Hi gillmi,
You are fortunate that your son tests well. Mine does not, all his assessments are given with support from his teacher (questions read to him, given on one-to-one basis as possible), a writing sample of 3-5 sentences takes him 3 hours to complete. Even with that type of support, he will miss things on assessments that his teacher knows he can do, because it just wasn't clicking with him that moment or he lost focus during the assessment. School is just overall very difficult and overwhelming for him. Fortunately, I'm a stay-at-home mom and am able to devote a lot of time and energy to keeping on top of his difficulties, fighting with the school for services he needs and working with his teacher to help him stay on track. Otherwise, I cringe at the thought of what my son would be going through.
Yes, we were officially diagnosed with Dyspraxia in 2006 after we had been treating symptoms (low muscle tone in his hands, fine motor delays, speech delays) since he was 19 months old. We were so excited about getting a formal diagnosis because it made all his difficulties make sense. I thought it was such a break through for us because we could go to the school with a clear cut reason for his need for special services at school and they could help us with what we'd been doing privately for years. But that was wishful thinking on my part. Because dyspraxia isn't one of the 7 disabilities recognized by the US government and he wasn't failing by 2 grade levels (yes 2), the school originally turned him down for special education services. Again, he didn't fit in their "box" and it broke my heart. But I refused to take no for an answer because despite them telling me no, my son needed help and they were going to give it to him. I had to privately have him assessed for his expressive language delay at the clinic where he does OT services before the school would even test him. At no surprise to me, he did have a delay and I informed the school. Amazingly, the school finally tested him and he qualified. Once we got him into speech then he fell under the special ed umbrella, which qualified him for other services he needed, like daily content mastery where he works with a teacher one-to-one in a private classroom for a short period of time to work on things he's struggling with. I could go on for days about how flawed our school systems here in the US are when dealing with kids with these types of disabilities. It is just criminal.
Cameron finished on grade level this year to complete 1st grade, but at the lowest level of grade level in reading and math. He has to work 3 times harder than his peers just to keep up. I haven't seen any remarkable changes yet from doing the program and yes we are religious in doing our exercises. In 4 months, we have missed 1 1/2 days due to illnesses. We have stopped his OT visits since starting Dore because we felt it could conflict with the program. However, I am having an OT assessment done next month to give us an idea of where he is compared to this time last year, when his last assessment was done. I'm hoping that will give me a little hope that he's making progress with his coordination, balance and motor planning skills.
I'm keeping the faith because there is nothing more I can possibly do. I'm tired though and I know he is too.
I'll keep you posted on what I find out about the stomach pain. Hopefully we'll have a breakthrough to report soon!