Is it spring yet? Save 25% on all Wrightslaw books, training CD-Roms and Advocacy Supplies during our Pre-Spring Sale!
Tags: Advocacy · IEPs · Reading · Special Education LawNo Comments.
Is it spring yet? Save 25% on all Wrightslaw books, training CD-Roms and Advocacy Supplies during our Pre-Spring Sale!
Tags: Advocacy · IEPs · Reading · Special Education LawNo Comments.
Online registration deadline has been extended to Midnight, Monday March 11, 2013.
Wrightslaw Special Education Law and Advocacy Conference, a Wrightslaw training program featuring Pete Wright, Esq., is being sponsored by Win River Casino and C.H.E.A.R. (Child Help Educational Advocacy Relations).
Registration includes morning refreshments, lunch, afternoon and three Wrightslaw books.
Please download and share the flyer with your friends, family members or work buddies!
See you in Redding!
Tags: Advocacy · Conference · IDEA 2004 · Special Education Law · special education training2 Comments
The school wanted to retain my son who has an IEP for OT, PT and Speech. They insisted he repeat second grade. I disagreed.
Now in third grade, his teachers want to send him back to second grade. They say his writing is not on par with a “normal” third grader’s writing.
He grasps all concepts of the curriculum, but has a cognitive processing issue. He has difficulty understanding directions and the details of assignments.
Should I let the school retain him?
Specialized instruction, provided through an individualized education program (IEP), should be meeting your son’s unique needs.
Retention is not a form a specialized instruction.
Didn’t Work the First Time
Since his instruction in second grade the first time through did not meet his needs, it does not seem logical to repeat that again. Doing what did not work the first time makes no sense.
Meeting his needs through the IEP would be the logical approach. [Read more →]
Tags: IEP Goals · IEPs · retention2 Comments
Guest post by Jeremy Hilton -
In 2008, Congress mandated creation of the DoD Military Family Readiness Council to review and make recommendations to the Secretary of Defense regarding the policy and plans of the department’s military family readiness programs.
Four weeks ago, we volunteered our efforts to help DoD get the word out to the many military families who would benefit from information about the council and its mission. In keeping with the obvious need to go where the people are, we have created a Facebook page instead of a website:
https://www.facebook.com/DoDMFRC.
Our intent is to focus on areas that concern the council and military families.
1. Noted at the last council meeting, not enough is known about the issues surrounding EFMP or those families’ concerns. This Master List of Reports, Articles, and Regulations will help.
2. Read the full text of legislation attached to the 2013 NDAA, otherwise known as TRICARE for Kids.
We hope keeping military families informed empowers them. [Read more →]
Tags: DoD Military Family Readiness Council · EFMP · Jeremy Hilton · TRICARE for Kids Provision in HR 4310No Comments.

Seats going FAST! Register Now!
Join sponsors Parents Helping Parents and Pete Wright, Esq. for a one-day Wrightslaw Special Education Law and Advocacy Training on March 14, 2013.
This Wrightslaw conference will take place at the Westgate Church located in San Jose, CA.
If you miss this one… check out the schedule page for ALL upcoming Wrightslaw trainings.
Can the school district set a predetermined dollar amount as a cap on the cost of an IEE?
No. There is no provision in the law that allows districts to limit the cost or that requires parents to pay a portion of the cost of an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE).
The regulation about the parental right to an independent educational evaluation is 34 CFR §300.502 (Wrightslaw: Special Education Law, page 252-253).
A few years ago, OSEP issued a letter to clarify that parents have the right to select an evaluator of their choice.
Since the letter was written in 1994, the regulations cited were for IDEA 97, and may be slightly different in IDEA 2004.
In a nutshell, parents have the right to select an evaluator of their choice. [Read more →]
Tags: Approved List of Evaluators · IEE · independent educational evaluations · Procedural Safeguards5 Comments
Based on a doctor’s order, my daughter is receiving homebound instruction. The school district makes us provide transportation to the school for this instruction.
Shouldn’t the school provide transportation or a teacher to come to our home?
Transportation for Homebound Services
If your child has an IEP, the IEP controls the services, regardless of where they are delivered – at home or in the public school.
The IEP team determines what the child requires in order to receive FAPE, i.e., a free appropriate public education. [Read more →]
Tags: homebound instruction · Homebound Services · IEPs · TransportationNo Comments.
Early Bird Registration Ends on March 1, 2013. Don’t miss out on this event!
Location, Location… Join Pete Wright and Education for Parents of Indian Children with Special Needs (EPICS) on March 20, 2013 for this Wrightslaw Special Education Law and Advocacy Training at the Buffalo Thunder Resort and Casino in Santa Fe, NM.
This Pre-Academy Session kicks off the 10th Annual Family Leadership Academy which runs from March 21 through March 23, 2013.
Two ways to register: Online or Download the Registration Form.
Registration includes Continental Breakfast, lunch, snacks and three Wrightslaw books.
See you in beautiful New Mexico on March 20th!
Tags: Advocacy · Conference · IDEA 2004 · IEPs · Learning Disabilities · Special Education Law · special education training · StrategiesNo Comments.
My son is going to middle school. Same district, new school, just blocks apart. His 1:1 (same para for 3 years) has been the best thing that has come into his life ever.
We want his para to follow him to middle school.
The Special Education Director says this para can not follow him. He will have a few different paras at his new school. Can we get around this?
When parents ask for a specific service or person, schools usually say “No.”
They don’t want to be in the position of doing what a parent asks, even when the parent makes a reasonable request. Even though the IEP team may work well together, it is a small part of a large system.
If you have an unusual request, sometimes you run into an “invisible administrator.” You need to learn about school culture and the rules of the game.
Tags: gatekeeper · Rules of the Game · School Culture1 Comment
“Your child is reading 7 grade levels below his peers.”
How would you like to hear these words?
That is what we heard after years of working with the school on behalf of our son who has ADD/LD and dyslexia. He was going into 8th grade as a primer (first grade) reader. He could comprehend at grade level but could not read, write, or spell at grade level. He was good in math and all other subjects.
We learned late about his diagnosis of dyslexia.
His IQ was in the normal range, but he had a reading and writing disability. We had been working with the schools since he was in 2nd grade and we noticed that he had severe problems in reading and writing. These problems got worse as he continued in school but did not get the help he needed. This is what we did … [Read more →]
Tags: Evaluations · Research Based Instruction · Scientifically Based Instruction · Teaching Reading · Test Scores · Wilson Reading Programs1 Comment