Hi Elsie, I am on my phone and don't have time to fully reply to everything, but wanted to address the OT comment re no fine motor deficiency where the neuropsych had seen an issue. If the neuropsych is suggesting fine motor dysgraphia, she is referring to a neurological connection made in the brain that is used to coordinator fine motor when creating letters and numbers. A child can have fine motor dysgraphia and still have what looks on the surface like an ok OT evaluation. My ds was referred for OT after he was diagnosed with fine motor dysgraphia and his intake OT eval found he had no fine motor deficiencies - which didn't mean he didn't have dysgraphia. What it meant was he had fine motor skills sufficient to allow him to benefit from handwriting OT.

polarbear