Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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."
Yeah really. An IQ of 130 is equal to or higher than every 2 out of 100 kids.- 2 Standard Deviations away from mean. So if a school has 100 kids you would expect to find about 20 students with that IQ or higher (and you would find more students with that IQ at a higher SES school and not as many at a low SES school since there is a strong correlation between a mother's level of education and her child's IQ). Once you get to 145 the percentile rank is 99.9 -3 Standard Deviatiins from the mean . That is equal to or higher than 1 out of 1000 students. That student might not have an intellectual peer group at the school.
An IQ of 137 is plenty gifted. If there are no issue at home and there are issues at school, I would really look into how she does in the community. If there aren't issues in the community- she owes fine at outside classes, play dates, camps, then I would wonder if you just haven't found the right school for her.
Can someone clarify this?
Anonymous wrote: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."
Yeah really. An IQ of 130 is equal to or higher than every 2 out of 100 kids.- 2 Standard Deviations away from mean. So if a school has 100 kids you would expect to find about 20 students with that IQ or higher (and you would find more students with that IQ at a higher SES school and not as many at a low SES school since there is a strong correlation between a mother's level of education and her child's IQ). Once you get to 145 the percentile rank is 99.9 -3 Standard Deviatiins from the mean . That is equal to or higher than 1 out of 1000 students. That student might not have an intellectual peer group at the school.
An IQ of 137 is plenty gifted. If there are no issue at home and there are issues at school, I would really look into how she does in the community. If there aren't issues in the community- she owes fine at outside classes, play dates, camps, then I would wonder if you just haven't found the right school for her.
Anonymous wrote:137 is not highly gifted. Also the testing sounds wonky. I'd wait simply. On all of the further testing. She's struggling. What does she need? Can you do a private for a couple years?
Anonymous wrote:also if Ritalin isn't taking care of lot of this I would say there's other things at play. She sounds like she has autism to be frank. I'd start some sort of behavior therapy. Nobody cares if she has a borderline gifted IQ if she can't behave. I'm speaking as the mom of a smart kid with serious behavior issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would schedule her for ADOS to evaluate her for autism. HFA in girls does not present in the same way as boys AND a psycheducational eval finding "signs of autism but not enough' should not rule out autism in a girl without ADOS.
If she is on the spectrum, it will be much easier to get her into the Asperger's program.
ADOS under diagnoses girls. If you are concerned about ASD, make sure you go to someone who has experience with girls. I recommend Dr. David Black.
True, girls can better "fake it" socially. We used Dr. Black for DS but can recommend Children's neuropsych dept under Lauren Kenworthy for ADOS.
Doesn't everyone "fake it" socially sometimes? I have never understood the talk of how autism presents differently in girls. DS has some ASD tendencies but ASD was ruled out by ADOS and other providers, but many of the descriptions of how girls with ASD present seem familiar to me. If he happened to be a girl but with the same issues would he get a diagnosis? Seems arbitrary.
This deserves its own thread, but one example is that one stereotypical boy asperger interest is trains and elevators. Those are kind of wonky interests, so a boy with those obsessive interests stands out. Girls are very rarely interested in those things but they might, for example, be obsessively interested in horses. Horses is a pretty typical interest, so the obsessiveness associated with asperger's would be harder to pick up. It's not a more vs less, but just different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would schedule her for ADOS to evaluate her for autism. HFA in girls does not present in the same way as boys AND a psycheducational eval finding "signs of autism but not enough' should not rule out autism in a girl without ADOS.
If she is on the spectrum, it will be much easier to get her into the Asperger's program.
ADOS under diagnoses girls. If you are concerned about ASD, make sure you go to someone who has experience with girls. I recommend Dr. David Black.
True, girls can better "fake it" socially. We used Dr. Black for DS but can recommend Children's neuropsych dept under Lauren Kenworthy for ADOS.
Doesn't everyone "fake it" socially sometimes? I have never understood the talk of how autism presents differently in girls. DS has some ASD tendencies but ASD was ruled out by ADOS and other providers, but many of the descriptions of how girls with ASD present seem familiar to me. If he happened to be a girl but with the same issues would he get a diagnosis? Seems arbitrary.
Anonymous wrote:ASD is more than just about social skills. Mental inflexibility, the inability to apply skills to new situations, and sensory issues, along with very commonly comorbid anxiety can cause a lot of behavioral issues like OP described.
High IQ and LD can also cause school refusal and tantrums. A bright child can be very conscious of their LD even if they don't have a name for it and refuse all activities related to the LD to minimize fear of failure and anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think an ADOS is necessary now. OP seems to have a handle on the main issues and has plenty of other things to work on at this point. If at some point social issues become more of a concern she could go back for more testing. Her child is still young and many social issues for kids with Asperger's may take until 3rd grade or higher to tease out.
OP you haven't talked about your child's emotional health. How is she reacting to everyone's reaction to her behavior? Is she happy at the school or does she tell you she wants to leave? These are key questions that would drive my decisions about where to place her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would schedule her for ADOS to evaluate her for autism. HFA in girls does not present in the same way as boys AND a psycheducational eval finding "signs of autism but not enough' should not rule out autism in a girl without ADOS.
If she is on the spectrum, it will be much easier to get her into the Asperger's program.
ADOS under diagnoses girls. If you are concerned about ASD, make sure you go to someone who has experience with girls. I recommend Dr. David Black.
True, girls can better "fake it" socially. We used Dr. Black for DS but can recommend Children's neuropsych dept under Lauren Kenworthy for ADOS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would schedule her for ADOS to evaluate her for autism. HFA in girls does not present in the same way as boys AND a psycheducational eval finding "signs of autism but not enough' should not rule out autism in a girl without ADOS.
If she is on the spectrum, it will be much easier to get her into the Asperger's program.
ADOS under diagnoses girls. If you are concerned about ASD, make sure you go to someone who has experience with girls. I recommend Dr. David Black.