Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can tell you it is designed to break the backs of the entire FCPS SpEd apparatus, from administration to teachers. If OCR wanted to "help" students by doing this, I think they took the wrong route.
This is my fear. At our IEP meeting I said I think they are going to burn out at the SPED teachers with this and I do not need a meeting. I said if they offer something for X issue (my child's academic issue), please feel free to email and we can communicate that way, but the SPED teachers work enough already.
I’m a teacher. My department chair is a teacher and her husband is a sped teacher in FCPS. When this came out he spent 6 hours alone poring over the IEPs of kids he doesn’t even teach anymore to do all this shit. Been doing elementary sped for 10 years and this has pushed him to thinking it’s time to leave. Sped teachers cannot teach, manage a current caseload, AND go back and redo and provide compensatory services for kids they haven’t taught in 3 years. It’s inhumane.
Six hours is really not THAT big of a burden.
I think how “difficult” this is for teachers is being overblown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the options for kids that are now high school seniors? They can’t get services to make up for their partly 9th, 10th and 11th grade years.
You can extend the IEP until age 22 and use that for transitional services, including college or trade school, interview and job training skills, etc.
Some of these parents somehow want blood from a stone. They want a time turner . They want the pandemic to never have happened. They want their kid to somehow have not suffered any minute loss even though EVERY HUMAN ON THIS PLANET was impacted in some way by it. They want someone to PAY, they don’t care how, they don’t care who, but somebody owes them something
I mean, fcps has signed a legal agreement admitting that they owe people something. No one knows what. It is BS that they dumped all this on teachers. I agree with pp, don't waste your time reading old IePS. Reimburse for tutors or provide extra help or whatever.
Fcps has dumped all this shit on you. Just spend their money.
Yup and the irony is teachers will miss a lot more time with kids. Congrats on "winning" :lol:
It’s not optional. We are required to pick through each and every IEP/ 504, past and present, that is or was on our caseload. We must provide information about services, dates of services, test scores, etc for every single one of these students. It takes roughly 75 minutes per student to do each sheet and that’s for people who know what they’re doing. That 75 minutes doesn’t include meetings with parents or anything else. I’d be happy to just tell FCPS to cut a check to families but that’s not how it works.
Yeah why do they think this is voluntary or that sped teachers / case managers can just NOT do it? This isn’t something that’s optional or that sped tesvhers are doing because they want to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are the options for kids that are now high school seniors? They can’t get services to make up for their partly 9th, 10th and 11th grade years.
You can extend the IEP until age 22 and use that for transitional services, including college or trade school, interview and job training skills, etc.
Some of these parents somehow want blood from a stone. They want a time turner . They want the pandemic to never have happened. They want their kid to somehow have not suffered any minute loss even though EVERY HUMAN ON THIS PLANET was impacted in some way by it. They want someone to PAY, they don’t care how, they don’t care who, but somebody owes them something
I mean, fcps has signed a legal agreement admitting that they owe people something. No one knows what. It is BS that they dumped all this on teachers. I agree with pp, don't waste your time reading old IePS. Reimburse for tutors or provide extra help or whatever.
Fcps has dumped all this shit on you. Just spend their money.
Yup and the irony is teachers will miss a lot more time with kids. Congrats on "winning" :lol:
It’s not optional. We are required to pick through each and every IEP/ 504, past and present, that is or was on our caseload. We must provide information about services, dates of services, test scores, etc for every single one of these students. It takes roughly 75 minutes per student to do each sheet and that’s for people who know what they’re doing. That 75 minutes doesn’t include meetings with parents or anything else. I’d be happy to just tell FCPS to cut a check to families but that’s not how it works.
Yeah why do they think this is voluntary or that sped teachers / case managers can just NOT do it? This isn’t something that’s optional or that sped tesvhers are doing because they want to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they are referring to receiving no ‘special Ed’ services for a whole year. No pullouts, no 1 on 1s, no small groups. This did happen to my DC.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone explain:
1) Why did FCPS sign this voluntary agreement?
2) Why was FCPS singled out for an OCR investigation? What happened in FCPS to special education students from 2020-2022 was not terribly unique.
I do not understand the dynamic and politics of the settlement at all.
They picked a few large school districts in the US for this investigation. School districts all over the US did WAAAAAAY less than FCPS did but because we're big and always in the news, we got singled out. FCPS was following the guidance they were given by VDOE but someone decided that wasn't good enough.
where is this data? it is hard to do less than nothing.
