Anonymous wrote:If your child will need an autism program with smaller classes (any level of autism including HFA), Montgomery county has the best options. However, if your child will be fully mainstreamed, I wouldn’t recommend.
Anonymous wrote:I’m reading this as the parent of a neurodivergent kid in Westchester County, NY and my jaw is on the floor. We have had no issues getting the necessary supports for our kid and he is thriving and happy in school. Having grown up in MoCo and lived in DC it would never have occurred to me that parents in such an affluent area would struggle to get services for their kids, especially since the districts aren’t tiny. Legal precedent here in NY makes it very easy to sue for services which may have something to do with the process here. There is also no shame in neurodivergence in our affluent community that I have encountered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child will need an autism program with smaller classes (any level of autism including HFA), Montgomery county has the best options. However, if your child will be fully mainstreamed, I wouldn’t recommend.
This is a blatant lie. Moco absolutely does not provide smaller classes for HFA in any shape or form. They push HFA kids into mainstream and then wait to see if they fail badly enough to put them into a different program. There is a lot of gatekeeping and spots are limited in the Aspergers MS program. Furthermore, there is a lot of political activism happening through the school system via budget reshuffling, and some of the previously good ASD programs are being dismantled in the name of equity - see the recent Newsweek piece on Darndestown Learning Center situation.
I bought in Whitman cluster before we knew we will need special education services and if I had to do it again I would buy in Arlington or Fairfax. MCPS is a hot mess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New Jersey. I'm only half joking. I wish we had left here years ago. Too late now, for various reasons.
This was what I was going to say. A friend changed careers and moved across the country because he didn't know what to do for his ASD child in his west coast city (they had tried both private and public schools with no success) and said it was 100% worth it in terms of the difference in services and support his child got. He went from basically not attending school to graduating from high school and going on to college, and his parents credit the school system for a LOT of that.
Another friend just moved there with two ADHD/dyslexic kids and again, she said the difference in supports they receive is just unbelievable. The school district is active in trying to figure out what services they can provide that will help make the kids more successful, v. their past school, where it felt like they were fighting the school every step of the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child will need an autism program with smaller classes (any level of autism including HFA), Montgomery county has the best options. However, if your child will be fully mainstreamed, I wouldn’t recommend.
Agree. Mainstreaming kiddos on montgomery county get ignored and bullied by both students and teachers in montgomery county but if they will be in a contained program it's an okay place
Anonymous wrote:I would look at the different special ed laws in Virginia and Maryland as another factor. As a parent, I appreciate that VA is a parent consent state - only maybe two states are. No changes can be made to the IEP without your consent. You can partially consent if they remove a goal, accommodation or service: “I consent to all parts of this IEP except the removal of xx,” and xx continues. You need parent consent to add or take away eligibility. It helps me feel more comfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Whatever you do, do not go to Charles County (south of PG).