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Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "Due Process - Burden of Proof"
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[quote=Anonymous]Unbelievable. I had the IEP meeting from H*LL today. My child is in high school, so we have many years of experience dealing with multiple schools and their style of conducting the meetings. I honestly am doubting if my child's high school know anything about the IDEA because they failed to give proper Prior Written Notice, failed to protect the confidentiality of the IEP documents, and failed to implement the last IEP. Today, they did not update the IEP as changes were agreed to and I did not get a copy of the revised IEP prior to leaving the school. God knows what they are going to send me in the mail. God knows if it is going to reflect the meeting and all the decisions the team made. Sure they are not legally required to update the computer as the meeting takes place, but it does seem like a good practice to follow. In the end, I am not even sure what Goals and Objectives were agreed to and if we have a valid IEP. The General Educator left the meeting 15 minutes after it started (for a 2 hour meeting). Doesn't the IEP meeting cease to exist as soon as a vital member such as the General Education Teacher leaves? Would this new IEP hold up under scrutiny since so many mistakes were made? If we are unhappy with the final product, we will be hiring an attorney for representation because the school just seems to be walking over my child's rights. What good is the IDEA if the school does not follow it? Why doesn't Montgomery County Public Schools do a better job policing their own staff and training them on knowing what the law is and how important it is for them to follow it? Hopefully, changing the Burden of Proof would encourage them to do so. [/quote]
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