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"Free" Psychologists
Being one of the "free" school psychologists that you speak of, I can tell you for sure that I have never acted outside the interest of a student, even when it upset my school colleagues, and I don't know any other school psychologist who has.
We don't get into this field because we get our kicks from upsetting parents and trying to trick them. C'mon, you can't consider for a moment that just maybe they were genuinely trying to develo something that works for your child? Yes, schools are required to provide only the minimum necessary to help the student access the curriculum, but they very often go as far as they can with the resources they have, even when the parent is difficult. If you want to be angry with someone, consider the economy for a target. We also have enormous case loads to deal with, and I think that very often parents don't consider that.
I'm not suggesting that you shouldn't advocate for your child; You absolutely should. I myself needed a lot of this same help as a child, but thankfully my parents worked with the school respectfully and purposefully and what I didn't have I learned to develop coping skills for. All I'm saying is to please consider for a moment that educators are not innately bad and we don't sit up at night thinking of ways to torture you. We're doing the best we can with what we have.
And, the "free" school psychologists you speak of are trained specifically to work with students' needs in schools. You're seeking advice from a more clinical perspective. We design interventions that work in the school environment because it's our specialty and we chose to work in schools, not because we're any less capable or intelligent than a clinical psychologist.
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