Here's our story... hope it has some info you can use.
By the time our 3rd child was between 3 - 5 years old, I saw small differences in her. Nothing alarming, I knew she was smart, but there were little clues along the way. Her pre-school teachers were teaching safety awareness, and the importance of knowing their phone number and address. They worked with her, we worked with her, her older siblings worked with her. "Say, 555-123-4567." She would try to repeat, "222-555-9999."
Over that two year period, we tried to teach her the number. Her teachers thought it was her hearing, so we had her hearing tested... 4 times in 2 years. Finally, in March of the year she would start kindergarten, I had my calculator on the table, and she said, "Look Mommy, I did our phone number!" It read, 555-123-4567. We jumped for joy! I told her how proud I was. I cleared it and said do it again... it was perfectly type out. So I took the calculator away and said, "Now, tell me what it it." She said, "626-222-9447." My heart sank. I knew something was wrong.
That same day, I contacted our school to see if and where I could get her some help. They told me a true learning disability doesn't show up until about the middle of first grade. So, we waited. Meanwhile, my child couldn't remember the lines to "Happy Birthday" (3 of the 4 lines are exactly the same) or recite simple nursery rhymes.
Kindergarten seemed to be going okay, but when I questioned her teacher about my concerns (who also had both our older girls) she called me a "worry-wart" and said I was comparing her to her sisters who were at the top of their class, this child, she said, was not at the top of her class, but right where she should be. Another year gone.
First grade - January (
last Friday in Jan.) report card, I noticed they had dropped her from "On Level to
Below Reading Level." Called the teacher... "No, no need for concern, lots of kids are right where she is. Just continue to work with her at home." She entered remedial reading program.
First Grade -
first week of March - Received a call from the teacher... "We want to retain her in First grade." There is NO school here, the 3rd week of Feb.! So, in 15 school days, they went from, "No need for concern, to wanting to hold her back!
I made an appointment to meet with her teachers. I asked lots of questions, and asked to have her tested. They told me they didn't know if they could get her in before the end of the school year. (This was still the first week in March.)
(Some of this probably varies by state, school district, available funding, etc.)
Here in New York, I contacted the
Learning Disability Association of Central New York. They sent out a packet, including a form letter to copy, inserting my daughter's name, etc., into the blanks. By putting it in writing, the school legally had 30 days in which to test her. (The CSE called me to ask where I had learned this information!
hehehe)
Anyway, they tested her with the school psychologist. He got it wrong but slapped some "Borderline" label on her. (He did mention she aced the visual Memory part of the test.)
Grades 2 and 3 - More of the same. November conferences, "She's one of my best students! I don't know what you talking about." April conferences roll around, and then it was, "Gee, ya know, I think you're are right. I think she does have a problem." I didn't want to be right, just wanted her to get helped if she needed it. Two more years wasted.
Finally, with the help of her very nice 4th grade teacher, the school agreed to test her
outside of the school. BINGO! Finally a name... and it all made sense.
My daughter has, and there are other names for it, Specific Language Recall Disability. The information goes in correctly, she processes it correctly, but she can't always put it back out correctly. Simple example - 2 + 2 = 4 goes into the brain, she understands 2 + 2 = 4, but when you ask her, she may not be able to come up with the word, "four." He said she had already found ways to compensate for it. He also mentioned she aced the visual memory part of the test. (One way she was managing so well.)
This Dr. put in place for her, an IEP and listed modifications that would be helpful. This was 4th grade. By the end of 6th grade, the school declassified her, saying with her averages (all above 90) they couldn't justify her need to remain in the program.
She graduated this past year... 11th in her class, (yep, just missed the top 10 and we had big tears.) She's off to a 4 year college and going for... Special Education.
I think you need to have DD tested. Start with your school and put your request in writing. If you aren't satisfied or something doesn't seem right, you may need to go outside the school. Also, have vision and hearing tested. Talk to her pediatrician. Ours was very helpful... her daughter is a special ed teacher. Be your child's advocate and do your own homework.
On a side note - I want to mention, I am happy with our school and the teachers. We've had 2 other children graduate in the Top 10 and 2 still in school. Even to best teachers/schools, though, can miss problems or be lacking the resources, funding etc., to catch all problems.
Good luck.