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Special Education NEGOTIATING the ARC: WORKING in COLLABORATION TO EDUCATE OUR CHILDREN Leslie A. Jones September 13, 2007

Special Education

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Special Education. NEGOTIATING the ARC: WORKING in COLLABORATION TO EDUCATE OUR CHILDREN Leslie A. Jones September 13, 2007. Objectives. To provide an overview of special education under IDEA and 504 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Special  Education

Special Education

NEGOTIATING the ARC: WORKING in COLLABORATION TO EDUCATE OUR CHILDREN

Leslie A. Jones

September 13, 2007

Page 2: Special  Education

7/13/2007 2

Objectives

• To provide an overview of special education under IDEA and 504

• To provide information on transitioning children from the First Steps program to Pre-K, Headstart, kindergarten and first grade, highlighting differences

• To provide information on collaboration efforts and provide examples of how collaboration benefits children

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7/13/2007 3

Agenda

• IDEA 2004

• Section 504

• Collaboration

Page 4: Special  Education

Individuals with Disabilities Education Act

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IDEA 2004

• Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act

• Signed Dec. 3, 2004

• Effective July 1, 2005

• Congress worked on IDEA ’04 for 3 years

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Roles–Schools

• Locate children who may need services

• Provide services to eligible children

• Offer assistance to families

• Listen to parents

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More on FAPE

• Two part test– Were procedures followed?– Was the plan calculated to allow

educational benefit

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Members of the Team

• Parents• Regular education teacher• Special education teacher• District representative• Someone to interpret evaluation results• Child, when appropriate• Others with special knowledge or

expertise• Related services personnel

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“Parent”—IDEA ‘04

• Natural, adoptive or foster parent

• Guardian

• Surrogate

• Individual acting as a parent with whom child lives– Grandparent– Stepparent– Other relative

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“Parent”—KY proposed regulation

• Biological or adoptive parent

• Guardian

• Surrogate

• Person acting in parent’s place with whom child lives or who is legally responsible

• Foster parent only if biological parent’s rights extinguished and long term relationship

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Parent Tips

• Ask for and review evaluation data and reports before the IEP meeting

• Know who will attend, and who you will bring

• Gather information to share, including medical and other assessments

• Write down your questions• Write down your priorities

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An IEP has 4 basic parts

1. Present Levels of Performance (PLPs)

2. Annual Goals

3. Supports and Service

4. Placement

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Placement Options

Hospital or Institution

Home Instruction

Special School`

Special Class

Regular Class

←Most restrictive

←Least Restrictive

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Section 504of the Rehabilitation Act

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Safeguards

• Parent consent• Prior written notice• Access to records• Independent evaluation• Procedures for placement changes• State Complaints• Mediation• Due Process hearings

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Resolving Disputes

IDEA ’04• Mediation

• KDE Complaint

• Due Process Hearing

• Court Actions

Section 504• Mediation

• Grievance

• OCR Complaint

• Court Actions

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Special Circumstances

• School may send student to an Alternative Placement– If, on school premises or at a school function,

the student• Has a weapon• Knowingly possesses or uses illegal drugs or sells

or solicits their sale• Has inflicted serious bodily injury on someone

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Special Circumstances

• School may send student to an Alternative Placement– For up to 45 school days– Without regard to whether the child’s behavior

is a manifestation of her disability

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Discipline for Students not yet IDEA-eligible

• School had knowledge that child had disability before the behavior occurred: – Parent expressed concern in writing to

teacher, supervisor, administrator– Parent requested an evaluation– Teacher expressed specific concern to DoSE

or other supervisor

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Transitioning to the School Setting

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Selected Scene from Negotiating the ARC

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Do you see differences in an ARC meeting compared to a

IFSP meeting?

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Lack of collaborationAdversarial approach

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IDEA/504• Educators tend to guide the process based

on their perceptions of the student’s needs

• Parents can experience limited input

• Local school districts tend to be conservative with resources

• District implement IDEA/504 differently

• All services that are available to a student may not be mentioned during an ARC or 504 meeting

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IDEA/504

• Child my need an assessment

• Education - academic & social - total educational experience

• First Steps - developmental & medical

• Parents may not be told that they may bring professionals, friends, or advocates to an ARC or 504 meeting

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Selected Scene from Negotiating the ARC

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Preparation for Transitioning

• Educate yourself about IDEA/504• What services does the child need to be

successful in a school setting• What are the child’s strengths and

weaknesses• Contact the district’s director of special

education for information • Contact an advocacy group for information

and assistance

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Preparation for Transitioning

• Education yourself about related services: OT, PT, communication, and transportation

• An Assistive Technology assessment may be necessary

• Local school districts have additional resources to call upon -educational cooperative, AT cooperative, and others

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Examples of Collaboration

• Mediation resulted in collaboration with parent, school, and educational cooperative

• Due Process proceeding resolved by collaboration with parents, district personnel, and outside professionals of district and parent, which resulted in program improvement

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Examples of Collaboration

• Restraint and seclusion of student stopped with development of behavior plan with behavior specialist

• Other professionals invited to ARC, such as Impact, Impact Plus, doctors, therapist, advocates, independent evaluators

• Court personnel with parents and school

• First Steps and school

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Resources

• Your local school district

• Kentucky Department of Education

• Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services

• Protection & Advocacy

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Protection & Advocacy100 Fair Oaks Ln

Frankfort, KY 40601502.564.2967

502.564.0848 Fax800.372.2988 Toll Free

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Protection and Advocacy receives funding from the US Department of Health and Human Services, the US Department of Education, and the US Social Security Administration.