Can ESA+ help pay for academic support?
Start with the broad funding question and how families usually sort next steps.
North Carolina families often start with a funding question and quickly realize they also need a fit question. A student with ADHD or dyslexia may need support with writing, reading load, executive functioning, confidence, or a combination that does not fit neatly into one label. That is why choosing support well matters as much as accessing funds.
Some students need support that includes writing, reading, planning, task initiation, and confidence all at once. When families see the full picture first, it becomes much easier to decide whether ESA funding should support tutoring, academic coaching, or another path.
Start with the broad funding question and how families usually sort next steps.
Look at what support can do when follow-through, planning, and writing are part of the struggle.
See how reading, writing, fatigue, and confidence often press on each other in high school.
An Academic Success Assessment can help your family understand the real academic pattern first, so ESA decisions are tied to a stronger plan instead of urgency alone.