Anonymous wrote:I heard they "encouraged" a special ed student to leave before classes even started.
Anonymous wrote:^ I have little doubt that it's some anti-charter activist who started this thread, sensing what they thought was blood in the water to serve their aims.
It's unbelievably cynical and heartless for anyone to use special needs students and their families and their private lives as pawns in some kind of political chess game, and as such, starting this thread was highly inappropriate.
For anyone to be so intrusive, cold and heartless by posting speculations about special needs students and to drag their personal lives through message boards is awful - and if the OP would treat students at other schools so poorly by doing so, one can only assume they treat their own students as poorly - no true advocate for special needs students would have done the same.
Anonymous wrote:^ I have little doubt that it's some anti-charter activist who started this thread, sensing what they thought was blood in the water to serve their aims.
It's unbelievably cynical and heartless for anyone to use special needs students and their families and their private lives as pawns in some kind of political chess game, and as such, starting this thread was highly inappropriate.
For anyone to be so intrusive, cold and heartless by posting speculations about special needs students and to drag their personal lives through message boards is awful - and if the OP would treat students at other schools so poorly by doing so, one can only assume they treat their own students as poorly - no true advocate for special needs students would have done the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the mother should have kept her child at Basis. It would have given her a better chance of getting her child a private placement.
You only get private placement if the school cannot meet FAPE: if the child tested into 5th grade algebra then he is above grade level at least in math. Very difficult if not impossible to get private placement if the child is not below grade level.
Perhaps the family felt Basis was a bad "fit".
That is incorrect. In some cases, it's actually easier. As in so many things, this depends upon the individual situation: the child, the needs, the school, the history, the family's lawyer, etc. DC has public schools for children who are below grade level. The families of children with special needs, who are not below grade level do not have many choices.
First time I've heard this:. It's EASIER to get a private placement for SN kids who are NOT below grade level vs SN kids Below grade level Really!?! DC has a student population where over 50% of the non SN students are below grade level in both English and Math, yet they will pay for a SN student who is at grade level to attend a private SN school. Don't think so. There was a long extensive discussion on the SN board about this recently. Private placements have gotten much tougher in the past two yrs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the mother should have kept her child at Basis. It would have given her a better chance of getting her child a private placement.
You only get private placement if the school cannot meet FAPE: if the child tested into 5th grade algebra then he is above grade level at least in math. Very difficult if not impossible to get private placement if the child is not below grade level.
Perhaps the family felt Basis was a bad "fit".
That is incorrect. In some cases, it's actually easier. As in so many things, this depends upon the individual situation: the child, the needs, the school, the history, the family's lawyer, etc. DC has public schools for children who are below grade level. The families of children with special needs, who are not below grade level do not have many choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the mother should have kept her child at Basis. It would have given her a better chance of getting her child a private placement.
You only get private placement if the school cannot meet FAPE: if the child tested into 5th grade algebra then he is above grade level at least in math. Very difficult if not impossible to get private placement if the child is not below grade level.
Perhaps the family felt Basis was a bad "fit".
Anonymous wrote:I think the mother should have kept her child at Basis. It would have given her a better chance of getting her child a private placement.