School Survival Guide for Parents of Children with Ichthyosis
Assistant Principal, Sandy Run Middle School
How do you know if your child is eligible for special services?
IDEA provides a definition of a child with a disability. The disability must affect the child’s educational performance. The child must fit into one of the 13 disability categories established by IDEA, and the disability must cause the child to need special education and related services.
The 13 disability categories established by IDEA are autism, deafness, deaf-blindness, hearing impairment, mental retardation, multiple disabilities, orthopedic impairment, other health impairment, serious emotional disturbance, specific learning disability, speech or language impairment, traumatic brain injury, and visual impairment.
How can you be sure your child has a special need?
Write to the school district’s Director of Special Education or local principal requesting that your child be evaluated for special education services. Written notification will start the timelines for evaluation if the school district agrees to an evaluation. Always keep a copy for your records.
What happens during an evaluation?
The school must evaluate your child in all the areas where your child may be affected by the possible disability: health, vision, hearing, social and emotional well-being, general intelligence, performance in school, and how well your child communicates with others and uses his or her body. The evaluation must be complete enough to identify all of your child’s needs for special education and related services. An appropriate evaluation will give you and the school a lot of information about your child. This information will help you and the school to determine if your child has a disability and then design instruction based on your child’s special needs.
The evaluation has been completed, now what?
If your child is found not to be eligible for special education, it must be in writing, an explanation given, and you must be given information about what to do if you disagree with the evaluation and want to challenge district’s decision. Most states also have a Parent Training and Information Center (PTI) you can access on the web for more specific answers to your questions. If your child is found eligible for an Individualized Education Plan (IEP), that plan must be developed within 30 days of that finding. An IEP sets reasonable learning goals for the student and also states the specific services the district will provide. Other information found in an IEP includes present levels of educational performance, annual goals, special education and related services to be provided, participation with non-disabled children, participation in state and district-wide assessments, transition services, and measuring progress.
Who develops the IEP for your youngster?
The parents and child (when appropriate), the regular education teacher, a special education teacher, a district representative (LEA), the school psychologist to interpret the evaluation results, and other individuals such as a speech therapist or occupational therapist.
What happens during the IEP meeting?
The child’s strengths and needs are discussed by the IEP Team to decide the educational and other appropriate goals for your child, the type of special serv¬ices your child needs, and the related services your child may require to benefit from his or her special education plan.
What are the “related services” for which your child may be eligible?
Transportation, speech and language pathology, audiology services, physical therapy, occupational therapy, recreation, counseling services, orientation and mobility services, medical evaluation or diagnostic services, psychological services, parent counseling and training, and other related services. Each state will vary in the services offered to IEP students.
Infants and toddlers also can receive services under the IDEA umbrella. These services are called early intervention services for children up to 2 years old and preschool services for children ages 3-5. Contact your local state agency for more information.
Hopefully, this article has answered many of your questions about the special services your child may require in order to have a successful school year. I encourage you to contact your child’s school to start to lay the groundwork for a rewarding, enriching, and exciting school year for you and your child.
Website Resources for Parents:
National Association of School Psychologists www.nasponline.org/advocacy
ADA.gov www.ada.gov
US Department of Education www.ed.gov
National Organization on Disability www.nod.org
American Speech Language Hearing Association www.asha.org/slp/schools/schools_resources_advocacy