Tortuga wrote:
It's hard for me to compare my son to other children. He's not a little professor as some people describe a child with Aspergers, but he's very bright. On an IQ test, his highest subtest (tested above average) was in the area of perceptive reasoning. I see that he's perceptive in many ways, but other people miss that because of his autistic behaviors.
He's so bright, yet he struggles to read. I have a hard time understanding that sometimes. He's well-above grade level in science, history, and social studies.....as long as you read it to him. He's in the 3rd grade, but tests at high school level for science.
I have to homeschool him. He is atypical enough that the school system did not have a program for him and I didn't want to litigate it.
Your son sounds a lot like me... 154-157 IQ on the old scale here... I hate to read because my mind does not work like that. I am extremly adept at perceptive reasoning, and abstract problem solving. It takes me SO LONG to read. I hate it and don't have the patience. I can actually read aloud faster than I can read "in my head" but when I read aloud, I read flawlessly and understand 5-10% of what I read. I can write a novel faster than I can read one.
I always tested very well and read aloud very well, so none of the educators, or my parents really figured out my difficulty with reading. Once we switched to lecture format vs book work format I excelled in school... Most teachers attempt to explain long enough for me to get it, then expect the book to reinforce it, but I would just use their lectures alone to do all the work.
Homeschool sounds like a great option for you and I am glad you have that ability! My kids are homeschooled as well.
_________________
If you suffer from Autism, you're doing it wrong.