As an aspie who attended Stuy, I find the unstated assumption that the kids at Stuy (and those other elite schools) don't overlap at *all* with the, uh, "special needs crowd" to be, if not quite wildly hilarious, at least quietly amusing.
However, lest we go too far the *other* way - no, not all supergeniuses are autistic, and no, not everybody at Stuy is on the spectrum. (When I was there I'd say the percentage wasn't any higher than in the general population - but it wasn't lower than the general population either, of course.)
However, lest we go too far the *other* way - no, not all supergeniuses are autistic, and no, not everybody at Stuy is on the spectrum. (When I was there I'd say the percentage wasn't any higher than in the general population - but it wasn't lower than the general population either, of course.)
no subject
Date: 2010-12-24 08:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-24 10:19 pm (UTC)I had an IEP when I was young (mostly unrelated to the AS, it was for speech therapy... which may or may not be related, but that certainly wasn't the why of it), but sometime after my father died it simply... stopped. It wasn't very useful to me at that point anyway.