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Special Education Law 2008 Presented by: Jane R. Wettach Clinical Professor of Law, Duke Law School Director, Duke Children’s Law Clinic

Special Education Law

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Special Education Law. 2008 Presented by: Jane R. Wettach Clinical Professor of Law, Duke Law School Director, Duke Children’s Law Clinic. History of Discrimination. Approximately 12 percent of children have disabilities that affect their ability to learn - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Special Education Law

Special Education Law

2008

Presented by:Jane R. Wettach

Clinical Professor of Law, Duke Law SchoolDirector, Duke Children’s Law Clinic

Page 2: Special Education Law

History of Discrimination Approximately 12 percent of

children have disabilities that affect their ability to learn

Disabilities range from mild to profound

Historically, the most impaired were excluded from education altogether;

some (such as blind, deaf, mentally retarded) were segregated in special schools;

less impaired were in public school but were often retained in grade level, considered lazy or stupid, dropped out of school because their needs weren’t met

Page 3: Special Education Law

Challenges to Discrimination &

the Right to be Educated

Early 1970’s – successful civil rights lawsuits brought on behalf of disabled children for inclusion in public schools

1975 – first federal law promising states federal funds to assist in educating children with disabilities -- Education for all Handicapped Children Act (94-142)

1990 -- revisions to EHCA, including new name: Individuals with Disabilities Education Act

2004 – most recent revisions to IDEA

Page 4: Special Education Law

Special Education Laws

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act – 20 USC 1400 et seq and 34 CFR Part 300

Education of Children with Disabilities – NCGS 115C-106 et seq

North Carolina Policies, issued by the Dept. of Public Instruction (new policies about to be issued; formerly called “Procedures”)

http://www.ncpublicschools.org/docs/ec/policy/policies/2007policies.pdf

Page 5: Special Education Law

IDEA – The Basic Promise All children with

disabilities are entitled to

A “free, appropriate, public education”

In the “least restrictive environment”

Pursuant to an Individualized Education Program (IEP)

Page 6: Special Education Law

IDEA Entitlements The right to be evaluated, at public

expense, to determine eligibility for special education

The right to an Individualized Education Program that provides the specialized instruction and related services needed to allow the child to make educational progress

Page 7: Special Education Law

IDEA Entitlements The right to be educated, to the maximum

extent possible, with typically developing peers

The right to access, to the maximum extent possible, to the general curriculum

Page 8: Special Education Law

IDEA Entitlements The right of parents to

be involved in the decision-making process and the development of the IEP

The right to review of decisions made by the IEP team through due process appeal

Page 9: Special Education Law

Who is a “child with a disability”?

Child (ages 3 – 21) must have an identified physical or mental dysfunction that interferes with educational performance

Child must need “specially designed instruction” to make educational progress (not just accommodations)

Page 10: Special Education Law

What is a “FAPE”? A “free, appropriate public education” is

Special education (i.e., specially designed instruction to meet the unique needs of the child); and

related services (supportive services designed to enable the child to benefits from instruction – such as transportation and specialized therapies)

that allow the child to make reasonable educational progress.

Page 11: Special Education Law

What is a “FAPE”? “Educational progress” is not

just academic learning, but includes – Socialization Adaptive/functional skills Language and communication Reduction of behavioral problems

Page 12: Special Education Law

What is the “least restrictive environment”?

The LRE is the setting in which children with disabilities may be educated with typical children to the maximum extent possible

Page 13: Special Education Law

Least Restrictive Environment Every child should be

educated in the regular classroom, in the school he or she would attend if not disabled, with “supplementary aids and services.”

Special classes, separate schooling or other removal of children with disabilities from the regular educational environment occurs only if the nature or severity of the disability is such that education in regular classes with the use of supplementary aids and services cannot be achieved satisfactorily

Page 14: Special Education Law

Least Restrictive Environment Disabled child need not be placed in a

regular classroom if: The child would not receive “educational

benefit” from being educated in regular classroom; or

The marginal benefit of being educated in the regular classroom is outweighed by the benefits of a separate setting; or

The disabled child is a disruptive force in the regular classroom.

Page 15: Special Education Law

Special Education -- Eligibility

Child must be “referred” to be evaluated for possible special education services

Referral: in writing, dated, addressed to principal, state reason for referral in terms of lack of educational performance

The school district has an obligation to identify children who may need special education, but parent should refer if there are concerns

The parents must agree for the evaluation to proceed.

Page 16: Special Education Law

Special Education -- Eligibility

Initial evaluation is usually conducted by a school psychologist (but it can be contracted out)

State policies set out required & recommended screenings & evaluations for each type of disability, as well as the criteria for eligibility in each category

Page 17: Special Education Law

Special Education -- Eligibility

Child must be “referred” to be evaluated for possible special education services

Referral: in writing, dated, addressed to principal, state reason for referral in terms of lack of educational performance

The school district has an obligation to identify children who may need special education, but parent should refer if there are concerns

The parents must agree for the evaluation to proceed.

