Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 School departments can consider the recommendations from an outside evaluation, they do not HAVE to incorporate them into an IEP or use them in deciding eligibility.. Also, if a school district feels strongly in their first evaluation, they can refuse an independant evaluation and initiate due process with the family. This is rare, but sometimes families think that they will automatically get an outside independant evaluation when they don't agree. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 if your son hasn't had recent educational testing then it might be something you want to agree to, to prove that he is still not on grade level in Math. Schools are always going to try to reduce or eliminate services when possible. That's why as parents we need to be savy in knowing what our rights are. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 be very cautious going out and getting help/tutoring for your child (even though he/she may need it). I have worked with several families who immediately started sending their child to Sylvan and it helped enough that the school didn't have to provide any services. The three year reevaluation is not mandatory. You can refuse it as the child's parent and member of the IEP team. You can also choose to do an outside or private evaluation on your own instead and choose what to share with the school team. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 Hi Pam, the school thinks my son is getting to much help right now and would like to see how he does if they don't help him as much. I think this is still too soon since he " can't read " . last night, he told me if he can't read a math question. He will look at the math problem and guess what to do. If he gets it wrong, its because he couldn't read the question. but, as soon as someone reads the math question to him. he will answer that math problem the right way. ppanda65@... wrote: School departments can consider the recommendations from an outside evaluation, they do not HAVE to incorporate them into an IEP or use them in deciding eligibility.. Also, if a school district feels strongly in their first evaluation, they can refuse an independant evaluation and initiate due process with the family. This is rare, but sometimes families think that they will automatically get an outside independant evaluation when they don't agree. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 Thanks -Ann I think with all this information I'm getting from this site. It's important for me to make an appointment with family resource and try to find out much more. I also think the school is trying to change my sons DX because he is doing much better. they told me: He doesn't fit Autism anymore that they feel he should be DXed with something else right now???? My son has never " not had " outside help (that I paid for) with tutoring, therapy, social skills. He also has social skills in school, speech, and now a reading program in school since I kept sending in notes stating he can't read, write or spell. When they finally decided to test him to shut me up and prove me wrong. instead, they told me he was two years behind in reading..... I didn't wait for the school to notice this. I already had him in a reading program. Colleges, have students that work with a professor that help kids read. I've been doing this for a while. Now that he just started to improve. the school wants to change his services???? and Diagnosis. they said, they will do this every three years to see where he is classified at. -Ann <kalars69@...> wrote: Does the school realize that because of the therapy he has improved? Or do you feel they are trying to place him out of Spec Ed services? With regard to Independant evals, here in MN (maybe national) if you disagree with an independant, outside evaluation paid by school (or also if school doesn't have staff qualified) you have right to ask for evaluation outside the school system. That said, the school must consider the 3rd round of evaluation but isn't required to implement the recommendations. (Ask for Procedural Safeguards, details how process works & your rights, responsibilities) This also may have changed with latest IDEA bill, but I'm not up 100% on new regs just yet. _Ann --------------------------------- Cheap Talk? Check out Messenger's low PC-to-Phone call rates. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 The people that do the outside help with my son said: as soon as the evaluator meets with him they will keep all services and not to worry. ppanda65@... wrote: if your son hasn't had recent educational testing then it might be something you want to agree to, to prove that he is still not on grade level in Math. Schools are always going to try to reduce or eliminate services when possible. That's why as parents we need to be savy in knowing what our rights are. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 In my sons situation, he is so far behind with reading, writing & spelling. that with the schools help and outside help, he is still far behind. they saw this when they gave him a science test and he failed it. I told them to read the questions to him. He knows each answer. They did and he got them all right. The help that my son is getting, he needs it. thanks for your response. ppanda65@... wrote: be very cautious going out and getting help/tutoring for your child (even though he/she may need it). I have worked with several families who immediately started sending their child to Sylvan and it helped enough that the school didn't have to provide any services. The three year reevaluation is not mandatory. You can refuse it as the child's parent and member of the IEP team. You can also choose to do an outside or private evaluation on your own instead and choose what to share with the school team. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 Pam, that is exactly what I'm trying to do. Learn my right to help my son. I read alot on this site because, to go to places that have speakers come in to help parents. We can't take our children & sitters are hard to find and expensive too. So, I learn as much as I can here. Rose <beachbodytan2002@...> wrote: The people that do the outside help with my son said: as soon as the evaluator meets with him they will keep all services and not to worry. ppanda65@... wrote: if your son hasn't had recent educational testing then it might be something you want to agree to, to prove that he is still not on grade level in Math. Schools are always going to try to reduce or eliminate services when possible. That's why as parents we need to be savy in knowing what our rights are. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 Your's is somewhat similar situation we are in; that we have provided all his " sucessful " services. We are having Grant's 3 year review soonish...part of why I waited was to get this diagnosis; 3 year review it is part of big picture " IEP process " to continue to re-evaluate his goals and ensure he's making educational progress he's capable of. Great book is " Negotiating the Special Ed maze " , by Winifred Chitwood & Diedre Hayden Look at www.pacer.org then on left side National information; this will take you to another website,(taaalliance I think) where you can get state specific Parent Advocacy information to become more informed. -Ann Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2006 Report Share Posted October 29, 2006 I will check out that book and the web-site too. big thanks. -Ann <kalars69@...> wrote: Your's is somewhat similar situation we are in; that we have provided all his " sucessful " services. We are having Grant's 3 year review soonish...part of why I waited was to get this diagnosis; 3 year review it is part of big picture " IEP process " to continue to re-evaluate his goals and ensure he's making educational progress he's capable of. Great book is " Negotiating the Special Ed maze " , by Winifred Chitwood & Diedre Hayden Look at www.pacer.org then on left side National information; this will take you to another website,(taaalliance I think) where you can get state specific Parent Advocacy information to become more informed. -Ann --------------------------------- Check out the New - Fire up a more powerful email and get things done faster. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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