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General Parenting
wanting to give son and wife help
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<blockquote data-quote="LittleDudesMom" data-source="post: 199117" data-attributes="member: 805"><p>Hi Kasey,</p><p> </p><p>it's great to have you join us and nice to see such a concerned grandma. It is tough raising a difficult child alone, which appears to be what your daughter in law is basically doing. </p><p> </p><p>As the others have said, relying soley on the school for the results of the testing is not always a good thing - unless daughter in law has done her own research and feels in her gut that their diagnosis is correct. There are some great school districts who can do quality testing.</p><p> </p><p>However, it may be a good thing for your daughter in law to speak with her daughter's peddoc and get a recommendation for testing. She can have a multidisciplinary evaluation at a local children's hospital or teaching university or go the neuropdoc or psychiatrist route.</p><p> </p><p>I would also recommend getting from the library (or go through the Amazon link on the site here) the book The Explosive Child, by Ross Greene. It is a wonderful book that helps parents with some insight into the workings of their difficult children.</p><p> </p><p>Welcome.</p><p> </p><p>Sharon</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LittleDudesMom, post: 199117, member: 805"] Hi Kasey, it's great to have you join us and nice to see such a concerned grandma. It is tough raising a difficult child alone, which appears to be what your daughter in law is basically doing. As the others have said, relying soley on the school for the results of the testing is not always a good thing - unless daughter in law has done her own research and feels in her gut that their diagnosis is correct. There are some great school districts who can do quality testing. However, it may be a good thing for your daughter in law to speak with her daughter's peddoc and get a recommendation for testing. She can have a multidisciplinary evaluation at a local children's hospital or teaching university or go the neuropdoc or psychiatrist route. I would also recommend getting from the library (or go through the Amazon link on the site here) the book The Explosive Child, by Ross Greene. It is a wonderful book that helps parents with some insight into the workings of their difficult children. Welcome. Sharon [/QUOTE]
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