Yeah, okay...the teachers did nothing. My kids were online every, single day with their teachers learning the curriculum. My child who receives special education services was pulled into small groups online just like she would have been had she been in person. She got her accommodations and she got instruction. You people who keep saying the teachers did nothing are flat out lying. I simply do not believe you. I understand that some related services such as speech and OT got the shaft, particularly since it's hard to provide those services virtually. But do not lie and say your kid literally got no instruction for a year.
I’d be willing to bet at least half of the people saying their children received no instruction really mean “my kid didn’t want to sit/logon to virtual school and instead of forcing the issue/monitoring them during school time I just threw my hands up”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We heard at our IEP meeting that evening and weekend compensatory hours were available from non-FCPS teachers. No one is making teachers do this work.
Who do you think is combing through the IEPs from the last few years and holding extra meetings on top of the already way-too-full
schedules? What services are being provided to the students while the teachers are dealing with this? They can’t teach and do this at the same time.
Aside from pay, which I agree should be more, what do you suggest? Not provide IEPs? Additional services? Or outsource it altogether?
I'm one of the Special Ed teachers who responded upthread. Central Office should be handling all of it with the possible exception of delivering services. I'd be a lot more willing to provide the compensatory services myself if I had time. I don't, because of all the extra paperwork and meetings I'm now required to handle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they are referring to receiving no ‘special Ed’ services for a whole year. No pullouts, no 1 on 1s, no small groups. This did happen to my DC.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone explain:
1) Why did FCPS sign this voluntary agreement?
2) Why was FCPS singled out for an OCR investigation? What happened in FCPS to special education students from 2020-2022 was not terribly unique.
I do not understand the dynamic and politics of the settlement at all.
They picked a few large school districts in the US for this investigation. School districts all over the US did WAAAAAAY less than FCPS did but because we're big and always in the news, we got singled out. FCPS was following the guidance they were given by VDOE but someone decided that wasn't good enough.
where is this data? it is hard to do less than nothing.
Yeah, okay...the teachers did nothing. My kids were online every, single day with their teachers learning the curriculum. My child who receives special education services was pulled into small groups online just like she would have been had she been in person. She got her accommodations and she got instruction. You people who keep saying the teachers did nothing are flat out lying. I simply do not believe you. I understand that some related services such as speech and OT got the shaft, particularly since it's hard to provide those services virtually. But do not lie and say your kid literally got no instruction for a year.
I’d be willing to bet at least half of the people saying their children received no instruction really mean “my kid didn’t want to sit/logon to virtual school and instead of forcing the issue/monitoring them during school time I just threw my hands up”.
Anonymous wrote:I think they are referring to receiving no ‘special Ed’ services for a whole year. No pullouts, no 1 on 1s, no small groups. This did happen to my DC.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone explain:
1) Why did FCPS sign this voluntary agreement?
2) Why was FCPS singled out for an OCR investigation? What happened in FCPS to special education students from 2020-2022 was not terribly unique.
I do not understand the dynamic and politics of the settlement at all.
They picked a few large school districts in the US for this investigation. School districts all over the US did WAAAAAAY less than FCPS did but because we're big and always in the news, we got singled out. FCPS was following the guidance they were given by VDOE but someone decided that wasn't good enough.
where is this data? it is hard to do less than nothing.
Yeah, okay...the teachers did nothing. My kids were online every, single day with their teachers learning the curriculum. My child who receives special education services was pulled into small groups online just like she would have been had she been in person. She got her accommodations and she got instruction. You people who keep saying the teachers did nothing are flat out lying. I simply do not believe you. I understand that some related services such as speech and OT got the shaft, particularly since it's hard to provide those services virtually. But do not lie and say your kid literally got no instruction for a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe teachers should direct their irritation about compensatory services toward their leadership? Parents didn’t make the directive that they didn’t have to teach special kids.
I taught special ed kids. Every day during the virtual learning year. This lawsuit even covers the year we were fully back in person. And requires us to spend hours combing through old data and hold second iep meetings for literally every special education student in our building before June. It's almost impossible to get through all the meetings in a regular year but now we have to do it twice. OCR has lost there ever loving minds.
That is nice that you taught special kids when it was your job but many schools took away services. It happened to us. We were fortunate to be able to go to a private tutor- it was expensive but the teacher was fantastic and our child made massive improvements. It was worth it but it was expensive.
I have no expectations that the FCPS compensatory services will be good so we are not doing them but we are submitting our expenses for the time we paid for the private tutor. We probably won’t get paid back but I want someone to see the cost.
Ok: wow- that was really expensive. You really helped your kid by paying all that money. You really love him! A+ for parenting. Bad school. Bad teacher. Bad emergency response. Bad bad scared teachers.
