Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP here. His report cards are "fine." At the elementary level, they do a 1 - 4 scale, so he has mostly 3s & 4s (the highest), with a few 2s thrown in here and there. On grade level for everything, a decent NNAT score, so not on anyone's radar for academic intervention. I am so, so grateful that academics are not a concern (yet). This is only first grade, though. I do see signs of attention and focus issues when he's doing his homework and has trouble sitting for ten minutes and write a few sentences about George Washington, or when he brings home papers that are illegible or scribbled, and I know he wasn't able to focus. Maybe that's typical of most first graders?
So, yes, I get that he doesn't need academic interventions, but as I understand it, the school can provide ABA, social skills training, maybe some OT if his core muscles continue to be a problem. The kids with physical disabilities receive OT through the school, though this isn't academic. My insurance will only provide ABA for kids aged 2 - 6, so private isn't an option unless we pay out of pocket. I have a special ed teacher friend who encouraged me to initiate the process by explaining how a paraeducator would provide social support in the classroom and it sounded like a godsend. I feel it would help him tremendously, as school is 60% of his day. I'm still not certain what support I should be asking for or expecting, so it's difficult to find my voice to advocate for it.
I will call Children's today, talk to my spec ed friend, and continue to read all that I can. Thank you so much, everyone, for your help and advice.
This is why the school isn't offering - it's that "significant academic impact" piece. They don't give services including evaluations, ABA, social skills etc. until there is an academic impact.