prek. We did childfind eval and they naturally said all was wonderful. By Feb. 2016 we were on verge of being kicked out and we called childfind again and they agreed to revisit, came out and observed her 4/2016, then had IEP/PEP meeting with them and the "home elementary school" special ed teacher 5/2016. In May we also started ritalin. Moderate improvement.
- Issues on and off through the fall, some dosage tweaks etc., issues accelerated after Thanksgiving. Major incident in early January that unnerved us. Her therapist suggested psych testing, and we had intake on that at tail end of January. Pricey but felt we needed to do it. Got report a couple days before spring break, and yep gave it to the school. No real response to it yet.
- Testing was WISC-IV. Full scale IQ was 137. Verbal was lower than fluid reasoning, is that the same as percetual?
I probably missed some questions. I don't know boredom is causing the behaviors, that was just me speculating. None of the increasing array of medical professionals has indicated as such
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your DCs eligibility code right now?
Is that the thing on the IEP form? Developmental delay. But that is from last May.
My point in asking about the code is that you can't get into one of the Autism programs unless you have a diagnosis or a code of Autism. If Autism isn't anywhere in the picture on paper yet, and you are interested in these programs, you'd need an evaluation from the school first. The code represent the primary issue, but if you have a diagnosis from a private eval or findings consistent with Autism on a school eval, you can request a consult from an Autism program---assuming you think that would be a good fit.
This is a violation of federal law. Federal law is very clear that students can't be placed based on eligibility code.
Read it again---I said the code or it is listed as additional disability. The Autism Programs are designed for the unique needs of people with Autism.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your DCs eligibility code right now?
Is that the thing on the IEP form? Developmental delay. But that is from last May.
How can there be a Developmental delay as a code, was this before IQ testing? You did WISC this time, correct and she tested high IQ? Sorry to bug you. Make sure you share with the school the new evaluation. They can't have her marked with developmental delay one year and then gifted the next. That would be very inconsistent. I have DS with major anxiety(and inattentive due to it) and DD with ADHD(hyper and inattentive) with some anxiety. They are teens now, so I have been through a lot. When did she start acting out at school? Recently? Or all the time? The reason I ask is, that SSRI's cause loss of inhibition, and some kids can act out and be completely inappropriate. It works for anxiety, no doubt, but the inappropriate behavior we experienced with DS was outrageous. As for ADHD DD, she is not in a gifted program, but she has 504 in MCPS and they were very accommodating, but they did look at her grades and evaluation, and basically 504 is due to inconsistency in grades and her eval. Once I showed them that, they were really fast to accommodate. Gifted program would not be the right choice for my DD, even though her IQ is very high in some areas(but not the combined results, which is typical of ADHD kids, as far as I was told.) As a fellow parent, I don't know what advice to give if your DD is acting out because she is bored in school. Is she hyper? As she is young, I would suggest holding off on gifted program, and enrolling her in some physical activity, like swimming, if you don't do that already, to get that extra energy burn out. Good luck.
Are you confusing Developmental Disability with Developmental Delay?
Developmental Delay is the code given to kids when the evaluation team feels that the kid is too young to figure out a specific diagnosis, but that they would benefit from special education because they are behind in one or more critical skills. It sounds like this kid's critical skills might be some combination of attention, self-regulation, and impulse control.
A child can absolutely have a developmental delay in one or more areas and simultaneously test in the highly gifted range.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your DCs eligibility code right now?
Is that the thing on the IEP form? Developmental delay. But that is from last May.
My point in asking about the code is that you can't get into one of the Autism programs unless you have a diagnosis or a code of Autism. If Autism isn't anywhere in the picture on paper yet, and you are interested in these programs, you'd need an evaluation from the school first. The code represent the primary issue, but if you have a diagnosis from a private eval or findings consistent with Autism on a school eval, you can request a consult from an Autism program---assuming you think that would be a good fit.
This is a violation of federal law. Federal law is very clear that students can't be placed based on eligibility code.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your DCs eligibility code right now?
Is that the thing on the IEP form? Developmental delay. But that is from last May.
How can there be a Developmental delay as a code, was this before IQ testing? You did WISC this time, correct and she tested high IQ? Sorry to bug you. Make sure you share with the school the new evaluation. They can't have her marked with developmental delay one year and then gifted the next. That would be very inconsistent. I have DS with major anxiety(and inattentive due to it) and DD with ADHD(hyper and inattentive) with some anxiety. They are teens now, so I have been through a lot. When did she start acting out at school? Recently? Or all the time? The reason I ask is, that SSRI's cause loss of inhibition, and some kids can act out and be completely inappropriate. It works for anxiety, no doubt, but the inappropriate behavior we experienced with DS was outrageous. As for ADHD DD, she is not in a gifted program, but she has 504 in MCPS and they were very accommodating, but they did look at her grades and evaluation, and basically 504 is due to inconsistency in grades and her eval. Once I showed them that, they were really fast to accommodate. Gifted program would not be the right choice for my DD, even though her IQ is very high in some areas(but not the combined results, which is typical of ADHD kids, as far as I was told.) As a fellow parent, I don't know what advice to give if your DD is acting out because she is bored in school. Is she hyper? As she is young, I would suggest holding off on gifted program, and enrolling her in some physical activity, like swimming, if you don't do that already, to get that extra energy burn out. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your DCs eligibility code right now?
Is that the thing on the IEP form? Developmental delay. But that is from last May.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your DCs eligibility code right now?
Is that the thing on the IEP form? Developmental delay. But that is from last May.
My point in asking about the code is that you can't get into one of the Autism programs unless you have a diagnosis or a code of Autism. If Autism isn't anywhere in the picture on paper yet, and you are interested in these programs, you'd need an evaluation from the school first. The code represent the primary issue, but if you have a diagnosis from a private eval or findings consistent with Autism on a school eval, you can request a consult from an Autism program---assuming you think that would be a good fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your DCs eligibility code right now?
Is that the thing on the IEP form? Developmental delay. But that is from last May.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your DCs eligibility code right now?
Is that the thing on the IEP form? Developmental delay. But that is from last May.
Don't worry about the code. You may end up with OHI or Autism. MCPS will probably pressure you to change the code soon usually by age 7 but you can keep the code until age 9. The focus needs to be getting her on track behaviorally and then there will be more options.