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As
the parent of a child who may receive
special education, you have certain
rights which are guaranteed by federal
lawthe individuals with Disabilities
Education Act (IDEA) as amended in
1997. It is this law that guarantees
your child a Free Appropriate Public
Education (FAPE).
- You
have the right to be informed (always
in writing in your native language
or with a translator provided by
the school) of your procedural safeguards
when your child is referred for
evaluation for the first time, at
each IEP, for reevaluation and if
you wish to request due process
hearing.
- You
have the right to receive written
notice before the school proposes
or refuses to begin or change the
identification, evaluation, educational
placement and FAPE for your child.
This must include notice of your
rights, description and explanation
of the action proposed or refused
by the school district, other options
considered and rejected by the school
district based on testing, evaluations,
reports and records, other information
that is important to the decision
and sources to help you understand
your rights.
- You
have the right to be fully informed
in your native language of all the
information needed to make an informed
decision for your child. This is
called informed consent. You give
informed consent before the first
school evaluation, before your child
is placed in a special education
program or the school conducts testing
for reevaluation. It is your right
to voluntarily consent or revoke
your consent at any time. If you
refuse to consent, the school district
may choose to go to due process
hearing.
- You
have the right to see your childs
records and ask the school to provide
you copies of those records (possibly
for copying costs). You also have
the right to have someone of your
choice review those records. The
school should have a list of people
that have looked at these records.
You can request that information
in the record be changed and may
write an explanation to be included
with the file record.
- You
have the right to a full, individual
evaluation of your childs
needs before your child is placed
in a special education program.
Your child should be evaluated in
all areas of suspected disability.
Evaluation must be based on a variety
of testing to find out if your child
has a disability, your childs
present level of performance and
educational needs and whether your
child needs special education and
related services. The testing must
be in the childs native language.
The testing can only be given by
trained personnel. The results must
be considered by at least one person
that is knowledgeable about your
child, understands the test results
and placement options and ensures
that ALL testing information is
carefully considered.
- You
have the right to have your child
reevaluated at least every three
years or more frequently if needed.
- You
have the right to request an independent
evaluation at the schools
expense if you disagree with the
evaluation provided by the school.
If the school disagrees, you have
the option of proceeding to due
process hearing. If the process
officer finds cause for an independent
evaluation, it would be at public
expense. If the school district
finds the current evaluation appropriate,
you may have an independent evaluation,
but must pay for it. Either way,
the school district MUST consider
the results.
- You
have the right to have your child
educated as much as possible with
peers without disabilities. Your
child may be taken from the regular
education classroom only when his/her
disability is such that regular
education with supplementary aids
and services would not enable them
to receive FAPE. Your child has
the right to attend the school they
would attend if not disabled. Your
childs placement is decided
by the IEP team at least annually.
- You
have the right to mediation, when
assistance in solving disagreements
between the school and parents is
needed. A trained mediator works
with both parties to guide them
toward a mutually agreeable solution.
- You
have the right to due process hearing
on any matter relating to the proposal
or refusal of the school district
to initiate or change the identification,
evaluation, educational placement
or FAPE for your child. The hearing
is conducted by an officer that
is NOT employed by a public agency
involved in your childs education.
The hearing will be scheduled at
a reasonably convenient time for
you and your child. During the process,
you have the right to bring support
(lawyers, advocates, family, etc.)
and people with knowledge or training
in the disability. You will be able
to present information on your child
and your complaint and ask questions
of the witnesses. Information that
is not available to you five business
days before the meeting may not
be presented. You will receive a
verbatim record of the hearing.
You may open the hearing to the
public. You WILL be informed of
free or low-cost legal or other
relevant services if you request
the information or if the school
begins due process. Your child will
remain in the current placement
(referred to as stay put) unless
the school AND the parents agree
otherwise.
- You
have the right to appeal to a district
court in the state of Wyoming if
you are not satisfied with the due
process hearing. This appeal must
be filed within 30 days of receiving
the certified hearing decision.
