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Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "disappointed with IEP"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]There is a difference between an NT child who may have some social awkwardness and an ASD child who can't function with the social aspects of the school day including small group work, negotiating hallways, cafeterias, greeting teachers and classmates, playing in groups with other children at recess. It is up to the IEP team to determine the extent of the challenge and to work toward mitigating the impact in a school setting. This is absolutely the school's job under IDEA. Please don't put this all on the parent. It sounds like OP is doing all s/he can. [/quote] But that's the thing. It's not the school's job to mitigate all of the impact and catch the child up to the level of a neurotypical peer. [b]The government has decided that taxpayer-funded school services are for children who are generally in the area of the lowest ~7th percentile. [/b]If a child is above this level but not where the parent wishes them to be, it's on them to supplement with private services. There just isn't money for everyone, so the government sets the limits that the school has to then enforce. It's not personal. Nothing in government ever is. The people who it is personal for, the family, have to do what they think their child needs. That's how it's always been. They just can't rely on government-funded services if they don't meet the requirements.[/quote] I've never seen this percentage cited anywhere, but don't disagree that it could be the case. What are you basing this on PP? And what 'government' are you referring to?[/quote] I've also never seen a percentage quoted in the law but our school said below 25% was necessary to qualify. The truth is that a variety of data should be used to evaluate kids and no one test or measurement should be used. Using a 7% standard would be in violation of the IDEA and ADA laws.[/quote] In MCPS, no single source of data can be used. However, for standardized measures, the 90% confidence interval must not overlap with the average (85-115). The other measure (observations, language samples, other tests, informal measures) can be used to qualify even if the standardized measures do not show a need.[/quote] File a State Complaint letter. Sounds like the school may not be compliant with Federal law.[/quote]
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