auntblabby wrote:
i hope the OP has good social service/good insurance to assist her child in his development. there wasn't any of that stuff in my young years so i was stunted. didn't speak 'til 4. didn't read 'til 6 or so.
This might not have as much to do with your autism as just a crummy school system. I couldn't read at six either, so I needed special 'remedial' reading lessons. I was reading above my grade level my the time I was 8. My pre-k teacher had taught phonics, my kindergarten teacher continued this because that was how I learned best, my first grade teacher (the one who sent me to remedial lessons) though phonics was a bunch of BS and refused to teach me that way, so I didn't learn well. This was a theme throughout school for me, I had a lot of teachers who insisted that they knew the best way to learn to do something, even if it made no sense to me, and having someone else explain it differently worked for me, but would then make the teacher angry because I wasn't learning the way they taught.
Granted I wasn't diagnosed at the time, so there is that. Dunno if that would've been more helpful or not. I do hope she lives in an area with good resources, but I wouldn't hold my breath on the insurance thing. The only kind of autism treatment covered by insurance is ABA therapy... and I don't think I need to explain anything further than that. So, my insurance doesn't cover CBT therapy for my autism and I have to pay out of pocket, although I'm sure if it was CBT therapy for depression or anxiety or something, then it'd be covered!