Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "IEP meetings-Did you know this?"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Actually, the IDEA legislation specifically provides that parents are equal members of the IEP team and can invite anyone with “knowledge or special expertise” about the child. IDEA §300.321(a)(6) and (c). She more here from https://www.parentcenterhub.org/participation/#refs : “It’s referring to IDEA’s provisions that, at the discretion of either the school or the parents, other individuals who have knowledge or special expertise regarding the child may be invited to participate in the IEP meeting as members of the IEP team. For example, related services personnel (e.g., a speech language therapist or physical therapist) may be invited (if appropriate) if they have knowledge or special expertise about the child—the same as a teacher, specialist, friend, or family member with special expertise or knowledge of the child might be. Who determines if the person to be invited has knowledge or special expertise about the child? According to IDEA, the party (parents or the school) that invites the person to be a member of the IEP team. Thus, it’s not necessary to demonstrate or prove the person’s knowledge or special expertise regarding the child.” I always invite other family members so the IEP meeting can’t gang up on me by myself. You can have a doctor, a tutor, a friend, a nanny or babysitter, other family members, etc. you can also have people call in and participate by phone for some or all of a meeting. (Making it less expensive to get service providers to participate because you don’t have to pay for their travel time). I often invite specific teachers, and in all the time I have done that I have only had one teacher asked to be excused, and she basically did so only after she said a sentence or two supporting my DC. It looks really unprofessional for a teacher to refuse to participate, and the IEP team cannot refuse to invite anyone. But, whoever you invite, make sure they know what their brief is! [/quote] Of course the parent can invite whomever they want. But we’re not talking about a family member or an advocate or a neighbor. We’re talking about a school employee who would need permission from their supervisor (the principal) to attend the meeting rather than perform their instructional duties. Who is supposed to provide coverage while the aide is attending this meeting? If the meeting is held outside of school hours, who is paying this aide? Or can they even work then? In our district, instructional assistants cannot work “overtime” or outside their contracted hours. It would be a violation of Fair Labor & Standards Act. [/quote] You are completely wrong. I invite specific teachers every time to kids IEP meetings. The school administration cannot prevent the teacher from attending. The school administration must provide coverage for the aide. IEP meetings are never held outside of school hours, IME. (You are right, teachers should be paid for attending, although union contracts often require teachers to be at school before or after the school day for a certain period of time.) A school who refused to invite teachers with knowledge of the child or who prevented teachers from attending, for whatever reason, would be in violation of federal legislation. They would be treating parents as less than an equal team member (because they would be team members without the power to request teacher attendance and the school would have that power, thus flouting the federal disability law). If your school has told you that you cannot invite a teacher, or that teacher cannot come because they have obligations that cannot be covered, please write a letter to the associate superintendent of special education citing the IDEA section I wrote above, and ask the associate superintendent to provide the school with the necessary resources to provide coverage so the teacher can attend and “bring the school into compliance with IDEA” and that you “look forward to participating in the IEP team as a full and equal team member” and that you hope this can be done swiftly so that you “do not have to pursue my due process options.” I can guarantee that the Assoc.superintendant of special Ed will recognize the legal liability presented by refusing to invite or facilitate the attendance of teachers requested by the parent. Also, if this happens at a meeting - simply say that it’s unfortunate that the team couldn’t find coverage and you are requesting that the meeting be reschedule to a time when the requested teacher can participate. Make it clear that you are not refusing to participate in an IEP meeting, but merely want it scheduled when all relevant teachers can attend and within the required legal timeline. You should refuse to waive timeline if asked. [/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics