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I'd really need a lot more information -- which would probably be more than you would want to or should put on a public forum than this. However . . . .
My oldest son (probably) has Asperger's. We finally figured that out when he was 18 and half way through his senior year in high school. He'd always been somewhat different growing up, and I'm personally glad we didn't have the label until fairly late, even if it did mean there were a lot of frustrations because I simply could not understand why he was the way he was.
We enrolled him in LOTS of camp programs. He generally did well in them, and did better in those that had low counselor to camper ratios. His least productive experience was one aimed at kids with special needs, back when he was in sixth grade and I'd figured out he did have problems with social issues, although I didn't yet have the name "Asperger's" to associate with him.
One problem with conventional schools, by which I mean any school, whether private, public or parochial -- including Catholic or fundamentalist Christian or Jewish or Moslem, is that they expect children to proceed in a lockstep fashion through the curriculum. Even "normal" children don't always do well if they are not developing EXACTLY as the conventional school model thinks the child should be developing. This is where parents need to step in.
Ask yourself the following questions: Will your child (as he is now) disrupt the camp activities? If your kid were "normal", would your child as he is now significantly impact your "normal" kid's camp experience? How would you feel about that disruption? Will your child be better off in this regular camp experience rather than the special needs one?
That last is the really crucial and tricky question, I think. When you say he needs "a bit more attention" are you downplaying his needs? Or is he honestly just slightly more needing of attention?
All I can say is that my son's "mainstreaming" was the best thing that could have happened for him. But he was not so obviously different (handicapped if you will) that he clearly needed to be in special ed or anything like that. He was simply different from other kids. He will always be different. He's now 24, has a limited social life, but is preparing to move into his own apartment this week. He's still going to college -- THAT'S been a real challenge, but he's finally in a program that we think he can succeed in. He works 20 hours a week doing math tutoring and he will eventually be fully self-supporting. Perhaps the most important thing to keep in mind is that in the normal course of events he will outlive you. At this point, since he's only six, his being an adult and being on his own is impossibly far into the future, but I think you must keep that future firmly in mind as you shepherd him through life.
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