yes, this happens everywhere, and not just with IDEA funds. Lots of other federal education funds. |
Sorry OP DC sucks especially for lack of providers covered by insurance.
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It is federal law that every state use some of their funding to provide services to kids in private schools, but school systems have a great deal of leeway as to which services and how. So, yes, MD, and VA, and all 48 other states do this. |
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OP- while you try to fight this decision, you may want to look into the cost of purchasing an individual health insurance policy for your DC via Healthlink (Obamacare) rather than having her on your employer sponsored policy.
Some of the DC exchange policies cover speech therapy and it may end up costing you less than you would be paying out of pocket. |
| PP, good idea. I am OP one of the frustrating details is that our health care plan is actually through DC government, where my husband is an employee. |
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OP, sorry you are getting abuse for this posting. People bring a lot of baggage to any discussion of private schools, and make lots of assumptions about your motives and attitudes. Hope you get through this and that your child gets the services she needs.
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+1 on "bring it to the media". Consider talking to Jay Matthews at WaPo. Also consider contacting DC council members. |
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For the trolls posting here, parents who privately place their children continue to pay taxes that support public education, which they are not accessing. Parents that make this life changing decision for their families typically do so out of necessity. Schools won't or aren't able to teach their children and or provide them a safe environment. The stories are all over DCUM.
It would much more convenient and economical for a family to access their local public school, cultivate friendships with local families/children, utilize public transportation to transport kids to and from school, not have to pay tens of thousands of dollars for private schools, etc. choosing to go privately impacts relationships, schedules, finances, careers, commutes, etc. if schools were able to meet the needs of all students, parents would not be privately placing their children. Stepping down from my soapbox. |
If your kid is eligible for services, it does not matter if they go to private. They are still eligible for services through the public school system. In any state we have lived, this is the same. Services are required by the state and the school system is required to provide them to all kids in the district. As an example, my child has a disease that is chronic and incurable. She is not able to physically attend school consistently. Homebound services are a joke in the public school system and my child was not getting an education. Even the school system said that they couldn't do it (and I probably could have won private placement if I chose to deal with it). Therefore we cleaned out all of our 401k plan assets and savings accounts to provide her with the education she needs. But there are still some services that she can get through the school (not academics) and you can bet she both deserves those and that I'm not either willing or able to pay for them. I'm furious enough that she isn't getting the education she is eligible for from an academic standpoint and we will pay $60k just to get her the remainder of a high school education that she should have received in public school. There are a lot of people in private schools who are there as a last resort and paying for it is a real struggle and burden. |
Thank you. |
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| OP, there are several threads about low cost speech services. Not sure about OT and PT, but there are other options out there that are affordable that some of us use. |
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"Coaching" is also coming to Early Intervention programs, too. My daughter who is a PT was required to go to a 2 day workshop on the concept. She works in a private center based with classrooms and instead of giving a child with an IEP in preschool the PT, OT or Speech directly you are noe supposed to go into the classroom and " coach" with no direct hands on. It is crazy when many staff are not that we'll educated in general at all. The other idea is that a therapist could be a generalist and cover beyond one's discipline. She is at a DC site, but you may want to check EI programs in VA and MD.
DD did say that working as a private therapist in a person's home in EI that certainly one does use a combo of hands on and coaching a parent or caretaker I. What to do. However in a school setting with untrained - not eve special Ed teachers Itbis watering down services. |
This is the norm in many other states EI program. It's cheaper. Probably much less effective too. |
| Well, it would make sense to me that public school districts provide services to public school students. Why should tax payers fund services for students not in public school? Imagine how much more resources public school students could have if funds were not funneled into providing services to those NOT in public school! |