- You
have the right to file your complaints
alleging that a school district
has failed to follow state and/or
federal law in providing a student
with disabilities a FAPE. To file
a complaint, send a written and
signed statement of the specific
complaint and law violation. The
complaint must be filed with the
State Superintendent of Public Instruction,
Hathaway Building Second Floor,
2300 Capitol Avenue, Cheyenne, WY
82002-0050.If the disciplinary
action the school district imposes
results in a *change of educational
placement of your child (or more
than ten school days), you have
the right to written notice and
procedural safeguards under IDEA
and prior to the tenth day of suspension
and request an expedited hearing
if you disagree with the determination
that your childs behavior
was not a manifestation of your
childs disability or with
any decision regarding placement.*as
in suspension or expulsion for a
behavior that is known to be a symptom
of your childs disability.
- You
have the right to request a functional
behavior assessment and behavior
plan. If this wasnt in place
before your childs behavior
that resulted in out-of-school suspension
for more than ten school days WITHIN
a school year, the district WILL
have an IEP meeting to develop a
plan to deal with that behavior.
If such a plan is already in place,
the team will modify that plan to
address the behavior. The educational
setting, to include participating
in the curriculum, services and
modification will be determined
by the IEP team.
- Your
child has the right to receive written
notice and the transfer of rights
at age 18. Your child may grant,
in writing, you the authority to
continue to make decisions on their
behalf for educational purposes.
If the parent has legal guardianship,
they have the right to continue
to make decisions without written
consent from the student.
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IEP
Team Meeting Tips
- Request
minutes be taken and ask for a copy
of those minutes. Check them over
carefully. If you need to have the
meeting tape recorded to review
at a later date, you have the right
to do that.
- Keep
a notebook of dates, phone calls,
personnel youve talked with,
doctor/specialist appointments,
written correspondence, past IEPs,
ideas for future IEPs, support
contacts, etc.
-
Request information, meetings, etc.
in writing and keep copies of those
letters in your childs file.
- Ask
for test results and reports before
the meeting. Take the time to review
the reports and understand what
they mean. Highlight included strategies
for teachers to help your child.
- Tell
school personnel what they do right.
It can become easy to dwell on the
negative, but teachers, etc. like
to hear what you appreciate.
- Try
to present the facts only. IEPs
can be an emotional time for parents,
but an IEP meeting is not the time
for hysterics.
- Take
an advocate. An advocate can help
with your understanding of the law
and provide support during school
meetings.
- Related
services are those services that
enable your child to take advantage
of a Free Appropriate Public Education.
These services may include counseling,
physical therapy, occupational therapy,
teacher and aid training, etc.
- Write
your ideas down BEFORE the meeting.
Its not uncommon for parents
to feel overwhelmed once they are
in a school meeting. Jot down ideas
and solutions to problems you are
aware of. Know what goals you have
for your child.
- Be
an active team member. Parents have
a perspective on their child that
NO ONE else has. Share your childs
strengths and help develop a plan
that reflects those strengths. Know
your rights under the law. Research
strategies and accommodations that
might work with your child. Attend
support meetings, conferences and
workshops on your childs disability
to gain an understanding of what
your childs disability means
within his/her educational environment.
- Volunteer
in your childs school. This
enables you to see the environment
first hand, as well as allowing
the school personnel to get to know
you.
Children
that do NOT qualify under IDEA, may
qualify for services and accommodations
under Section 504, which is a civil
rights statute that prohibits the
discrimination against individuals
with disabilities. It is particularly
useful in cases where a child with
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
is doing well academically, but would
still benefit from certain classroom
modifications such as reducing the
length of homework assignments, allowing
extra time on tests, providing instructions
in writing, tape recording lectures
to review later, providing copies
of notes to read while the teacher
is lecturing, school/home notebook,
etc.
If you would like more information
on IDEA
or Section 504, contact UPLIFT for
the
Family Outreach Specialist nearest
you.
The
Educational Series is intended for
informational purposes only and
not to replace professional evaluation
and treatment.
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