Page 18: Special Education Law

Special Education -- Eligibility School has 90 days from date of referral to

beginning of services

If parent believes school evaluation is incomplete or wrong, parent can ask for an independent evaluation at school expense

School must either pay for the evaluation, or file a due process petition to allow a judge to decide if school is obligated to pay

Page 19: Special Education Law

Special Education -- Eligibility

Eligibility is decided by a team of qualified personnel plus the parent

Parent may invite persons who have special expertise

Members of the team consider all information and then determine if child fits into one of the 14 eligibility categories

Page 20: Special Education Law

Categories of Eligibility Autistic Deaf Seriously emotionally

disabled (formerly BED) Deaf-Blind Hearing impaired Multi-handicapped Intellectually disabled

(formerly EMD, TMD) Orthopedically impaired

Other health impaired (includes ADD/ADHD)

Specific learning disabled (includes dyslexia)

Speech/language disabled Traumatic brain injured Visually impaired

Page 21: Special Education Law

Specific Learning Disabled A disorder of basic psychological

processes involved in understanding or in using information

Manifests itself in the imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do mathematical calculations

No medical test; may be determined by any of a number of alternative methods

Page 22: Special Education Law

Specific learning disabled Includes:

perceptual disabilities brain injury minimal brain dysfunction dyslexia developmental aphasia

Does not include a learning problem that is primarily the result of: visual, hearing, or motor disabilities mental retardation emotional disturbance environmental, cultural, or economic disadvantage lack of appropriate instruction limited English proficiency

Page 23: Special Education Law

Specific learning disability Below average ≠

disabled

“Discrepancy model” 15-point discrepancy

between cognitive ability

(measured on an IQ test)

academic performance (measured on a standardized achievement test)

Page 24: Special Education Law

Response to Interventions A student with academic delays is given one or

more research-validated interventions.

The student's academic progress is monitored frequently

If the student fails to make good progress, this failure to 'respond to intervention' can be viewed as evidence of an underlying learning disability.

Page 25: Special Education Law

The IEP Each eligible child must have

an Individualized Education Plan (IEP), revised at least annually

IEP is “blueprint” for the child’s free, appropriate, public education in the least restrictive environment

IEP must be written by a team of persons knowledgeable about the child and the child’s needs, including parents

Page 26: Special Education Law

The IEP Must be designed to meet child’s unique needs,

and include: Current performance Measurable, objective annual goals

Short term benchmarks/objectives now only required for children who take alternate assessments

A statement of the special education and related services, and supplementary aids and services to be provided

Amount of special education to be provided Amount of related services to be provided Classroom and testing modifications Placement on continuum of settings

Page 27: Special Education Law

Follow up to IEPIEP is revised annually, or as often

as needed, to assure that child is making progress on goals

Child is re-evaluated at least every three years, or more often if needed (but not more than once a year unless parent and school district agree)

Page 28: Special Education Law

Entitlement to FAPE A “FAPE” allows a child to make reasonable

academic progress. For children with average cognitive skills, this generally means being taught the standard course of study, with appropriate supports & modifications, and passing from grade to grade.

A “FAPE” does not require services to “maximize the potential” of the student

Page 29: Special Education Law

FAPE Progress should be measurable & measured.

A parent has the right to ask for objective testing on a regular basis that reflects progress.

A parent has the right to have periodic reports –as often as regular report cards go out -- of progress on IEP goals

Page 30: Special Education Law

Reasonable Progress Some ways to measure progress

Grades, if student is in standard curriculum Achievement of annual goals (so long as those

goals change from year to year and represent progressively more sophisticated skills)

Improvement on standardized measures that compare student to nationally-normed standards

Page 31: Special Education Law

Methodology As a general rule, a parent does not have

a legal right to select a preferred methodology. School personnel may choose the methodology to be used.

Parents have the right to demand a methodology that works. A legal claim arises if the child does not make progress with the methodology chosen by the school personnel.

Page 32: Special Education Law

IEP Timelines After parental consent for

evaluation, determination of eligibility must be accomplished within 60 days

After determination is made that a child requires special education, an IEP must be developed within 30 days

IEP shall be implemented “as soon as possible” following the IEP meeting

From referral to placement in appropriate program may not exceed 90 days

Page 33: Special Education Law

Private Services at Public Expense

If the school district cannot provide services that allow a child to make reasonable educational progress, it must pay for those services to be provided privately

If the school district does not provide the services, a parent can unilaterally place the child in a private school and request reimbursement

Page 34: Special Education Law

Private Services at Public Expense

If the parent unilaterally places his child in private school, he must:

Give the school district at least 10 days notice that he finds the IEP unacceptable, plans to place his child in private school, and demands tuition reimbursement

If the school district declines, parent must file a due process petition and prove that the child’s proposed IEP did not offer a FAPE and that the private school chosen was appropriate for the child

Page 35: Special Education Law

Discipline & Special Ed Students

Disabled children are treated as “regular ed” students if they are suspended for fewer than 10 days (cumulative in a year) (i.e., no protections, no recourse)

Disabled children have additional rights for suspensions of more than 10 days (cumulative in a year, if suspensions form a pattern)

Page 36: Special Education Law

IDEA Discipline Protections Functional Behavior

Assessment Behavior Intervention

Plan Manifestation

Determination Review Continuation of FAPE

Page 37: Special Education Law

Eligibility under “Section 504” Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of

1973, 29 USC 794 and 34 CFR 104 prohibits discrimination against disabled

persons in educational institutions that receive federal funds (all public schools)

Like IDEA, requires that students with disabilities receive a free, appropriate public education

Page 38: Special Education Law

Eligibility under Section 504 To be eligible for coverage by Section 504,

an individual must Have a physical or mental impairment that

substantially limits a major life activity Have a record of such an impairment Be regarded as having such an impairment

Page 39: Special Education Law

“504 Plans” Students with disabilities that require

some type of accommodation, but not necessarily “specialized instruction” are offered “504 Plans”

“504 Plans” should outline what accommodations the student will receive (examples: special transportation, elevator pass, modified physical education, testing modifications, classroom modifications)

Page 40: Special Education Law

“504 Plans” Typically, a meeting is held with designated

school personnel and parents to develop a plan

504 Plans have much less structure than IEPs

Enforcement is through a local grievance procedure, followed by a complaint to the federal Office of Civil Rights or a civil law suit.