Guest guest Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 Let me preface this by saying this is a helpful resource. I am one of you. When I have a problem, I seek expert advice, or I turn to someone who has overcome the same problem and ask how they did it. Being both an LD expert AND someone who has been through this personally, I have plenty of excellent free advice to offer you. There are also options for purchase, but anyone is welcome to stay on my list and just collect the useful freebies. I am the parent of an LD/ADD son, and it seems like yesterday that I was in the trenches. I remember the anxiety in 12th grade, feeling uncertain about whether my son could " do " college (he WANTED to go). Fortunately, besides being a parent, I've also worked with LD students on the college level since 1993, 13 of those years as a college Learning Specialist. In addition, I have my Master's Degree in Education from the University of PA, one of the finest schools in the country. As a result, I KNEW how to prepare my son, how to " vet " colleges (you can't believe what they tell you or what you read on their website), how to determine how much support my son would need, how to make the best match, and those decisions and strategies that bode for college success. My son, never a " student " , graduated college successfully and obtained a job in his field. Most students with LD fail on the college level - the statistics are abysmal. The ONLY way we can change this is to prepare them for college's unique challenges - it is VERY different from high school! If you are the parent of a teen in grades 9 - 12 and would like a free teleseminar, " How College Savvy Are You " , register at: http://www.conquercollegewithld.com/coaching.html. This is a coaching course - the first lesson is FREE for everyone, with no payment due, and no obligation to continue. You can also benefit from my totally free subscription list that sends out high-quality weekly articles pertaining to postsecondary transition -- http://www.conquercollegewithld.com. I have been passionate about college success for our kids since seeing my own son do it. His victory was not accidental, however; it was the result of difficult and deliberate decisions, all worth it in the end. If your teen is of normal intelligence, WANTS to go to college, acknowledges his LD, and will accept help, success is PROBABLE..... assuming you have all your " ducks in a row " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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