Anonymous wrote:Most parents get their kids tested because they SEE them struggling, not before that happens. It is not a decision made quickly or easily.
Yes, this "advantages" upper SES families. That is a deep flaw in our system, not something awful that those families are doing to get an edge on lower income kids. They have more resources to help their children. No crime there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you may find this hard to believe but it's not as easy as you think to get accommodations on the ACT and SAT. I'm the PP whose daughter has abnormal eye tracking and low processing. She is in a special program at her high school that provides her with the support she needs to do well in college prep courses.
The program director told us to be prepared to be turned down for ACT/SAT accommodations despite her IEP and other documentation. She said the bar is very high, most get turned down - however, she will then file an appeal and provide additional documentation and we cross our fingers that is is accepted by ACT/SAT.
She felt our daughter has a good chance of getting accommodations on an appeal, but not to count on it for they routinely turn down kids that she feels really should get it. So, rest assured, they are not handing out extra hours like candy to anyone who asks or provides them with a minimum of documentation of a vague problem.
This is true.
+1. My DD who has received accommodations at her high school for ADHD since freshman year was turned down for accommodations on the SAT.
And rightly so. Because they are seeing an increase of kids coming to the party late with diagnoses after middle school. it is very suspicious when people suddenly have a new diagnosis of ADHD. In most cases this is identified in elementary school. I am sure those who are gaming the system are the ones who decide to get evaluated in high school for the first time. Our DS gets accommodations on both SAT and ACT, but he has a strong history of accommodations since 2nd grade.
This is true for affluent families in modern times. It's not true for lower-middle-class/working-class families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you may find this hard to believe but it's not as easy as you think to get accommodations on the ACT and SAT. I'm the PP whose daughter has abnormal eye tracking and low processing. She is in a special program at her high school that provides her with the support she needs to do well in college prep courses.
The program director told us to be prepared to be turned down for ACT/SAT accommodations despite her IEP and other documentation. She said the bar is very high, most get turned down - however, she will then file an appeal and provide additional documentation and we cross our fingers that is is accepted by ACT/SAT.
She felt our daughter has a good chance of getting accommodations on an appeal, but not to count on it for they routinely turn down kids that she feels really should get it. So, rest assured, they are not handing out extra hours like candy to anyone who asks or provides them with a minimum of documentation of a vague problem.
This is true.
+1. My DD who has received accommodations at her high school for ADHD since freshman year was turned down for accommodations on the SAT.
And rightly so. Because they are seeing an increase of kids coming to the party late with diagnoses after middle school. it is very suspicious when people suddenly have a new diagnosis of ADHD. In most cases this is identified in elementary school. I am sure those who are gaming the system are the ones who decide to get evaluated in high school for the first time. Our DS gets accommodations on both SAT and ACT, but he has a strong history of accommodations since 2nd grade.
Anonymous wrote:You are so ignorant, but obviously feel that OPINIONS and facts are interchangeable. I know a president that you might like.
Junior year of high school is the second most common age for kids being diagnosed with learning disabilities because when they are not severe, the child can compensate until the material becomes more challenging (i.e., more nuanced, requiring critical thinking). They compensate by, for example, putting in ridiculously long hours completing reading and writing assignments that take other kids 1/4 of the time.
This is a fact and I know because we lived it in our house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you may find this hard to believe but it's not as easy as you think to get accommodations on the ACT and SAT. I'm the PP whose daughter has abnormal eye tracking and low processing. She is in a special program at her high school that provides her with the support she needs to do well in college prep courses.
The program director told us to be prepared to be turned down for ACT/SAT accommodations despite her IEP and other documentation. She said the bar is very high, most get turned down - however, she will then file an appeal and provide additional documentation and we cross our fingers that is is accepted by ACT/SAT.
She felt our daughter has a good chance of getting accommodations on an appeal, but not to count on it for they routinely turn down kids that she feels really should get it. So, rest assured, they are not handing out extra hours like candy to anyone who asks or provides them with a minimum of documentation of a vague problem.
