Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mentioned autistic tendencies ... did they actually do an ADOS?
My DS was being routed towards ED with a lot of similar issues in K, though he tended to turn everything inward so was threatening suicide vs being aggressive towards other students. Turns out a lot of it was related to ASD, anxiety, and LD.
In our county, I'm doing my best to keep him as far from the ED label as possible. I don't know if MoCo is any different but I'd much rather the school understand that unwanted behavior is originating from ASD & anxiety vs just writing it off as "willful" and treating it punitively. Because then if they actually give him the supports he needs because of his ASD and anxiety, he won't have the behavior problems.
This has been my experience as well. Once my child started getting adequate supports for anxiety and ASD/ADHD combined, the behaviors have mostly gone away. And even with some behaviors now, they are not as extreme (like hitting, work refusal, etc.). When a child is adequately supported, they should be able to perform much better. Don't let the school label your child as a behavior "problem." That is so easy for them and puts all the pressure and blame on your child and you.
My child's experience as well. The year before ASD diagnosis, in a poor fit school, was terrible -- hitting, biting, screaming, meltdowns. With a diagnosis and a better fit school, all the aggressive behavior disappeared and meltdowns got much better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mentioned autistic tendencies ... did they actually do an ADOS?
My DS was being routed towards ED with a lot of similar issues in K, though he tended to turn everything inward so was threatening suicide vs being aggressive towards other students. Turns out a lot of it was related to ASD, anxiety, and LD.
In our county, I'm doing my best to keep him as far from the ED label as possible. I don't know if MoCo is any different but I'd much rather the school understand that unwanted behavior is originating from ASD & anxiety vs just writing it off as "willful" and treating it punitively. Because then if they actually give him the supports he needs because of his ASD and anxiety, he won't have the behavior problems.
This has been my experience as well. Once my child started getting adequate supports for anxiety and ASD/ADHD combined, the behaviors have mostly gone away. And even with some behaviors now, they are not as extreme (like hitting, work refusal, etc.). When a child is adequately supported, they should be able to perform much better. Don't let the school label your child as a behavior "problem." That is so easy for them and puts all the pressure and blame on your child and you.
Anonymous wrote:You mentioned autistic tendencies ... did they actually do an ADOS?
My DS was being routed towards ED with a lot of similar issues in K, though he tended to turn everything inward so was threatening suicide vs being aggressive towards other students. Turns out a lot of it was related to ASD, anxiety, and LD.
In our county, I'm doing my best to keep him as far from the ED label as possible. I don't know if MoCo is any different but I'd much rather the school understand that unwanted behavior is originating from ASD & anxiety vs just writing it off as "willful" and treating it punitively. Because then if they actually give him the supports he needs because of his ASD and anxiety, he won't have the behavior problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How high is her IQ? Big difference between 130 and 145+. Is her verbal IQ lower than her perceptual reasoning? Or are they both high?
Eh, not really: http://www.hoagiesgifted.org/highly_profoundly.htm
"There is the numerical answer: a child of IQ 160 is as different from a moderately gifted child of 130, as that child is from an average child of 100. But IQ scores are no longer derived from a ratio, with the numerical difference between scores indicating the variation. Today's IQ tests score on a curve, so that the difference between 100 and 115 is far less than the difference between 130 and 145, and the difference between 130 and 145 is far less than the difference between 145 and 160, though the ranges appear similar numerically.
And there are lots of different levels of development to consider in each child. There is intellectual development, the development measured by an IQ test. There is also physical development - gross and fine motor skills, social and emotional development, and spiritual development. And all of these development levels characterize the gifted child."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here...nutshell history is,
- issues started on and off in a private prek. We did childfind eval and they naturally said all was wonderful. By Feb. 2016 we were on verge of being kicked out and we called childfind again and they agreed to revisit, came out and observed her 4/2016, then had IEP/PEP meeting with them and the "home elementary school" special ed teacher 5/2016. In May we also started ritalin. Moderate improvement.
- Issues on and off through the fall, some dosage tweaks etc., issues accelerated after Thanksgiving. Major incident in early January that unnerved us. Her therapist suggested psych testing, and we had intake on that at tail end of January. Pricey but felt we needed to do it. Got report a couple days before spring break, and yep gave it to the school. No real response to it yet.
