It should be for students that ATTEND public schools... full stop |
Because . . . ? (Full stop is not an argument). |
Funding for special ed is definitely more than ELL. Best practices is to have preschoolers who are eligible for ELL services, which in preschool almost never means "ELL classes" and instead means consultation between the ELL teacher and the classroom teacher and other whole class interventions, keep their services until it's clear that they're on their way to becoming readers in Kindergarten. |
Coaching (when done properly) is much more effective than providing hands-on, direct therapy services (which is not what EI is supposed to be) as it allows for better carryover and more opportunities to practice skills. M'Lisa Shelden and Dathan Rush are the coaching gurus of early intervention. Here's one article by them about coaching. http://www.coachinginearlychildhood.org/cmisperceptions.php Robin McWilliam is another good researcher to read up on. |
Totally depends on the issue. For my kid's it was useless. |
Or sue the District for a non-public placement. It worked for us, and many others. It's a lot cheaper to pay Michael Eig's fee than several years of private school! Providing FAPE and services is DC's obligation. If they can't or won't do it willingly, they can be forced to do so by the court. |
Parents aren't winning these cases much anymore, as you know. Your litigation was several years ago, correct? |
I didn't know that. Are they not winning, or not bringing the suits in the first place? I can't say I'm impressed by what I'm hearing about DCPS's services, so if they (DCPS) are losing less often perhaps some of the more egregious problems have been addressed. It was my understanding that many of the students who left private placements did so because they essentially aged out of the system, not that anyone ever came back to DCPS. Some of them, after all, were out of state I believe (and I don't mean MD or VA, I mean PA or further). In answer to your question though, yes it was a few years ago. |
| They're not winning anymore. DC is putting up a much more vigorous defense and claiming it can provide FAPE. |
Ten years ago DC lost so many cases simply on procedural grounds. They didn't get evaluations done in the required timeframes. Didn't invite parents to IEP meetings and so forth. They have cleaned up that stuff and thus fewer 'easy' wins. |
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Hi OP and any others in similar situation,
I'm late to the party here as I was on vacation when we received our similar letter, plus it took me a few days to realize it actually meant what it meant (you are cutting all my preK 4 daughter's services - 8 hours a month of direct therapy which to me is a meaningful amount - after we just agreed to this a month ago)? My main issue is with the timing of how this is all communicated. I have already signed a contract with the private pre-school - I might have made a different decision if DCPS had been upfront about not providing the services this year. I know it won't make a lick of difference but I will feel better if I complain to someone - have you contacted anyone in the DC government, council, media etc. as was suggested by many? Or pursued legal options? I would love to add our voice to whatever chorus has already been started (if any). Thank you, Amanda |
| I imagine that contacting the media would bring a shit storm of embarrassment. I think it's worth a shot! |
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Hmmmm...I wonder if there's any case for bringing a material misrepresentation/detrimental reliance suit against DCPS for telling you you'd get X services, than pulling the rug after you'd already materially changed positions (committed to paying for private school) in reliance on that representation?
Or can you not bring that kind of tort claim against a government? |
| If you haven't already call Advocates for Justice in Education - (AJE). |
My personal opinion is that this would be very expensive and time consuming and the parents dealing with this need to focus that time and money on now securing private therapies to replace what has now been taken. Maybe it's possible in theory but it's one more thing to deal with that people in a panic scramble can't deal with. |