There was a topic about would grades affect the recruitment of your child? And it seemed the consensus was yes.
My question is what about if your child has a diagnosed learning disability and is truly doing the best he can?
Thanks.
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quote:Originally posted by allaboutbaseball:
I am a parent of a LD student-athelete. I am also a teacher so I get an opportunity to see this from many angels. If your son is LD then he has some form of accomodations that the college will take into account. My son is now a Freshman at a DII school. He signed early and is already getting playing time. We were very honest with the Coaches that recruited him and when the time came we were blessed with 9 choices from DI-DIII. We chose D-II because it was a smaller school that could work with him and his needs. Some of our top athelets that are professionals have some learning disorder from mild to severe. The nice thing we found was that all of the coaches and scouts listenedd and they worked with the counselors at the respective colleges. My son graduated HS with only a 3.1 but is in one of the top schools in the country. He took his work ethic on the filed and transferred it to the classroom. Thats what the college coaches saw.
Best of luck!
quote:Originally posted by Southpaw Pop:
On behalf of ZacksDad, thanks to the posters that stepped up with the personal experiences. Kudos to all!
Old discussion but a good discussion. This is very relevant in my world today.
Yes, NCAA has a special dept for this LD. Many results.
Bob
I have a niece playing D1 softball and she has accommodations as a result of a brain tumor removal when she was 4. She is on on heavy anti-seizure meds & needs more time to process certain things but is otherwise completely "normal" if you will. What a story! My wife is a 20 year Special Ed teacher and now a SSA, or Special Services Administrator (assist principal) and she deals with this all the time. At her school they prepare their students for college and their goal is to keep them in the classroom and learning with gen ed students. Great advice above and glad to hear about his talents on the field and opportunities in college.
too.tall posted:Old discussion but a good discussion. This is very relevant in my world today.
It's relevant in my world as well. However, being a college graduate that is dyslexic and knowing how my college bent over backwards to make sure I had the accommodations I needed, makes me feel better about the world my son will face.