I suspect my son with Developmental Coordination Disorder also has NVLD (WISC visual-spatial index is 78 and all the other indexes are in the average range, with verbal being his highest and more than 20 points above his spatial; reading scores on the WIAT are 10 points above his arithmetic, weak fine motor, poor motor planning, socially very naive). Although he did OK in math in the early grades he really struggled with Prealgebra and now Algebra. He needed extensive outside tutoring to pass Prealgebra and is barely passing Algebra even with the extensive tutoring. Given his visual-spatial WISC score I am anticipating Geometry (a graduation requirement) will be even harder. He also has a really hard time with academic writing (paragraph and essay organization and supporting his ideas with details are all very poor), but because his vocabulary and grammar are well above average he hasn't qualified for any writing support (he is allowed to type rather than handwrite, but does not get specialized instruction).
He was tested for ADD/ADHD in elementary school; the educational psychologist who evaluated him said he did not have ADD/ADHD, but suspected learning disabilities and particularly NVLD. The testing he did at school last year seems to support this. NVLD isn't in the DSM so it isn't a medical diagnosis, but does it carry any weight in education? He is having full neuropsych testing in a couple of months and if the neuropsych confirms he meets the criteria for NVLD, will that open any doors to further services? My school district is notoriously difficult to work with, so before I talk to them about modifying his IEP and adding services it is helpful to know what is typical in this situation in a more functional school district. I may need to go into due process over this so I want to make sure I am asking for supports that are warranted and effective so they stand a chance of being implemented.
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HighSchoolParent
I suspect my son with Developmental Coordination Disorder also has NVLD (WISC visual-spatial index is 78 and all the other indexes are in the average range, with verbal being his highest and more than 20 points above his spatial; reading scores on the WIAT are 10 points above his arithmetic, weak fine motor, poor motor planning, socially very naive). Although he did OK in math in the early grades he really struggled with Prealgebra and now Algebra. He needed extensive outside tutoring to pass Prealgebra and is barely passing Algebra even with the extensive tutoring. Given his visual-spatial WISC score I am anticipating Geometry (a graduation requirement) will be even harder. He also has a really hard time with academic writing (paragraph and essay organization and supporting his ideas with details are all very poor), but because his vocabulary and grammar are well above average he hasn't qualified for any writing support (he is allowed to type rather than handwrite, but does not get specialized instruction).
He was tested for ADD/ADHD in elementary school; the educational psychologist who evaluated him said he did not have ADD/ADHD, but suspected learning disabilities and particularly NVLD. The testing he did at school last year seems to support this. NVLD isn't in the DSM so it isn't a medical diagnosis, but does it carry any weight in education? He is having full neuropsych testing in a couple of months and if the neuropsych confirms he meets the criteria for NVLD, will that open any doors to further services? My school district is notoriously difficult to work with, so before I talk to them about modifying his IEP and adding services it is helpful to know what is typical in this situation in a more functional school district. I may need to go into due process over this so I want to make sure I am asking for supports that are warranted and effective so they stand a chance of being implemented.
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