Title: Individual Education Programs: Changes in Implementation and Practice
1Individual Education ProgramsChanges in
Implementation and Practice
AFT Special Education Action Network
Conference Baltimore, MD November 13-14, 2006
- Elizabeth A. Truly, Legal Consultant to AFT and
UFT and - Lawrence Waite, Associate in Educational
Services, NYSUT - Presenters
2The Statute, Regulations, and Analysis of
Comments and Changes
- Citation format Is it Sec. 614 or Sec. 1414?
- One stop shopping the statute is now
incorporated in the regulations - Analysis of Comments and Changes
- Response to thousands of comments
- Comments include
- Objections to changes made by Congress
- Requests to retain prior regulations
- Requests for clarification of ambiguities and
scope of State and local authority - Appeals for additional protections for parents
and school staff - Discussion articulates the USDOEs position on
many key issues - Changes are changes from NPRM, not IDEA 97
3A New Philosophy Permeates the Law and
Regulations and Limits Options
- Historically, federal law and regulations have
set the floor and states and local school
districts have had the option to be more
protective of parents rights. - New law and regulations emphasize
- Personal responsibility (characterized as parent
empowerment) - Reductions in regulatory burden at the State
level - Increased decision-making authority at the local
level - As a result, it will be more difficult to address
issues at the State level.
4Concrete Applications of the New Philosophy
- USDOE policy, expressed in the Discussion
sections of the Analysis of Comments and Changes - Prohibits States from legislating or regulating
on certain issues - Explicitly authorizes States to legislate or
regulate on other issues - Discourages States from legislating or regulating
in a number of areas - Allows school districts autonomy in deciding
implementation practices
5Reading the Tea Leaves
- Prohibitions
- We do not have the authority to allow a State to
. . . - A State must allow . . .
- It would be inconsistent with the Act to . . .
- The Act cannot be interpreted to require . . .
- There is no statutory authority to permit . . .
- The public agency may not . . .
6Reading the Tea Leaves
- State Discretion
- State and local officials are in the best
position to determine . . . - There is nothing in the Act that requires a
State to, or prohibits a State from . . . - We decline to specify as we are not in a
position to determine . . . - The Act gives States considerable discretion to
. . . - A State could, if it chose to do so . . .
- There is nothing in the Act that limits States
and LEAs from . . . so long as the requirement
is not inconsistent with the Act or these
regulations.
7Reading the Tea Leaves
- State action discouraged but not prohibited
- We believe that it is important to give public
agencies and parents wide latitude about . . .
and therefore we decline to regulate on . . . - We believe these requirements are sufficient . .
. and do not believe that additional regulations
on this subject are warranted. . . - The Act does not require . .
- It would not be appropriate to . . .
- To require public agencies to . . . would be
counter to the intent of . . . - We do not believe it is appropriate to require.
. . - It would be overly burdensome to . . .
8Questions to Consider in Deciding How to Respond
on a State and Local Level
- What is the current requirement/procedure/
practice in your State/District? - Does implementation of the new requirement have
the potential to significantly change practice in
your State/District? - In your view, will this change have a positive or
negative impact on the education of students with
disabilities in your State/District? - How will your members respond to the change in
practice? Will they support it, oppose it or
accept it?
9Questions to Consider in Deciding How to Respond
on a State and Local Level
- What, if anything, will your members expect you
to do on a State or local level regarding this
change? - Will ameliorating the impact of this change be a
priority issue for your members? - Will other constituencies (school boards,
parents, advocacy groups) seek your support in
having this issue addressed in a particular
manner? - If action is necessary, what are your options?
10Questions to Consider in Deciding How to Respond
on a State and Local Level
- Will this change alter the roles and
responsibilities of your members? - Will this change affect the terms and conditions
of employment of your members? - Will this change affect any other collective
bargaining issues?
11From Referral to PlacementWhats New?
- Requests for an Initial Evaluation
- Reevaluation Procedures (including triennials)
- Eligibility
- IEP Team Meetings
- Changes to IEP Content
- Annual Goals Benchmarks/Short-Term Objectives
- Progress Reports
- Statement of Special Education and Related
Services - Transition Services
12Request for Initial Evaluation
- New language in statute
- Either a parent or a public agency may initiate a
request for an initial evaluation - Public agency does not include employees
- of SEAs or LEAs (e.g., teachers and related
services providers) unless they are acting for
the SEA or LEA or - of other State agencies (e.g., probation
officers, social workers, or State agency staff)
13Request for Initial Evaluation
- Child find
- Permits referral from any source that suspects
child may be eligible - Typically involves some sort of screening
process - Employees of SEA, LEA and other public agencies
responsible for the education of the child
identify children who might need to be referred
for an evaluation - Initiating an evaluation
- The parent of a child and the public agency are
responsible for initiating evaluation procedures.
