Childrens IEPs not being followed?
I have a sister with DOWNS and her school (which is in MA) isn’t following her IEP
We found out and my mother has been fighting with the school ever since. They keep saying they will change it but don’t. She has a lawyer but I believe there are more people dealing with this problem in MA. If anyone can fight with us, or have been through this let me know!
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I checked it out just now – why don’t you start with this website? There are lots of names of people you can contact to try to get some info!
http://www.doe.mass.edu/boe/sac/parent/
Federal law requirew FAPE (Free Appropriate Public Education) It sounds as though your sister is only getting FPE (Free Public Education) How much time does she spend in a Resource class? Does she have an aide? a shadow?
Has the school given written documentation to your mother about parental/student rights? I recommend your mother start keeping records, logging phone calls, taping IEP meetings, taking someone into the IEP with her, noteing members participating, note the time they come in or leave during the IEP. (if they do not participate during the ENTIRE session) Mom should not be coerced into signing an IEP she disagrees with. She may be threatened that no service will be given if she doesn’t sign. Tell her to sign BUT make a notation that her signature represents “attendance only, not agreement with”.
MA being the Kennedy”s home state, and that family has a personal connection with Special Olympics, etc. check it out to see if they can provide access to Advocacy Services.
Go to www.collier-ese-reform.com to review Floridia Due Process and OCR complaints regarding special education issues. Google for other sites as well.
The deck is stacked against parents. Teacher’s who advocate for their students get turned on by administrators and are forced to knuckle under or leave the profession.
Due Process has become a joke. Many “hired” witnesses will “whore” their profession for paid testimony. Others will give false witness in order to keep their job.
I hope her lawyer is knowledgable about Special Education Issues (an IDEA attorney), or an attorney knowledgable in Disability (504 issues). they are usually one or the other, not both. If her attorney is neither, she will be spending a lot of money educating him and will probably be disappointed with the results.An attorney that is savvy on these issues will be able to be straight forward about costs and prospective outcomes.
Until the media gets enough grass roots complaints and the public becomes aware of the problem, parents of special needs children will continue to be considered overly demanding, administrative teacher abuse will continue and teaching careers ruined, and ALL children, not just special needs children will be the brunt of our declining educational system.
There are dozens more parents in the same school who are blindly believing everything the school tells them, and probably would be shocked if they were able (or willing) to spend a day at the school. And many more who suspect something’s not right, but aren’t educated as to their children’s rights in public education. It certainly isn’t in the school’s best interest to educate them, now is it?
Good luck. The best luck we had was calling an emergency IEP meeting and insisting that the special ed director of the entire district was in attendance. It was the ONLY time the school worked outside of their little box to help my children.
You need to hit them where it hurts – publicly question if they are spending the money the state appropriates for each student like your sister properly.