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Special Ed 101
More re. accomodations & classification
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<blockquote data-quote="klmno" data-source="post: 197292" data-attributes="member: 3699"><p>Thank you! I've found that extremely useful in the past but had never looked at the article on classification, for some reason. I just read it and think I'll take it to the case manager. It isn't too long to expect her to read and it explains BiPolar (BP) pretty well, I think.</p><p></p><p>Also, the very areas it uses as examples to point out that kids with BiPolar (BP) have cognitive issues are the areas that difficult child scored low in on his neuropsychologist testing, which was done privately a year before he was diagnosis'd with BiPolar (BP) but the school has copies of. I'm glad they used the example of difficulty getting up and going to school sometimes, too.</p><p></p><p>I wonder, though, why they would have schizophrenia(sp) listed as ED. Not that it matters but that doesn't sound right to me-</p><p></p><p>Edited to add: I just emailed the link and pdf files of the education pamplet and the classification article. Also, I mentioned that difficult child isn't very stable right now and I'm very concerned about having effective strategies in place because this is more than a motivation problem, so I believe we should have an iep meeting as soon as we can.</p><p></p><p>I have copied the suggestions that Janet posted from archives and I'll go over them before the meeting.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="klmno, post: 197292, member: 3699"] Thank you! I've found that extremely useful in the past but had never looked at the article on classification, for some reason. I just read it and think I'll take it to the case manager. It isn't too long to expect her to read and it explains BiPolar (BP) pretty well, I think. Also, the very areas it uses as examples to point out that kids with BiPolar (BP) have cognitive issues are the areas that difficult child scored low in on his neuropsychologist testing, which was done privately a year before he was diagnosis'd with BiPolar (BP) but the school has copies of. I'm glad they used the example of difficulty getting up and going to school sometimes, too. I wonder, though, why they would have schizophrenia(sp) listed as ED. Not that it matters but that doesn't sound right to me- Edited to add: I just emailed the link and pdf files of the education pamplet and the classification article. Also, I mentioned that difficult child isn't very stable right now and I'm very concerned about having effective strategies in place because this is more than a motivation problem, so I believe we should have an iep meeting as soon as we can. I have copied the suggestions that Janet posted from archives and I'll go over them before the meeting. [/QUOTE]
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More re. accomodations & classification
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