Anonymous wrote:Had a nephew at McLean and a neighbor at Commonwealth. We visited both and liked both. My sense was commonwealth worked with moderate to mild LD while McLean worked with mild. Unforuntately, due to unforeseen financial issues (medical) we had to go with public school and that worked out.
As an educator who has also worked in administration I can tell you no school is allowed to diagnose your child. Asperger's/high functioning autism is/are pretty easy for school personnel to detect when they see your child day after day, but they are not really allowed to say it. Even school counselors are now allowed to give a diagnosis. Plus, it is a loaded diagnosis. People go to great lengths to avoid the label, insisting the child has ADHD, anxiety, language issues, etc so it's best to look at symptoms and address them and let outside professionals diagnose.
This is true and parents will get nowhere expecting a school to tell them what the diagnosis is with their child. At our public school the teachers are not even allowed to tell the parents that they should get their child evaluated. The only thing teachers and the school can do is to send home notes, emails, etc detailing what problems the child is having in the classroom. They basically send a lot of strong hints that an evaluation is in order but it is up to the parent to pick up the ball and get an evaluation. Not the school's fault if the parent doesn't get the message or takes a long time to figure it out. Personally, I find this unfortunate (being a parent who took a while to get the gist) but that is the way it is.