I have had several parent teacher conferences (in 1st, 2nd and 3rd grades to be precise) where I point blank said "[DD] seems to be struggling with reading and just general understanding of what is being taught, and homework seems to be a much bigger struggle for us than other families. Her background as an international adoptee puts her at MUCH HIGHER RISK for having a LD. I am ready to have her tested if you just say the word - does she need to be tested?" Teachers have basically looked back at me and said "Well, she does seem to be a bit slower at picking things up, but I don't think she needs to be tested for a LD. I'm sure she'll catch up.". Now, I am a single parent with just one child and I bought into the teachers-have-experience-with-a-lot-of-kids-and-know-what's-normal-vs.-a-real-problem philosophy for quite awhile. So I listened to those teachers. For MUCH longer than I should have. My daughter is a very sweet, loving, rule-following child whose LD does not lead her to be disruptive or demanding in the classroom (just the opposite really - she likes to blend into the woodwork because of it), and maybe they just didn't want to believe something could be wrong with her or see her labeled with the evil LD word. Or maybe it was because I worked very hard at home to keep her up to speed with her class and teach her what she wasn't getting during class, so teachers legitimately didn't see it. Or maybe it was because her LD isn't one of the more "common" LDs like ADHD or Dyslexia so the teachers simply weren't aware that her symptoms added up to something. I don't think it was that the teachers didn't care - my daughter's teachers have all been wonderful caring people - but I think they simply out of ignorance dismissed certain issues. But the end result is I shouldn't have given what the teachers were saying more credibility than my own gut feelings and experiences.