Anonymous wrote:My now adult kid went to TJ with a 504. It is very possible. Most teachers were great, but there was one teacher that was not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it's legal. You have no right to a certain program.
No it’s definitely not legal to just issue a blanket prohibition on IEPs. There’s no right to a certain program but you cannot be excluded on the basis of the disability.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, it's legal. You have no right to a certain program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a child meets criteria to get accepted to the magnet high school of their choice (selective enrollment), but the school district says he cannot go there because they do not have the special education services he requires, is that legal?
I'm not sure what district your kid attends but I have a kid in the same boat in MCPS and the school absolutely had to provide appropriate services so she could attend.
In the magnet selection process for MCPS they do a secondary review to make sure the school and program can accommodate whatever's in the 504 or IEP. If a child needs small classes or has aggressive behaviors the magnet would be out. If a child needs graphic organizers due to ADHD or special seating with a line of sight to the teacher because they are deaf the should should be able to provide that and allow the child to attend the magnet.
Anonymous wrote:Which district and what kind of needs? Is the magnet school housed in a comprehensive school? The only school I know that doesn’t also have a comprehensive program as well would be TJ. How many hours of services? Would these be serviced that might otherwise be provided at the same school for rest of the student population but they don’t want to provide it in the magnet cohort?
I don’t believe it’s legal for them to unilaterally bar you on that basis without a team agreement, but it likely depends on the precise services your child needs and whether the team (including you) believe it’s the best fit.
Check wright’s law on this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If a child meets criteria to get accepted to the magnet high school of their choice (selective enrollment), but the school district says he cannot go there because they do not have the special education services he requires, is that legal?
I'm not sure what district your kid attends but I have a kid in the same boat in MCPS and the school absolutely had to provide appropriate services so she could attend.
Anonymous wrote:If a child meets criteria to get accepted to the magnet high school of their choice (selective enrollment), but the school district says he cannot go there because they do not have the special education services he requires, is that legal?
Anonymous wrote:If a child meets criteria to get accepted to the magnet high school of their choice (selective enrollment), but the school district says he cannot go there because they do not have the special education services he requires, is that legal?