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Home > FAPE > Protect Your Child's Interests to Compensatory Education: Create a Record of Contacts During School Closure  | 
    
Home> COVID Resources > > Protect Your Child's Interests During the COVID-19 Crisis: Document Contacts with the School by Pam & Pete Wright
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       Protect Your Child's Interests During the COVID-19 Crisis: Document Contacts with the School <
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 ""If it is not in writing, it was not said. If it is not in writing, it did not happen"." -- Pete Wright In this article, you'll learn how to protect your child's interests (and his right to compensatory eduction) by documenting contacts with the school when school closed.
         Good records are essential to effective advocacy!
 
 When you deal with a bureaucracy like the Internal Revenue Service or your state tax department, you know you need to keep detailed records. But many parents don;t realize that their school district is a bureaucracy too. Keep 
            a record of your contacts with the school. Your log should include 
            telephone calls and meetings, conversations, and correspondence between 
            you and the school.  Train 
            yourself to write things down! If you have a dispute with the school, your contact log is independent evidence that supports your 
          memory. 
 
            Make 
            your requests in writing. Write polite follow-up letters to document 
            events, discussions, and meetings. Documentation 
            that supports your position is a key to resolving disputes early. 
          Your tools are simple: Documents 
            Support Memories  and Testimony However, 
            if your recollections are supported by a journal, contact log or calendar 
            that describes the problem or event, you will be in a stronger position. 
            Your journal or log should be contemporaneous -- that is, written 
            when the events or incidents occurred.  If 
            you can produce a letter that describes what the school agreed to 
            do or refused to do, your position will be stronger.  Documents 
            Answer Questions Documents 
            provide answers to Who, What, Why, When, Where, How and Explain 
            questions. Your 
            Contact Log Use 
            a log to document all contacts between you and the school. Your log 
            should include telephone calls, messages, meetings, letters, and notes 
            between you and the school staff. Figure 1 is a contact log for telephone 
            calls.  Your 
            log is a memory aid and will help you remember what happened and why. 
             Figure 2 
        shows how to log in a phone call you made to the school. You 
            can use a log to document problems too. Figure 3 shows how to log 
            in a problem.  You 
            can use a bound or looseleaf notebook as a log. Be consistent! Your 
            Calendar Many 
            parents like to record their appointments in a monthly or "Year 
            at a Glance" calendar. Calendars can provide good evidence about 
            meeting dates and times.  Tip! 
            Do not throw your calendar away at the end of the year! Your 
            Journal Your 
            journal is like a diary and should be clear and legible.  If 
            you request a due process hearing, your journal may be important evidence 
            in your childs case. Your writings, journals, logs, calendars, 
            and letters may be subpoenaed by the school district.  When 
            you write into your journal, write to the Stranger who has the power 
            to fix problems. When the Stranger reads your journal, the Stranger 
            will understand your perspective and want to fix your problems. Do you have frequent or ongoing problems with the school – frequent suspensions, homework problems, teacher problems? You can use the Problem Report worksheet to document ongoing school problems. If you have several Problem Reports about the same issue, this is evidence that your child’s program or placement is not appropriate.  Date:     ______/__________/_________ Problem: ____________________________________________________  _____________________________________________________________ People involved: ______________________________________________ Facts (5 Ws + H + E) What happened? ______________________________________________ When did it happen? ___________________________________________ Who was involved? ____________________________________________ Where did it happen? __________________________________________ Why did it happen? ____________________________________________ Who witnessed? ______________________________________________ What action did school take? ____________________________________ What action did you take? ______________________________________ Other facts: __________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________           Tip! You have a right to a copy of your childs IEP. Writing 
            to "The Stranger"  
            In             Wrightslaw: From Emotions to Advocacy, 2nd Edition, you learn how to write good evidence letters and persuasive Letters to the Stranger. When you document problems and write letters, assume that your letters 
              will be read by a Stranger who has the power to right the wrongs. After 
            reading a letter from you, the Stranger understands the issues, knows 
            what you want and why, and wants to help.  Who 
            is the Stranger?  The 
            Stranger has the power to make important decisions on your child's 
            behalf. The Stranger may be be the director of special education or 
            the school superintendent. The Stranger may be a hearing officer, 
            Administrative Law Officer, or judge.  If 
            you write a clear, logical, factual letter about your problem to the 
            Stranger, a letter that persuades the Stranger to help, you will prevail 
            without a war.  We 
            call this technique "Writing the Letter to the Stranger." 
            To learn more about letter writing, download and read these articles. 
             ** Required Reading for Clients - Original "Letter to the Stranger," by Janie Bowman and Peter Wright. 
              When you read the original "Letter to the Stranger" that 
              was posted on the CompuServe ADD Forum in 1994, you will see how this 
              concept evolved. A few years later, this article and other information 
              from the ADD Forum became part of a Smithsonian Exhibit about online 
          culture and communities. In 
            Summation           In 
            this article, you learned to create paper trails by documenting contacts 
            with the school - conversations, meetings and other events.  You 
            will think about the powerful decision-making Stranger when you write 
            descriptions of events, concerns and problems.       
      
     
       Copyright © 1998-2025, Peter W. D. Wright and Pamela Darr 
Wright. All rights reserved. 
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