Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is the thing. Getting a private placement is hard. It takes money and it is stressful. But it is possible. According to OSSE in 2019 (yes I know that’s 3 years ago), 6% of the children in DC - that includes DCPS and charter- are in funded non-public schools. People are still getting funded, it’s just not easy.
But understand that the overwhelming majority of these placements are for kids with very significant issues.
Or rather, the majority of these placements are for kids that had a significant period of time with their needs not being addressed appropriately, so no progress, which meant violation of FAPE and a private placement. (This is the profile I'm aware of children funded by DCPS at KTS, Lab & Chelsea).
DCPS can always come back and offer a new IEP though.
The IEP and compliance with are part it (or lack of compliance) are part of the case for not providing FAPE. DCPS can offer a revised IEP, but in our experience (and other families who have gone through the due process route) it wasn’t enough to address the learning needs of our child. Who, by the way, has learning issues/a working memory secicit, but does not fit the profile earlier PPs had raised (no intellectual disability, doesn’t have behavioral issues, no vision/hearing issue, is not autistic).
But DCPS can write an IEP that gives all the hours and services. The fact that you prefer the private setting doesn’t figure in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are very few schools that take private placements where most dcum parents would agree to send their kids. Ivymount is nearly impossible to get into BTW.
There used to be a document put out by OSSE which listed every private placement a dcps student was attending. A lot of out of state locked-down residential schools and "behavior" schools.
My child has a funded private placement at Kennedy Krieger and we are happy there. But you are right - lots of schools I wouldn’t want to send my kid to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is the thing. Getting a private placement is hard. It takes money and it is stressful. But it is possible. According to OSSE in 2019 (yes I know that’s 3 years ago), 6% of the children in DC - that includes DCPS and charter- are in funded non-public schools. People are still getting funded, it’s just not easy.
But understand that the overwhelming majority of these placements are for kids with very significant issues.
Or rather, the majority of these placements are for kids that had a significant period of time with their needs not being addressed appropriately, so no progress, which meant violation of FAPE and a private placement. (This is the profile I'm aware of children funded by DCPS at KTS, Lab & Chelsea).
DCPS can always come back and offer a new IEP though.
The IEP and compliance with are part it (or lack of compliance) are part of the case for not providing FAPE. DCPS can offer a revised IEP, but in our experience (and other families who have gone through the due process route) it wasn’t enough to address the learning needs of our child. Who, by the way, has learning issues/a working memory secicit, but does not fit the profile earlier PPs had raised (no intellectual disability, doesn’t have behavioral issues, no vision/hearing issue, is not autistic).
Anonymous wrote:There are very few schools that take private placements where most dcum parents would agree to send their kids. Ivymount is nearly impossible to get into BTW.
There used to be a document put out by OSSE which listed every private placement a dcps student was attending. A lot of out of state locked-down residential schools and "behavior" schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is the thing. Getting a private placement is hard. It takes money and it is stressful. But it is possible. According to OSSE in 2019 (yes I know that’s 3 years ago), 6% of the children in DC - that includes DCPS and charter- are in funded non-public schools. People are still getting funded, it’s just not easy.
But understand that the overwhelming majority of these placements are for kids with very significant issues.
Or rather, the majority of these placements are for kids that had a significant period of time with their needs not being addressed appropriately, so no progress, which meant violation of FAPE and a private placement. (This is the profile I'm aware of children funded by DCPS at KTS, Lab & Chelsea).
DCPS can always come back and offer a new IEP though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is the thing. Getting a private placement is hard. It takes money and it is stressful. But it is possible. According to OSSE in 2019 (yes I know that’s 3 years ago), 6% of the children in DC - that includes DCPS and charter- are in funded non-public schools. People are still getting funded, it’s just not easy.
But understand that the overwhelming majority of these placements are for kids with very significant issues.
Or rather, the majority of these placements are for kids that had a significant period of time with their needs not being addressed appropriately, so no progress, which meant violation of FAPE and a private placement. (This is the profile I'm aware of children funded by DCPS at KTS, Lab & Chelsea).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is the thing. Getting a private placement is hard. It takes money and it is stressful. But it is possible. According to OSSE in 2019 (yes I know that’s 3 years ago), 6% of the children in DC - that includes DCPS and charter- are in funded non-public schools. People are still getting funded, it’s just not easy.
But understand that the overwhelming majority of these placements are for kids with very significant issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is the thing. Getting a private placement is hard. It takes money and it is stressful. But it is possible. According to OSSE in 2019 (yes I know that’s 3 years ago), 6% of the children in DC - that includes DCPS and charter- are in funded non-public schools. People are still getting funded, it’s just not easy.
You are making it sound like if you pay a lawyer enough, you will get private placement. That is not the case. If you can prove your case meets the criteria AND you have an expensive lawyer, then you MIGHT get private placement.
5,270 students are in funded non-public placements. That’s a lot of kids. More kids are getting it then just people with fancy pants lawyers.
Anonymous wrote:The kids we have met from dcps at various schools my dc (private placed via fcps) had attended all had emotional-behavioral challenges as well as autism.
The schools suck. Much worse then a public school in every way-except they are staffed for behaviors. Its not like they are sending your kid to Sidwell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is the thing. Getting a private placement is hard. It takes money and it is stressful. But it is possible. According to OSSE in 2019 (yes I know that’s 3 years ago), 6% of the children in DC - that includes DCPS and charter- are in funded non-public schools. People are still getting funded, it’s just not easy.
You are making it sound like if you pay a lawyer enough, you will get private placement. That is not the case. If you can prove your case meets the criteria AND you have an expensive lawyer, then you MIGHT get private placement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is the thing. Getting a private placement is hard. It takes money and it is stressful. But it is possible. According to OSSE in 2019 (yes I know that’s 3 years ago), 6% of the children in DC - that includes DCPS and charter- are in funded non-public schools. People are still getting funded, it’s just not easy.
But understand that the overwhelming majority of these placements are for kids with very significant issues.
Anonymous wrote:Here is the thing. Getting a private placement is hard. It takes money and it is stressful. But it is possible. According to OSSE in 2019 (yes I know that’s 3 years ago), 6% of the children in DC - that includes DCPS and charter- are in funded non-public schools. People are still getting funded, it’s just not easy.