Anonymous wrote:My son is at Jackson-Reed High School. I asked to observe him in class (he has struggled to focus and complete his school work), but was told that this would violate FERPA. Anyone know anything about this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have the legal right to request a teacher meeting. They have 30 days to comply so realistically you could meet one time per month if your schedule is flexible.
Source?
+1
I’ve never heard this and hope this isn’t true. I can’t imagine how teachers who get any work done if they spend planning periods meeting with each parent.
This is true but for IEP meetings. They often don’t like to share this fact because there would be so many meetings.
Generally the schools I have worked in always required a response to emails within 48 hours. If you need a meeting I can’t imagine a teacher turning you down, though they might suggest a phone call or video call.
So if a kid has an IEP the teacher is required to meet with a parent monthly if they request it?
“ The student’s parent/guardian has the right to request an IEP meeting at any time.”
https://specialeducation.dc.gov/page/eligibility-implementation
I suppose they could argue an IEP meeting doesn’t have to include a teacher. Or that the teacher is unavailable. And it doesn’t say that the team has to provide anything during these meetings. But you can request one and they would have to comply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have the legal right to request a teacher meeting. They have 30 days to comply so realistically you could meet one time per month if your schedule is flexible.
Source?
+1
I’ve never heard this and hope this isn’t true. I can’t imagine how teachers who get any work done if they spend planning periods meeting with each parent.
This is true but for IEP meetings. They often don’t like to share this fact because there would be so many meetings.
Generally the schools I have worked in always required a response to emails within 48 hours. If you need a meeting I can’t imagine a teacher turning you down, though they might suggest a phone call or video call.
So if a kid has an IEP the teacher is required to meet with a parent monthly if they request it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have the legal right to request a teacher meeting. They have 30 days to comply so realistically you could meet one time per month if your schedule is flexible.
Source?
+1
I’ve never heard this and hope this isn’t true. I can’t imagine how teachers who get any work done if they spend planning periods meeting with each parent.
This is true but for IEP meetings. They often don’t like to share this fact because there would be so many meetings.
Generally the schools I have worked in always required a response to emails within 48 hours. If you need a meeting I can’t imagine a teacher turning you down, though they might suggest a phone call or video call.