14Reevaluation Procedures Triennial Waiver
- New language in statute
- Reevaluation must occur once every three years
unless the parent and the public agency agree
that a reevaluation is unnecessary - The agreement to waive the triennial occurs
before the discussion of the need for additional
data (since the discussion, which does not
require a meeting, is part of the reevaluation) - Agreement, i.e., an understanding between a
parent and a public agency, is not the same as
consent and does not need to be in writing
15Reevaluation Procedures Triennial Waiver
- USDOE does not believe that
- Additional procedural safeguards are necessary to
ensure that parents who waive the triennial are
aware of the implications of their decision since
school districts will discuss the advantages and
disadvantages with parents prior to the decision - It is necessary to clarify that waiver must not
be a routine practice since it is a decision made
individually for each child - No explicit prohibition on State regulation that
is consistent with statute and regulations
16Reevaluation Procedures Students who Graduate
or Age-Out
- Graduation means graduation with regular
diploma - New language in statute requires the public
agency to provide a summary of the child's
academic achievement and functional performance,
including recommendations on how to assist the
child in meeting postsecondary goals - State and local officials determine the content
of the summary based on the childs needs and
goals
17Reevaluation Procedures Students who Graduate
or Age-Out
- Public agencies are not required to evaluate
children to meet the entrance or eligibility
requirements or to be considered a child with a
disability at another institution (such as a
college or career program)
18Eligibility Special Rule
- Provision in prior law was tweaked to make it
consistent with NCLB - A child must not be determined to be a child with
a disability if the determinant faction is lack
of appropriate instruction in reading, including
the essential components of reading instruction
(as defined in NCLB) - State and local officials determine whether a
child has received appropriate instruction - Curiously, information regarding the quality of
instruction a child has received in the past is
helpful but not essential.
19IEP Team Attendance
- New language in statute
- An IEP Team member is not required to attend an
IEP Team meeting, in whole or in part, if the
parent and public agency agree in writing that
the members attendance is not necessary because
the members area of curriculum or related
services is not being discussed or modified in
the meeting. - An IEP Team member may be excused from attending
an IEP Team meeting, in whole or in part, when
the meeting does involve a modification to or
discussion of the members area of curriculum or
related services, if - The parent, in writing, and the public agency
consent to the excusal - The member submits written input into the
development of the IEP to the parent prior to the
meeting
20IEP Team Attendance
- Intent is to provide flexibility in scheduling
meetings and to avoid delays in holding meeting
when a member cannot attend due to a conflict - States must implement excusal provisions
- States may not restrict, or otherwise determine
when an IEP Team member can be excused from
attending a meeting, or prohibit the excusal of
an IEP Team member when the LEA and parent agree
to the excusal.
21IEP Team Attendance
- Agreement
- An understanding between a parent and public
agency, which in the case of IEP Team meetings,
must be in writing - Consent
- Means that the parent has been fully informed in
his or her native language or other mode of
communication and understands that the granting
of consent is voluntary and may be revoked at any
time. - It is unclear whether States can establish
additional procedural safeguards, as USDOE may
interpret additional safeguards as limiting
parent rights.
22IEP Team Attendance
- Public agency, not the parent, determines the
specific personnel who will fill the roles of
mandated team members. - If parent invites other agency personnel not
designated by the agency to be on the IEP Team,
they are not required to attend. - LEAs may not routinely or unilaterally excuse IEP
Team members and those that do are subject to the
States monitoring and enforcement procedures.
23IEP Team Attendance
- Excusal provisions apply to federally mandated
members of the IEP Team - The regular education teacher of the child (if
the child is, or may be, participating in the
regular education environment) - The special education teacher of the child, or,
where appropriate, the special education provider
of the child - A representative of the public agency who is
qualified to provide or supervise the provision
of specially designed instruction, knowledgeable
about the general education curriculum and
knowledgeable about the availability of the
resources of the public agency - An individual who can interpret the instructional
implications of the evaluation results - In some circumstances, a member may serve more
than one role.
24IEP Team Attendance
- It would be inconsistent with the Act to
- Set a limit on the number of times an IEP Team
member could be excused - Prohibit excusals for initial IEP Team meetings
- Restrict the number of excusals per meeting
- Prohibit certain IEP Team members from being
excused - Otherwise restrict or limit parents and LEAs from
agreeing to excuse IEP team members.
25IEP Team Attendance
- It is up to State and local officials to
determine if teachers and service providers other
than mandated members can attend an IEP Team
meeting. - There is no requirement that the excused IEP Team
member, a teacher, or the other IEP Team members
agree to excuse a members attendance. - Each public agency determines who can enter into
agreements or provide consent on the agencys
behalf to excuse and IEP Team member.
26IEP Team Attendance
- The Act and regulations do not specify
- How far in advance a parent must be notified of
an agencys request to excuse a member - When the parent and LEA must sign a written
agreement or provide consent to excuse an IEP
Team member - How far in advance of the meeting written input
must be provided to the parent and the IEP Team
members - But requiring these activities to take place
within a specific period of time prior to the
meeting, according to the USDOE, would
effectively prevent IEP Team members from being
excused in many situations and, thus, be counter
to the intent of providing parents additional
flexibility in scheduling meetings.
