Anonymous wrote:As a classroom teacher, please please be upset about this. If your kid goes to a school with special education services, this impacts them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This could not be a more shirt-sighted decision by the Taylor administration. The schools serving special needs children need way more support, not less! Cannot imagine what that CO brain trust is thinking! 🤬
Follow the money… it all leads to the pockets of Peter O. Moran.
Oh please, here is the ubiquitous Moran-basher making hyperbolic and flimsy allegations again!
Hi Moran! You failed many of our kids and now are doing serious harm. Enough is enough. Time for you to leave MCPS!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This could not be a more shirt-sighted decision by the Taylor administration. The schools serving special needs children need way more support, not less! Cannot imagine what that CO brain trust is thinking! 🤬
Follow the money… it all leads to the pockets of Peter O. Moran.
Oh please, here is the ubiquitous Moran-basher making hyperbolic and flimsy allegations again!
Hi Moran! You failed many of our kids and now are doing serious harm. Enough is enough. Time for you to leave MCPS!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This could not be a more shirt-sighted decision by the Taylor administration. The schools serving special needs children need way more support, not less! Cannot imagine what that CO brain trust is thinking! 🤬
Follow the money… it all leads to the pockets of Peter O. Moran.
Oh please, here is the ubiquitous Moran-basher making hyperbolic and flimsy allegations again!
Anonymous wrote:As a teacher in classic autism who has worked with both our building psychologist and our autism psychologist, there is a huge differenced. I think they're all trained the same but it's more about the level of experience. It was a huge learning curve for me to jump into working with kids with cognitive disabilities. This is a low incidence population so I don't think the usual psychologist comes across a lot of ID kids regularly. The autism psychologists almost exclusively are working with our kids whose IQs are below 75 - it takes a lot more work and time to get used to each kid and get results. The building psychologist has done a few assessments for move in/home school model kids who have been placed with us temporarily. You can tell they are not comfortable with our kids and usually "attempt" an IQ test and when they can't get the student to do it in a short time frame they check the box that they tried and move on. We need these scores to qualify them for alo (non-diploma track) and to help get them services later when they become adults. It'll be a huge disservice to lose this expertise! I also don't understand why you think they have less accountability... the Autism Unit is much smaller than the psychology department so I would think they have more oversight, not less.
Anonymous wrote:Are all school psychologists not trained the same? I do think there is value in having one building psychologist who is in the same building full time. Why would a psychologist advocate to be in multiple buildings, more freedom and less accountability. I would think all school psychologists would have training to complete autism assessments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think in Montgomery County the Autism program was a racket like the Minneapolis fraud.
I think they were labeling kids that weren't autistic as autistic so they could get federal funds. Now they are afraid of getting busted.
LOL Sure nonverbal students with autism were just “labeled” for money. Thanks Taylor for joining the chat. Is that why you refuse to even step foot into an autism classroom? Are you afraid to meet the most severely impacted children in person?
My kid isn't autistic at all. They were just trying to get funds by misclassifying him.
Your child was nonverbal but not autistic? You know what nonverbal means?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think in Montgomery County the Autism program was a racket like the Minneapolis fraud.
I think they were labeling kids that weren't autistic as autistic so they could get federal funds. Now they are afraid of getting busted.
LOL Sure nonverbal students with autism were just “labeled” for money. Thanks Taylor for joining the chat. Is that why you refuse to even step foot into an autism classroom? Are you afraid to meet the most severely impacted children in person?
My kid isn't autistic at all. They were just trying to get funds by misclassifying him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think in Montgomery County the Autism program was a racket like the Minneapolis fraud.
I think they were labeling kids that weren't autistic as autistic so they could get federal funds. Now they are afraid of getting busted.
LOL Sure nonverbal students with autism were just “labeled” for money. Thanks Taylor for joining the chat. Is that why you refuse to even step foot into an autism classroom? Are you afraid to meet the most severely impacted children in person?
Anonymous wrote:she won't be replaced at all, they cut the position. Kris is amazing, this is a huge loss to MCPS and autism students and families.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most concerning, the Autism Unit has been reduced by roughly half. Two positions were eliminated, and five psychologists with autism-specific assessment expertise were reassigned to general caseloads, dispersing specialized knowledge that has long supported schools and IEP teams. At its peak, the Autism Unit included 21 full-time specialists serving 73 schools. The unit’s longtime supervisor, Kristin Ericson, is also departing after 43 years at MCPS, representing a major loss of expertise and institutional knowledge.
https://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2026/01/breaking-taylor-proposes-major-cuts-to.html?m=1
She’s allowed to retire after 43 years.
It wasn’t her choice. She was forced out.
Regardless, I don't think someone who's been in a position for 43 years is entitled to stay there forever. We need fresh blood in MCPS.
She will be replaced with a sycophant. If you are looking for an improvement with a replacement in a department with diminishing resources, you won't find it.
The new Special Ed Chief is horrible, personally and professionally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This could not be a more shirt-sighted decision by the Taylor administration. The schools serving special needs children need way more support, not less! Cannot imagine what that CO brain trust is thinking! 🤬
Follow the money… it all leads to the pockets of Peter O. Moran.
Oh please, here is the ubiquitous Moran-basher making hyperbolic and flimsy allegations again!
she won't be replaced at all, they cut the position. Kris is amazing, this is a huge loss to MCPS and autism students and families.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most concerning, the Autism Unit has been reduced by roughly half. Two positions were eliminated, and five psychologists with autism-specific assessment expertise were reassigned to general caseloads, dispersing specialized knowledge that has long supported schools and IEP teams. At its peak, the Autism Unit included 21 full-time specialists serving 73 schools. The unit’s longtime supervisor, Kristin Ericson, is also departing after 43 years at MCPS, representing a major loss of expertise and institutional knowledge.
https://parentscoalitionmc.blogspot.com/2026/01/breaking-taylor-proposes-major-cuts-to.html?m=1
She’s allowed to retire after 43 years.
It wasn’t her choice. She was forced out.
Regardless, I don't think someone who's been in a position for 43 years is entitled to stay there forever. We need fresh blood in MCPS.
She will be replaced with a sycophant. If you are looking for an improvement with a replacement in a department with diminishing resources, you won't find it.