Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh geez everyone. Does anyone have actual advice for the OP's question?
OP, I'm inferring that at the moment, your daughter has been deemed eligible for the IEP for K, and eligibility is not in question, is that correct?
And as you've described it, the issues that may interfere with her learning are her social skills - her ability to work with other children, communicate with the teacher, and demonstrate her knowledge?
So the issue is what kind of accommodations your daughter needs to help her in this.
Since you've mentioned that ASD is on the table, I think the best approach is to ask for accommodations that are designed to assist kids with ASD in their social skills needed for learning in K. Off the top of my head, I'd say:
- pull-outs 1x/week for express social skills instruction with the social worker; plus "lunch bunch" meetings to work on social skills
- push-in hours with the special ed teacher during classroom times when more interaction is expected (e.g., if they have reading groups where they are supposed to read in teams; or other times where they are expected to interact and you don't think she'll be able to)
- training for the gen ed teacher on how to interact with her to get her verbal participation in class
- accommodations in the class that help her relieve her anxiety (quiet spot? sitting in front? not sure here.)
Since K is so very different from preschool these days, you'll also have to be prepared to monitor how she's doing, and convene a meeting with the IEP team if things don't work.
Oh, and here are some ideas for IEP goals:
https://www.naset.org/fileadmin/user_upload/Autism_Series/Examples_IEP_Goals_Objectives_for_ASD.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Oh geez everyone. Does anyone have actual advice for the OP's question?
OP, I'm inferring that at the moment, your daughter has been deemed eligible for the IEP for K, and eligibility is not in question, is that correct?
And as you've described it, the issues that may interfere with her learning are her social skills - her ability to work with other children, communicate with the teacher, and demonstrate her knowledge?
So the issue is what kind of accommodations your daughter needs to help her in this.
Since you've mentioned that ASD is on the table, I think the best approach is to ask for accommodations that are designed to assist kids with ASD in their social skills needed for learning in K. Off the top of my head, I'd say:
- pull-outs 1x/week for express social skills instruction with the social worker; plus "lunch bunch" meetings to work on social skills
- push-in hours with the special ed teacher during classroom times when more interaction is expected (e.g., if they have reading groups where they are supposed to read in teams; or other times where they are expected to interact and you don't think she'll be able to)
- training for the gen ed teacher on how to interact with her to get her verbal participation in class
- accommodations in the class that help her relieve her anxiety (quiet spot? sitting in front? not sure here.)
Since K is so very different from preschool these days, you'll also have to be prepared to monitor how she's doing, and convene a meeting with the IEP team if things don't work.
Anonymous wrote:Oh geez everyone. Does anyone have actual advice for the OP's question?
OP, I'm inferring that at the moment, your daughter has been deemed eligible for the IEP for K, and eligibility is not in question, is that correct?
And as you've described it, the issues that may interfere with her learning are her social skills - her ability to work with other children, communicate with the teacher, and demonstrate her knowledge?
So the issue is what kind of accommodations your daughter needs to help her in this.
Since you've mentioned that ASD is on the table, I think the best approach is to ask for accommodations that are designed to assist kids with ASD in their social skills needed for learning in K. Off the top of my head, I'd say:
- pull-outs 1x/week for express social skills instruction with the social worker; plus "lunch bunch" meetings to work on social skills
- push-in hours with the special ed teacher during classroom times when more interaction is expected (e.g., if they have reading groups where they are supposed to read in teams; or other times where they are expected to interact and you don't think she'll be able to)
- training for the gen ed teacher on how to interact with her to get her verbal participation in class
- accommodations in the class that help her relieve her anxiety (quiet spot? sitting in front? not sure here.)
Since K is so very different from preschool these days, you'll also have to be prepared to monitor how she's doing, and convene a meeting with the IEP team if things don't work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are his pragmatic language skills? My child had/has anxiety and a mild language delay and the biggest intersection between academics and language has been his pragmatic skills: asking for help, participating in class discussions, understanding directions, etc. Obviously pragmatics also affect social skills, too (conversations). If his pragmatic skills have not been evaluated that may be worthwhile.
Understanding directions is receptive language, not pragmatic skills. Same with class discussions - that has more to do with expressive and receptive. Have you had a good speech evaluation?
OP child is testing at least low average to be phasing out of speech. Child may still be struggling with speech and may benefit from supplemented private but really needs a full evaluation.
Hey, Neuropsych Mom - tell this poster where to go and what to do.
Yes, thank you. Have you? There are actually many pragmatic skills that go into understanding and following directions and participating in class discussions: asking for clarification, making inferences based on contact, turn taking, staying on topic, etc.
If your contributions are going to be snide and ignorant maybe head back to the general parenting board?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are his pragmatic language skills? My child had/has anxiety and a mild language delay and the biggest intersection between academics and language has been his pragmatic skills: asking for help, participating in class discussions, understanding directions, etc. Obviously pragmatics also affect social skills, too (conversations). If his pragmatic skills have not been evaluated that may be worthwhile.
Understanding directions is receptive language, not pragmatic skills. Same with class discussions - that has more to do with expressive and receptive. Have you had a good speech evaluation?
OP child is testing at least low average to be phasing out of speech. Child may still be struggling with speech and may benefit from supplemented private but really needs a full evaluation.
Hey, Neuropsych Mom - tell this poster where to go and what to do.
Yes, thank you. Have you? There are actually many pragmatic skills that go into understanding and following directions and participating in class discussions: asking for clarification, making inferences based on contact, turn taking, staying on topic, etc.
If your contributions are going to be snide and ignorant maybe head back to the general parenting board?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are his pragmatic language skills? My child had/has anxiety and a mild language delay and the biggest intersection between academics and language has been his pragmatic skills: asking for help, participating in class discussions, understanding directions, etc. Obviously pragmatics also affect social skills, too (conversations). If his pragmatic skills have not been evaluated that may be worthwhile.
Understanding directions is receptive language, not pragmatic skills. Same with class discussions - that has more to do with expressive and receptive. Have you had a good speech evaluation?
OP child is testing at least low average to be phasing out of speech. Child may still be struggling with speech and may benefit from supplemented private but really needs a full evaluation.
Hey, Neuropsych Mom - tell this poster where to go and what to do.
Anonymous wrote:How are his pragmatic language skills? My child had/has anxiety and a mild language delay and the biggest intersection between academics and language has been his pragmatic skills: asking for help, participating in class discussions, understanding directions, etc. Obviously pragmatics also affect social skills, too (conversations). If his pragmatic skills have not been evaluated that may be worthwhile.
Anonymous wrote:Assuming "shy" is the the euphemism for a real diagnosis... or a soft-landing before one?
Anonymous wrote:OP here..Shyness and anxiety are what is left after a speech delay diagnosis. DC started saying mama only at age 2. We had IEP for speech and social skills. DC has mastered speech goals but social skills is affecting day to day activities. Hence the revised IEP.
DC may be possibly ASD but we haven't had a formal diagnosis. Pediatrician felt that it may be an anxiety issue not ASD.
Currently, DC gets pullouts for speech and gets facilitation for interactions. Nothing specifically treating the anxiety (which happens in large group settings)
Anonymous wrote:How are his pragmatic language skills? My child had/has anxiety and a mild language delay and the biggest intersection between academics and language has been his pragmatic skills: asking for help, participating in class discussions, understanding directions, etc. Obviously pragmatics also affect social skills, too (conversations). If his pragmatic skills have not been evaluated that may be worthwhile.
Anonymous wrote:We need IEPs for shyness now?