Neuropsych noted that dysgraphia does not have a well-accepted set of criteria, and with a kid like DD who fits some symptoms but not others, he thought it would just add more confusion to the situation and it was better to just say her issues stem from slow processing speed/EF dysfunction and be done with it. I do think that she has improved quite a bit with copy speed in the last 1.5 years. Not sure if someone with "dysgraphia" would imnprove like that with no treatment. Also, her handwriting is pretty good for the most part with no reversals, although she used to write over and over letters at age 7-8 (probably because she was making errors and then fixing them by writing over rather than erasing). She doesn't do that nearly as often. I'm guessing that there is some overlap between various conditions. Many kids with ADHD have poor handwriting, for instance.