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Special Ed 101
Talked with sd psychologist re: test
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<blockquote data-quote="smallworld" data-source="post: 50205" data-attributes="member: 2423"><p>Kjs, is it possible the terms, "high risk," etc. came from questionnaires the teachers filled out? The reason I ask is that when my son underwent a private neuropsychologist evaluation last December, his neuropsychologist sent his teachers the Achenbach Teacher Report Form (TRF). The questions they answered were tallied and came back with various classifications that included "average," "high-average," "clinicallly elevated," and "clinically at-risk" for areas such as depressive problems, anxiety-based problems, behavioral/conduct problems, etc. When you meet with the program director, you should ask for a complete list of tests performed with results. It may not be something anyone should change because it's how his teachers report the school behaviors they see.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="smallworld, post: 50205, member: 2423"] Kjs, is it possible the terms, "high risk," etc. came from questionnaires the teachers filled out? The reason I ask is that when my son underwent a private neuropsychologist evaluation last December, his neuropsychologist sent his teachers the Achenbach Teacher Report Form (TRF). The questions they answered were tallied and came back with various classifications that included "average," "high-average," "clinicallly elevated," and "clinically at-risk" for areas such as depressive problems, anxiety-based problems, behavioral/conduct problems, etc. When you meet with the program director, you should ask for a complete list of tests performed with results. It may not be something anyone should change because it's how his teachers report the school behaviors they see. [/QUOTE]
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Talked with sd psychologist re: test
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