Anonymous wrote:Can you tell me more about her middle school experience? Was this at Lab or Siena? What do you think should have happened in those years that didn't? (I have a middle schooler with dyslexia still struggling to read to learn and some decoding problems persisting)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Start her on transition services, prepare for trade school.
Could we please stop lowballing disabled kids? There are plenty of dyslexic, dysgraphic, dyscalculic kids who are bright enough for college, and there are a zillion colleges, many of which you can go to without having earned a single A.
The repeated talk about trade school is really not appropriate, unless the kid is organically interested in something trade school teaches.
Anonymous wrote:Is she medicated for the ADHD?
As one of the first posters said, you can’t expect miracles if the attention and focus aren’t there. They drive everything else.
My kid did maintain all As except in math in high school, despite his abysmally low processing speed, his dyscalculia, and dysgraphia (no dyslexia). Now I grant you dyslexia worsens the entire profile, but she will do much better with meds.
My son doesn’t need his meds anymore in college, BTW. High school was the hardest slog academically, and college is easier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Start her on transition services, prepare for trade school.
Could we please stop lowballing disabled kids? There are plenty of dyslexic, dysgraphic, dyscalculic kids who are bright enough for college, and there are a zillion colleges, many of which you can go to without having earned a single A.
The repeated talk about trade school is really not appropriate, unless the kid is organically interested in something trade school teaches.
Anonymous wrote:Start her on transition services, prepare for trade school.