Of course, the child also needs to know what Asperger's even is. I was diagnosed at 8 and was present when the diagnosis was confirmed, but all I knew about it was that people with Asperger's often don't like sports, are highly intelligent, and that Albert Einstein might have had Aspergers. It would have helped me a lot if I actually knew what Asperger's was. It didn't help when shortly afterward we were reading a book in the Gifted English where one of the character's seems to have confused Asperger's syndrome for classic Autism and thinks that Autistic people are mentally ret*d. That pissed me off, and later when I was moved into the districts program for people with Aspergers (it might have been Autism too, I'm still no entirely sure what was going on) I felt greatly ashamed and embarrassed, especially since I was only barely in the program; in the school district I was in the gifted program was just put on top of normal work, and I stubbornly refused to do the normal English work (I didn't like the physical labor of writing, I felt it was pointless to do both, and I didn't want to follow the stupid writing prompts they had), so in the fourth grade I was put in the classroom for the kids who were bad at reading, but I wasn't actually a part of the class, so I just sat in the corner and drew stuff, pretending that I was actually doing work and writing a story, and it was during that time were I drew my first notebook for video ideas. In the fifth grade I was moved into the school with the official program for Autistic children, and while the other two autistic boys followed a special curriculum I was in normal classes for everything except for social skills, until I had a few meltdowns in English, then I was sort of moved into the special English and sort of not, and I was still in gifted English, my memory on that period is fuzzy as I've been doing my best to blot it out, and after voicing my opinion that I wanted to learn Algebra and after getting an unheard-of-ly high score on the prerequisites of Algebra test I was moved out of gifted math into an Online Algebra class, which I only half finished that year as I started it in the middle of the year. In middle school I went to a middle in the district that wasn't the one for my geographic area, and my older brother went to the designated high school, and the separation hurt me as I always looked to my older brother for guidance and he was the only person I really felt comfortable talking to. I went to the school for two reasons; it was the only middle school in the district that offered Geometry and it was the middle school with the special ed program. I was in all normal classes and the middle school gifted program, but one elective was taken away for a social skills class, which I hated as I found it shameful, and it was the only class that I found even the slightest bit hard. I also had to ride the "short bus" (there was actually two or three of them for this school), and that scared me for life as the kids who were mentally ret*d were scary, and there was this one kid who wasn't mentally ret*d on the bus who called me ret*d and abused me until I got my father to chew him out. I still had no idea what Asperger's syndrome was except it was like mild autism, whatever that was, had something to do with difficulty in communicating and I was convinced that I did not have it as I wasn't stupid, the social skills classes and short bus were too shameful. Halfway through 7th grade I got out of social skills classes and that pleased me, but I still had no idea what was even wrong with me in the first place. Then my dad unexpectedly got accepted into what may be the most selective non-appointed nor elected government job on the first attempt and we moved to a new place with a new school system, where gifted students such as my self had a separate curriculum only special ed thing I had was occasionally the counselor came and spoke with me. I still had no idea what Asperger's Syndrome was and the only problem that I knew I had was that I pronounced th as f, which may have been do to me breaking one of my front teeth in a fight, and then mentally associating th as f because ph was f. I still don't treat th correctly, though I usually make the correct sound now. That's why I sometimes write "does" instead of "those". It wasn't until the middle of 9th grade, where I was now living in Brazil and had no special education things whatsoever even though I still have an IEP, where I finally figured out what Asperger's Syndrome actually was. I went through far to many years of psychological damage before I finally had my mind put at ease. Elementary school was hell. Middle school was purgatory. I'm sorry for getting off topic, I really needed to get that stuff off my chest.