Anonymous wrote:Special Education is in a complete free fall. My child was determined to need compensatory services but they couldn’t find a provider and I cannot hire a private special education teacher at the rate MCPS is offering to reimburse. The net result is that MCPS is way out of compliance with a Letter of Findings from MSDE and my child’s IEP.
Why doesn’t MCPS hire some Special Ed Teachers as 12 month employees? RTSE are 12 month employees. Why don’t they provide Special Ed services?
The OP’s letter went to students who MCPS said qualified for ESY. What about students who had the need but schools denied services due to the lack of teachers?
Finally, what is MCPS doing to fill Special Ed vacancies this fall? So many teachers resigned at the end of the year.
Anonymous wrote:Well that's...creative. I guess. Maybe they should go the route of allowing families to opt for a lump sum earmarked for "summer tutoring" to obtain their own private services during the summer in exchange for indemnifying MCPS against a due process complaint. Sort of like a LISS grant.
Because they can't manufacture staff from nothing and they can't force teachers to work, so that leaves them stuck like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d hire a lawyer for that one
I am a parent of a special education student and an MCPS staff person. Completely get the frustration of school not providing services a child’s IEP calls for but…staff members aren’t required to work in the summer. I’m working this year, but I’ve heard many, many of my colleagues say they’re taking the summer off for the first time in years. Many staff are fighting burnout hard and need a break so they can come back to school in the fall.
I don’t know the timeline for teachers but para educators weren’t offered an incentive to work ESY until very late in the process. If nothing else, that offer should have been made as soon as recruitment for summer jobs started.
Anonymous wrote:Whoa. That’s crazy. What program is that for? Is your child able to learn anything virtually?
Anonymous wrote:Maybe parents will get smart and start putting qualifications of the provider into the IEP like they should do from the beginning. School systems hate this but it’s within parental rights to do so but holds school systems more accountable.
Anonymous wrote:I’d hire a lawyer for that one
Anonymous wrote:Maybe parents will get smart and start putting qualifications of the provider into the IEP like they should do from the beginning. School systems hate this but it’s within parental rights to do so but holds school systems more accountable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d hire a lawyer for that one
MCPS has failed to meet the student's needs of students. Highly abled students are also ignored in the name of equity.