27IEP Team Attendance
- The form and content and method of providing
written input by an excused team member is not
specified in the Act. - According to the USDOE, such decisions are best
left to local officials to determine based on the
circumstances and needs of the child, the parents
and other members of the IEP Team. - State and local officials determine
- How and when the information about the childs
IEP is shared with the excused IEP Team
member(s) - How parents questions and concerns are addressed.
28Changing the IEP After Annual Review
- New language in statute
- The parent and the public agency may agree not to
convene an IEP Team meeting for the purpose of
making changes after the annual review and may
instead develop a written document to amend or
modify the childs current IEP. - The agreement does not have to be in writing.
- If changes are made in a childs IEP without a
meeting the public agency must - Inform the childs IEP Team of the changes
- Provide the parent with a revised copy upon
request
29Changing the IEP After Annual Review
- The Act does not place any restrictions on the
types of changes that may be made, so long as the
parent and the public agency agree. - States must allow changes to an IEP without an
IEP Team meeting because these provisions are
intended to benefit parents. - Amendment to an IEP cannot take the place of
annual review. - State and local officials determine when public
agencies must make the IEP accessible to service
providers responsible for implementation or
otherwise notify them of the changes.
30Addressing the Impact of Excusal and IEP Change
Provisions
The opportunity to directly address the impact
of the excusal and IEP change provisions
in State laws and regulations is extremely
limited.
- Think outside the box
- You cant do this alone
- You will probably be most successful in a
supporting role to parent and advocacy groups - Collect data to support state complaints and
future changes in federal law and regulations
31IEP Annual Goals
- New language in statute
- IEP includes present Levels of academic
achievement and functional performance and - A statement of measurable annual goals, including
academic and functional goals and - For children with disabilities who take alternate
assessments aligned to alternate achievement
standards, a description of benchmarks or
short-term objectives
32IEP Annual Goals
- The Act does not require goals for each specific
discipline or outcomes and measures on a specific
assessment tool. - States can continue to require benchmarks or
short-term objectives for students other than
those who are assessed against alternate
achievement standards. - There is no requirement to write a benchmark or
short-term objective for each alternate
achievement standard.
33IEP Periodic Progress Reports
- IDEA 2004 reduces the specificity of the required
reporting - The IEP must describe
- how the childs progress toward meeting annual
goals will be measured and - when periodic reports on the childs progress
toward meeting annual goals will be provided
34IEP Periodic Progress Reports
- The Act does not require report cards or
quarterly reports or reports concurrent with the
issuance of report cards - State and local officials determine
- the specific times that progress reports are
provided to parents and - the specific manner and format in which the
progress is reported.
35IEP Statement of Special Education and Related
Services
- New language in existing provision
- The IEP must include a statement of the special
education and related services and supplementary
aids and services, based on peer-reviewed
research to the extent practicable, to be
provided to the child or on behalf of the child.
36IEP Statement of Special Education and Related
Services
- Peer-reviewed research, while not defined in
the regulations, generally refers to research
that is reviewed by qualified and independent
reviewers to ensure that the quality of the
information meets the standards of the field
before the research is published. - The phrase to the extent practicable generally
means to the extent possible, given the
availability of peer-reviewed research. - The USDOE did not require
- All IEP Team meetings to include a focused
discussion of research-based methods or - Public agencies to provide prior written notice
when an IEP Team refuses to provide documentation
of research-based methods.
37IEP Statement of Special Education and Related
Services
- The service with the greatest body of research is
not necessarily required for the child to receive
FAPE. - Failure to provide services based on
research-based methods does not automatically
result in a denial of FAPE. - Services may be provided even if no research
exists if they are appropriate. - The Act does not require all programs for
children with disabilities to be research-based. - The Act does not require an IEP to include
specific methodologies, but if the IEP Team
determines they are necessary for a child to
receive FAPE they may be included on the IEP.
38IEP Transition Services
- Substantial change in existing provision
- The IEP must include, beginning not later than
the first IEP to be in effect when the child
turns 16, or younger, if determined appropriate
by the IEP Team, - Appropriate measurable postsecondary goals based
upon age appropriate transition assessments
related to training, education, employment, and,
where appropriate, independent living skills and
- The transition services, (including courses of
study) needed to assist the child in reaching
those goals
39IEP Transition Services
- States can require transition services to begin
before age 16 for all children in the State. - The Act does not require IEPs to address
vocational and career training or workplace
accommodations. - IDEA funds can be used for college and community
based transition programs, if such programs are
determined to be appropriate by the childs IEP
Team. - States are accountable for transition services
through State performance plans.
40Keep in touch!
- Let us know what is happening in your
- State or district.
- We are especially interested in hearing good
news, i.e., laws, regulations, policies and
practices that promote effective instruction and
respect members participation and expertise. - Liz Truly etruly_at_aol.com
- Larry Waite lwaite_at_nysutmail.org