Guest guest Posted August 11, 2004 Report Share Posted August 11, 2004 Hi Valeri I've only had my child in public schools, so I can't answer your questions. Have you looked here: http://www.listen-up.org/rights/rights.htm#advocate Personally...your referral was made the end of April so I would assume that there were at least 5 - 6 more weeks left of school. I would think that this would already be taken care of. I would send a letter registered mail, returned receipt, + telling them that an IEP should be convened within 14 days so your child could have services when school starts (sounds like it is a little late in the summer, though). I have never heard of this leftover business; the school district in which your child lives should take the lead. I requested an evaluation May 15 of my daughter to prepare the new teacher for middle school. She had the eval within three weeks and the last day of school I had an updated report for her. Good luck > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2004 Report Share Posted August 13, 2004 The only thing I can add to what said is that you might want to read this document: Obligations of Public Agencies in Serving Children with Disabilities Placed by Their Parents at Private Schools http://www.edlaw.net/service/private-school-obligations.html Please note that the responses come from the Department of Education and are considered advisory, and that they are based on Federal Statues. States can add to what they have to offer, but they can't take away anything federal statues say they are responsible for. -Kay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2004 Report Share Posted August 13, 2004 The only thing I can add to what said is that you might want to read this document: Obligations of Public Agencies in Serving Children with Disabilities Placed by Their Parents at Private Schools http://www.edlaw.net/service/private-school-obligations.html Please note that the responses come from the Department of Education and are considered advisory, and that they are based on Federal Statues. States can add to what they have to offer, but they can't take away anything federal statues say they are responsible for. -Kay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2004 Report Share Posted August 13, 2004 The only thing I can add to what said is that you might want to read this document: Obligations of Public Agencies in Serving Children with Disabilities Placed by Their Parents at Private Schools http://www.edlaw.net/service/private-school-obligations.html Please note that the responses come from the Department of Education and are considered advisory, and that they are based on Federal Statues. States can add to what they have to offer, but they can't take away anything federal statues say they are responsible for. -Kay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2004 Report Share Posted August 16, 2004 In a message dated 8/11/2004 9:02:44 PM Eastern Daylight Time, vfdouga@... writes: However, I understand that parochial students are served on a " leftover " basis. My questions: 1) should we have received something in writing from the district? 2) am I correct that, even though Lyssa attends Catholic school right now, she must be treated like any other referral kid, and the time line for evaluation/developing a service plan applies? 3) am I correct that determination for eligibility must be made by the first day of school? Funny thing is, all we want is a personal FM unit for her to use in her classroom. Val, This just bothered me. Their approach may be that parochial students are served last, but I don't think that is legal. Your child is within their district, under their legal purview and it is their job to provide the needed services. You should not accept second-class status. If all you are asking for is an FM system, they should not be giving you a fight. It is an easy accomodation and giving it to you would be easier than the grief you could bring down on them from the state Ed Dept. You are asking for hardware, not a TOD or other human services, it's a realtively inexpensive and easy request. So, get a letter from your audiologist, your pediatrician, the speech therapist you've been paying for ... from anyone you feel would be supportive in this. Get the letters together and call for another IEP meeting and bring along the letters. If they say 'No " for any reason, then do not leave the meeting without hand-writing a request for an appeal. At that point go to the speech therapist/audi/etc and see what services they think you could or should have been asking for all along... a TOD, speech therapy IN school, whatever you have been too shy to ask about. Then write a letter requesting them as needed services. If you're going to fight the district, make it a good one. Plus, then there are things you can " give in " on that you are not really wanting anyway. Treat it like a contract negotiation ... build in things you don't need and are willing to give up. Your child does not have to be failing to merit services. She has a physical disability that has an educational impact. She needs support services and they must provide them. If they argue that you have your child in a parochial/private school, look them in the eye and ask if they are planning to disciminate against your child based on your religious choices. Here in NY the local district maintains control of evaluating for services, as well as providing them. Don't just take their " no " as the end of the conversation. Do not accept their assertion that because she is in a local parochial school that they do not have any responsibility for her needs. All that having been said, I would start by calling your State Education Dept and ask them about the rules in your state. Here in NY you could win this fight. I do not know how things are set up in your state. Perhaps her being in parochial school is a problem, but you need to find out for yourself, not accept it just because the district said so. Our district refused to acknowledge our son's hearing loss was " educationally significant " and claimed that since they had no HOH service availbale within the district, we could not expect them to provide any. Wrong! They made many claims that were completely untrue, so make the calls for yourself, don't just accept their word for it. They are looking to spend as little money as they can, because education budgets are incredibly tight all over the country. But those budget concerns are not yours ... let them worry about their funding. You're concern is your daughter's educational need. Best of luck -- Jill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 18, 2004 Report Share Posted August 18, 2004 Terri- We are in central Illinois. We are making some progress- have an IEP/service plan meeting schedules for the 26th (the 4th day of school rather than the first, but I've stopped counting). A local ombudsman agency is starting to help us, and if necessary, will coach us through some due process. As far as we can tell, the district must pay towards private students a percentage of their budget equal to the percentage of private school students divided by the total number of students (private plus public). Now I am trying to track down budgets, etc., to get an idea of the potential budget. Again, all we want if the district to provide the FM unit for my daughter's classroom- nothing else. Thanks to everyone for all the help and advice! Val FD At 10:38 AM 8/17/2004, you wrote: >We have had the fortune/misfortune of living in three widely different >states in the last 4 years and that has shown me just how different the >states are in how they deal with students unilaterally placed by their >parents in non-public schools. You need to look at your own state laws, >talk to people in your state to find out how they treat this. In MA they >are required to serve in addition to strict child find. In CA they only >provided services to the percentage of federal funding (small) unless >they knew you or you were grandfathered in before IDEA 97. IDEA 97 >is the federal law that specified how much (how little) they had to help >these kids in outside schools (exactly - students unilaterally placed by >their >parents in non-public schools) > >Let us know what state you are in. There are probably people on the >list who can help. > >Terri , mother of Kathy, almost 10! CII BTE, future artist and >large animal vet (no cows!) > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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