Does that help? What you are saying is you are angry and want acknowledgement because you can’t handle it. You want the teaching profession to pay. We got it. At this point it is like give us the paddling you think all those horrible lazy women teachers deserve and move on with picking up the pieces. The misogyny that is inherent in the lack of respect teachers and nurses are feeling right now is incredible. So abisive. You need to be heard so make women do more work- got it.
Stop. First of all, yes it IS A+ parenting and one that schools and everyone in it should be thankful.
This poster said nothing about "bad teachers" or paddling. But the fact is, lots of parents DID have to PAY to fill that gap. We were happy do so, as well. But don't you dare complain about those parents who did so and picked up where the schools left off. And your screed only gives teachers a bad name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We heard at our IEP meeting that evening and weekend compensatory hours were available from non-FCPS teachers. No one is making teachers do this work.
Who do you think is combing through the IEPs from the last few years and holding extra meetings on top of the already way-too-full
schedules? What services are being provided to the students while the teachers are dealing with this? They can’t teach and do this at the same time.
Aside from pay, which I agree should be more, what do you suggest? Not provide IEPs? Additional services? Or outsource it altogether?
I'm one of the Special Ed teachers who responded upthread. Central Office should be handling all of it with the possible exception of delivering services. I'd be a lot more willing to provide the compensatory services myself if I had time. I don't, because of all the extra paperwork and meetings I'm now required to handle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We heard at our IEP meeting that evening and weekend compensatory hours were available from non-FCPS teachers. No one is making teachers do this work.
Who do you think is combing through the IEPs from the last few years and holding extra meetings on top of the already way-too-full
schedules? What services are being provided to the students while the teachers are dealing with this? They can’t teach and do this at the same time.
Aside from pay, which I agree should be more, what do you suggest? Not provide IEPs? Additional services? Or outsource it altogether?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We heard at our IEP meeting that evening and weekend compensatory hours were available from non-FCPS teachers. No one is making teachers do this work.
Who do you think is combing through the IEPs from the last few years and holding extra meetings on top of the already way-too-full
schedules? What services are being provided to the students while the teachers are dealing with this? They can’t teach and do this at the same time.
Aside from pay, which I agree should be more, what do you suggest? Not provide IEPs? Additional services? Or outsource it altogether?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can tell you it is designed to break the backs of the entire FCPS SpEd apparatus, from administration to teachers. If OCR wanted to "help" students by doing this, I think they took the wrong route.
This is my fear. At our IEP meeting I said I think they are going to burn out at the SPED teachers with this and I do not need a meeting. I said if they offer something for X issue (my child's academic issue), please feel free to email and we can communicate that way, but the SPED teachers work enough already.
I’m a teacher. My department chair is a teacher and her husband is a sped teacher in FCPS. When this came out he spent 6 hours alone poring over the IEPs of kids he doesn’t even teach anymore to do all this shit. Been doing elementary sped for 10 years and this has pushed him to thinking it’s time to leave. Sped teachers cannot teach, manage a current caseload, AND go back and redo and provide compensatory services for kids they haven’t taught in 3 years. It’s inhumane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe teachers should direct their irritation about compensatory services toward their leadership? Parents didn’t make the directive that they didn’t have to teach special kids.
I taught special ed kids. Every day during the virtual learning year. This lawsuit even covers the year we were fully back in person. And requires us to spend hours combing through old data and hold second iep meetings for literally every special education student in our building before June. It's almost impossible to get through all the meetings in a regular year but now we have to do it twice. OCR has lost there ever loving minds.
That is nice that you taught special kids when it was your job but many schools took away services. It happened to us. We were fortunate to be able to go to a private tutor- it was expensive but the teacher was fantastic and our child made massive improvements. It was worth it but it was expensive.
I have no expectations that the FCPS compensatory services will be good so we are not doing them but we are submitting our expenses for the time we paid for the private tutor. We probably won’t get paid back but I want someone to see the cost.
Ok: wow- that was really expensive. You really helped your kid by paying all that money. You really love him! A+ for parenting. Bad school. Bad teacher. Bad emergency response. Bad bad scared teachers.
Does that help? What you are saying is you are angry and want acknowledgement because you can’t handle it. You want the teaching profession to pay. We got it. At this point it is like give us the paddling you think all those horrible lazy women teachers deserve and move on with picking up the pieces. The misogyny that is inherent in the lack of respect teachers and nurses are feeling right now is incredible. So abisive. You need to be heard so make women do more work- got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We heard at our IEP meeting that evening and weekend compensatory hours were available from non-FCPS teachers. No one is making teachers do this work.
Who do you think is combing through the IEPs from the last few years and holding extra meetings on top of the already way-too-full
schedules? What services are being provided to the students while the teachers are dealing with this? They can’t teach and do this at the same time.