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Results WILL vary...
I have dealt with a lot of advocates in my days as the guy working for the school district.
Advocates can be an invaluable resource or they can be completely counter-productive. (and everything in -between)
In California, there are thee pages of regulations on who may be a licensed manicurist, but anyone can call themselves an advocate or educational consultant.
This means that there is no consistent standard of who they are or what their knowledge base it.... some are people who are just p*ed off at school districts and use this as a platform to get back.
When advocates help - They give you a third-party perspective, on your behalf, especially when emotions are running high. When the district is not taking care of business and they need the advocate to keep them on top of their job. When they have a knowledge base to hook you up with resources and help you understand the system and the disability better.
When they are not productive - When they have a "more is always better" or "one size fits all" approach to what kids need. When they talk more about their experiences as a parent/student than asking questions about your unique individual. When they start out unnecessarily adversarial with a "it is the only way to get anything done" attitude to the point where school staff is more focused on fighting them versus serving your child. example http://askdreric-schoolpsychologist.blogspot.com/2010/09/does-fear-of-litigation-make-educators.html
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