This is true.
+1. My DD who has received accommodations at her high school for ADHD since freshman year was turned down for accommodations on the SAT.
And rightly so. Because they are seeing an increase of kids coming to the party late with diagnoses after middle school. it is very suspicious when people suddenly have a new diagnosis of ADHD. In most cases this is identified in elementary school. I am sure those who are gaming the system are the ones who decide to get evaluated in high school for the first time. Our DS gets accommodations on both SAT and ACT, but he has a strong history of accommodations since 2nd grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you may find this hard to believe but it's not as easy as you think to get accommodations on the ACT and SAT. I'm the PP whose daughter has abnormal eye tracking and low processing. She is in a special program at her high school that provides her with the support she needs to do well in college prep courses.
The program director told us to be prepared to be turned down for ACT/SAT accommodations despite her IEP and other documentation. She said the bar is very high, most get turned down - however, she will then file an appeal and provide additional documentation and we cross our fingers that is is accepted by ACT/SAT.
She felt our daughter has a good chance of getting accommodations on an appeal, but not to count on it for they routinely turn down kids that she feels really should get it. So, rest assured, they are not handing out extra hours like candy to anyone who asks or provides them with a minimum of documentation of a vague problem.
This is true.
+1. My DD who has received accommodations at her high school for ADHD since freshman year was turned down for accommodations on the SAT.
And rightly so. Because they are seeing an increase of kids coming to the party late with diagnoses after middle school. it is very suspicious when people suddenly have a new diagnosis of ADHD. In most cases this is identified in elementary school. I am sure those who are gaming the system are the ones who decide to get evaluated in high school for the first time. Our DS gets accommodations on both SAT and ACT, but he has a strong history of accommodations since 2nd grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you may find this hard to believe but it's not as easy as you think to get accommodations on the ACT and SAT. I'm the PP whose daughter has abnormal eye tracking and low processing. She is in a special program at her high school that provides her with the support she needs to do well in college prep courses.
The program director told us to be prepared to be turned down for ACT/SAT accommodations despite her IEP and other documentation. She said the bar is very high, most get turned down - however, she will then file an appeal and provide additional documentation and we cross our fingers that is is accepted by ACT/SAT.
She felt our daughter has a good chance of getting accommodations on an appeal, but not to count on it for they routinely turn down kids that she feels really should get it. So, rest assured, they are not handing out extra hours like candy to anyone who asks or provides them with a minimum of documentation of a vague problem.
This is true.
+1. My DD who has received accommodations at her high school for ADHD since freshman year was turned down for accommodations on the SAT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you may find this hard to believe but it's not as easy as you think to get accommodations on the ACT and SAT. I'm the PP whose daughter has abnormal eye tracking and low processing. She is in a special program at her high school that provides her with the support she needs to do well in college prep courses.
The program director told us to be prepared to be turned down for ACT/SAT accommodations despite her IEP and other documentation. She said the bar is very high, most get turned down - however, she will then file an appeal and provide additional documentation and we cross our fingers that is is accepted by ACT/SAT.
She felt our daughter has a good chance of getting accommodations on an appeal, but not to count on it for they routinely turn down kids that she feels really should get it. So, rest assured, they are not handing out extra hours like candy to anyone who asks or provides them with a minimum of documentation of a vague problem.
This is true.
Anonymous wrote:”...This greatly alarmed the College Board that the population of students receiving accommodation did not mirror the rest of the population.”
I honestly don’t understand why it would alarm anyone that the special needs population doesn’t mirror the rest of the population. Of course they don’t. They receive accommodations specifically because they are unlike the rest of the population. Some special needs kids are brilliant but cannot show what they know without accommodations. Others are severely impaired and their performance on standardized tests falls well below average no matter what accommodations they receive. If your child was neither brilliant nor severely impaired, you probably wouldn’t spend thousands of dollars pursuing accommodations that might not make any significant difference in the college admissions process.