Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not in my experience. The bolded part is my experience. We were told point blank that DS HAD to be performing BELOW grade level to initially qualify and receive services. In their opinion, if a child is performing at grade level without services/accommodation, then he/she does not have a problem accessing the curricula regardless of if he/she is performing at his/her intellectual potential. A child that is performing at or above grade level with additional services/ accommodations should already have an IEP or 504.
It's not unusual to be told that a child doesn't qualify for an IEP because the child is working at/above grade level but there's nothing in the law that indicates that would be a disqualifying factor. The determining factors regarding eligibility are limited to disability and educational impact. A child must be considered to have a disability in two areas which negatively impacts his/her education. It's critical for parents to take the time to read and understand the law and be able to point out this falsehood.
http://www.wrightslaw.com/info/elig.sld.osep.felton.htm
http://idea.ed.gov/explore/home
http://www.wrightslaw.com/info/elig.add.grades.htm
This is good information. And, I, too, recommend Wrightslaw. My kid is not dyslexic but has high-functioning ASD. So high, in fact, that she repeatedly scores as doing college level English and verbal abilities and got a 32 composite score on the ACT so qualifies for gifted children of MENSA if you are into that sort of thing. But clearly an Aspie with cormorbidities of ADHD and Anxiety. She got the IEP for FCPS and really needed it. I can't speak to dyslexia but there are many gifted kids in FCPS with IEPs. Academic performance often has nothing to do with the difficulty of processing, executive functioning, organizational problems, etc.