What you've noticed
The pattern at home, the comments from school, the quiet things that have been adding up. You talk; Chelsi listens.
Tell Chelsi a little about what you're seeing — at home, at school, in the homework battles. Together you'll decide on the call whether a screening is the right next step. If it isn't, you've spent twenty minutes and gained a sounding board.
Bellavista-trained · BA Education · SACE registered · SAALED member
The pattern at home, the comments from school, the quiet things that have been adding up. You talk; Chelsi listens.
Grade, school, what they love, what they avoid, what's already been tried. Background that helps a remedial teacher hear what you're really describing.
The one or two threads worth pulling on next — a screening, a bridging programme, weekly sessions, or a referral to someone better placed.
You leave with a clear next step and zero pressure. If Chelsi isn't the right fit for your child, she'll point you to someone who is.
The discovery call is a conversation, not an assessment. Chelsi won't ask your child to read aloud or perform. If a formal screening is the right next step, that's a separate session, planned with you.
You won't be asked to commit to weekly sessions on the call. The point is for you to leave with a clearer picture — not with an invoice.
No card details, no signing up to a mailing list, no follow-up sequence. If the call clarifies that remedial isn't what your child needs right now, that's a useful outcome.
Everything except the “what's going on” box is short. The longer box is the most useful one — write what feels true, not what feels professional.
Sometimes a form feels like the wrong shape. If you'd rather just send a few sentences on WhatsApp, that's fine — Chelsi will pick up there.