Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would encourage you to look at Chelsea in Hyattsville. DS is happy and learning a ton. They specialize in dyslexia and don't restrict admission based on how many years behind a student is. It's expensive but not as bad as Lab. Call the admissions director tomorrow to see if they have openings for 6th.
Yes to Chelsea. Friend’s kid was six grade levels behind. Paid for by PGCPS. More than two grade levels should warrant non-public placement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would encourage you to look at Chelsea in Hyattsville. DS is happy and learning a ton. They specialize in dyslexia and don't restrict admission based on how many years behind a student is. It's expensive but not as bad as Lab. Call the admissions director tomorrow to see if they have openings for 6th.
Yes to Chelsea. Friend’s kid was six grade levels behind. Paid for by PGCPS. More than two grade levels should warrant non-public placement.
Anonymous wrote:I would encourage you to look at Chelsea in Hyattsville. DS is happy and learning a ton. They specialize in dyslexia and don't restrict admission based on how many years behind a student is. It's expensive but not as bad as Lab. Call the admissions director tomorrow to see if they have openings for 6th.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This absolutely sucks, but I think you only have bad choices right now, so it may be a matter of figuring out which bad option you can swallow.
1) Find the money for Lab School even if it means asking family for help, taking on a weekend job, or dipping into retirement or a 529.
2) Home school and deal with the loss of income.
3) Enroll in public and make yourself an enormous pain their ass until they agree that they can't meet his needs and help fund something that will work.
4) Move someplace known for special education and roll the dice that they have better resources.
This list sounds about right. Another choice is to rent out your house for a year and move somewhere so your dc can attend a great school and learn skills that they will then take back to public school. I’m currently reading The Woman Who Changed Her Brain, and the Arrowsmith School in Toronto sounds interesting. I haven’t done the research yet to know if this woman is for real or just blowing smoke.
I’m sorry your choices are so terrible. Could you pause saving for college right now? Kid isn’t going to college if they don’t learn to read. We had to stop saving for a while because our child’s autism was so out of control. It was not great financially, but he wasn’t on the college path anyway. Now he is. When we get there, we might be a little short, depending on how the markets do. It was still the right choice for our family.
Anonymous wrote:One of my kids with multiple special needs spent K-12 in MCPS on an IEP (apart from a short stint in private), and we were happy with his services and accommodations. However, he did not have dyslexia. Also, we moved to Bethesda from a problematic school district, because we'd heard the schools were better at dealing with SN and also generally more able to focus on such needs instead of student hunger, physical safety, etc, since the neighborhood is wealthier. He was still bullied in elementary, but the school was very responsive and it stopped rapidly. There were still a few fights, but he was not part of them.
Can you move inbounds to a different public school that has a better reputation? We reasoned it was worth it, to invest our money in more expensive real estate instead of "consuming" it on private school... even if we could have found a private we liked (we never did).
Dyslexia seems to be the only learning disability that schools don't readily cater to, for some unfathomable reason, which is incredibly irritating! So your child needs intensive OG tutoring regardless of where he's educated. I suppose he's doing that right now? So a mix of public plus expensive and frequent OG tutoring might be a better use of your resources than trying to find a unicorn private school. DS had multiple therapies that happened every week, and then on days we didn't have them, I copied what happened in those sessions at home with him. It was the most rapid way to overcome his delays, both physical, behavioral, and academic. A ton of hard work on both our parts, but that way I leveraged the cost of therapies, coaching and tutoring in a really optimal way.
Best of luck, OP.
Money. Pure and simple: dyslexia remediation doesn’t come cheap. Op - you must AVOID the frequent calls on the board for MCPS. They are peculiarly bad for dyslexia. I would say Jemicy is your best option at this point.
Anonymous wrote:Hi. This is the OP and I’m so grateful for these suggestions. Thank you, thank you, thank you!!! I’d hug every single one of you if possible.
DC is now enrolled in the ASDEC summer program for this coming summer. We have tried to find an ASDEC academic therapist for the last year, but no availability. We didn’t know about the Holy Child, Chelsea or Jamicy school options. We are in NoVA so logistics might be tough but we will figure it out. We can’t give up our jobs, but I am a fed, so that might work itself out anyway.DC has been tutored for OG privately for years and makes more progress that way but also loves school and is social. DC plays several sports, has a lot of friends, does scouting, loves sleepaway camp, is well adjusted and socially normal…. but can’t read or write. Is making progress (not illiterate anymore thanks to tutor) but very slowly. And is probably 2.5 years below grade level.
Anonymous wrote:Op again. For those who said “move” districts. We cannot. We have two other kids who are older and happy and doing well in HS.
Anonymous wrote:This absolutely sucks, but I think you only have bad choices right now, so it may be a matter of figuring out which bad option you can swallow.
1) Find the money for Lab School even if it means asking family for help, taking on a weekend job, or dipping into retirement or a 529.
2) Home school and deal with the loss of income.
3) Enroll in public and make yourself an enormous pain their ass until they agree that they can't meet his needs and help fund something that will work.
4) Move someplace known for special education and roll the dice that they have better resources.