polarbear,

Raising a twice-exceptional child is no picnic.

I'll ask the tester about doing extended norms. Do most achievement tests rely heavily on writing processing speed? If that's so, then we will likely have problems in the future as well. It would be almost impossible for a profoundly gifted child with dysgraphia to get the scores Davidson requires on a test like that. My son's achievement tests are at an acceptable level, only because writing is a separate subtest at this age. Even so, his slightly above-average score, is the one I am MOST proud of. He earned every bit of that score through hard work. smile