- Testing was WISC-IV. Full scale IQ was 137. Verbal was lower than fluid reasoning, is that the same as percetual?
I probably missed some questions. I don't know boredom is causing the behaviors, that was just me speculating. None of the increasing array of medical professionals has indicated as such
137 is not "highly gifted". It's in the moderately gifted range.
So I got both parts of my thread title wrong?? Well I just suck. "Behavior issues and twice-exceptional, age 6...what next?" I guess it should have been. I do promise she is 6.
LOL, I'm the PP above. I'm also the one who argued above that what you describe, with anxiety as a major factor can be considered an emotional disability, so no one person thinks you're twice wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here...nutshell history is,
- issues started on and off in a private prek. We did childfind eval and they naturally said all was wonderful. By Feb. 2016 we were on verge of being kicked out and we called childfind again and they agreed to revisit, came out and observed her 4/2016, then had IEP/PEP meeting with them and the "home elementary school" special ed teacher 5/2016. In May we also started ritalin. Moderate improvement.
- Issues on and off through the fall, some dosage tweaks etc., issues accelerated after Thanksgiving. Major incident in early January that unnerved us. Her therapist suggested psych testing, and we had intake on that at tail end of January. Pricey but felt we needed to do it. Got report a couple days before spring break, and yep gave it to the school. No real response to it yet.
- Testing was WISC-IV. Full scale IQ was 137. Verbal was lower than fluid reasoning, is that the same as percetual?
I probably missed some questions. I don't know boredom is causing the behaviors, that was just me speculating. None of the increasing array of medical professionals has indicated as such
137 is not "highly gifted". It's in the moderately gifted range.
So I got both parts of my thread title wrong?? Well I just suck. "Behavior issues and twice-exceptional, age 6...what next?" I guess it should have been. I do promise she is 6.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here...nutshell history is,
- issues started on and off in a private prek. We did childfind eval and they naturally said all was wonderful. By Feb. 2016 we were on verge of being kicked out and we called childfind again and they agreed to revisit, came out and observed her 4/2016, then had IEP/PEP meeting with them and the "home elementary school" special ed teacher 5/2016. In May we also started ritalin. Moderate improvement.
- Issues on and off through the fall, some dosage tweaks etc., issues accelerated after Thanksgiving. Major incident in early January that unnerved us. Her therapist suggested psych testing, and we had intake on that at tail end of January. Pricey but felt we needed to do it. Got report a couple days before spring break, and yep gave it to the school. No real response to it yet.
- Testing was WISC-IV. Full scale IQ was 137. Verbal was lower than fluid reasoning, is that the same as percetual?
I probably missed some questions. I don't know boredom is causing the behaviors, that was just me speculating. None of the increasing array of medical professionals has indicated as such
137 is not "highly gifted". It's in the moderately gifted range.
Anonymous wrote:OP here...nutshell history is,
- issues started on and off in a private prek. We did childfind eval and they naturally said all was wonderful. By Feb. 2016 we were on verge of being kicked out and we called childfind again and they agreed to revisit, came out and observed her 4/2016, then had IEP/PEP meeting with them and the "home elementary school" special ed teacher 5/2016. In May we also started ritalin. Moderate improvement.
- Issues on and off through the fall, some dosage tweaks etc., issues accelerated after Thanksgiving. Major incident in early January that unnerved us. Her therapist suggested psych testing, and we had intake on that at tail end of January. Pricey but felt we needed to do it. Got report a couple days before spring break, and yep gave it to the school. No real response to it yet.
- Testing was WISC-IV. Full scale IQ was 137. Verbal was lower than fluid reasoning, is that the same as percetual?
I probably missed some questions. I don't know boredom is causing the behaviors, that was just me speculating. None of the increasing array of medical professionals has indicated as such
Anonymous wrote:OP here...Dumb question, when people say "the county"...who is the county? Dept of special ed? If the principal wants a placement change, who turns him or her down? DH is all "oh, the county can pay for private if there isn't a good placement for her, so there!" but not straight out of the home school right? I mean come on.
And yes, we have had a child psychiatrist for about a year now. I mentioned it in the original post, my last one was overly nutshelly.
MCPS GTLD (soooo many acronyms) starts in 3rd grade or we would probably try for that.