Special Education: NOT the Resource Room, the Classroom in the Trailer, or the Special School Across Town

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Share

Does my daughter, who has an IEP, have to be served by resource classes or can she be totally in mainstream classrooms?

“Special education” under IDEA is not a place or placement or a pre-packaged program. Special education is a “service for children rather than a place where such children are sent.”

Special education is not the resource room, the classroom in the trailer, or the special school across town.

The IDEA includes a “least restrictive environment” (LRE) requirement.

LRE Requirement in IDEA

Special education services should be delivered in regular education classes (not special classes, separate schooling, or other removal from the regular ed environment) except “when the nature or severity of the disability of the child is such that education in regular classes with the use of supplementary aids and services cannot be achieved satisfactorily.”

20 U. S. C. § 1412(a)(5) – See page 72 in Wrightslaw: Special Education Law or Chapter 10 – Placement in Wrightslaw: All About IEPs.

If the IEP of a student with a disability can be implemented satisfactorily with the provision of supplementary aids and services in the regular classroom in the school the student would attend if not disabled, that placement is the LRE placement for that student.

The “I” in IEP

When school personnel view special education as a “place,” they often fail to evaluate the child’s unique needs and how the school can meet these needs.

That’s the “I” in IEP. “What we have available” usually refers to one-size-fits-all programs that are not individualized to meet a child’s unique needs.

And remember, parents are members of any team that develops the IEP and decides on placement. IDEA Section 1414(e) requires that the school “…ensure that the parents of each child with a disability are members of any group that makes decision on the educational placement of their child.”

Read Parent Involvement in Placement Decisions at https://www.wrightslaw.com/blog/?p=394

More about Inclusion, LRE, and Mainstreaming at https://www.wrightslaw.com/info/lre.index.htm


  1. My child has been removed from resource room and. General classroom to another classroom which I know nothing about. We are having a new iep meeting in couple weeks. I just wanna know what kind of room it is .

  2. Can a special education room be a storage room with no windows and little ventilation? Wasn’t there a rule that special education had to be delivered in the same setting of comfort as regular Ed?

  3. I have a serious question since my children left DODEA schools in NC for the state public ones and Nobody has ever answered my question at any of the IRP meetings- How can they stick my son in a self-contained classroom WITHOUT trying the supplementary aids and services? NC is terrible for inclusion and those that have won that battle had attorneys, I’m not fortunate to have one. I’m not listened to, I don’t even feel like what I say or bring to the table (the scientifically backed research articles and I summarized them all) on inclusion falls on deaf ears. And the IEP goals? No time frame for being achieved. I have never been satisfied at any IEP meeting, I’ve said as much and they don’t care; please help someone. Tyia

  4. I was a special education teacher and dyslexia specialist for 15 years and understand the monumental task of teaching students with disabilities. During the pandemic, to maintain my sanity, I developed a program for secondary students that provides instruction for all TEKS standards while providing accommodations for all learning levels. This program includes lesson plans, answers, and PowerPoint slides for an entire school year. If anyone is interested, this program is free for the asking.

    • I would love this im fighting in texas for my child w autism we pulled her out of a sty out so trying to to find resources to get her caught up since shes 2nd grade and they have her ar pre K level insane
      kimbelypi@yahoo.com

    • I’m a high school special education teacher. This year I had resource Biology added to my duties 2 days before students began. I am teaching 2 other subjects as well but am constantly staying late to learn, plan and prepare with no provided curriculum. I would love any resources you have.

  5. The IDEA law didn’t matter to my district. They removed my child from the general education classroom without our knowledge and consent.

  6. I’m a special education teacher. Our school district removed team taught inclusive classrooms in the content areas of social studies and science. Now they are offering a drop in resource room. Is this an acceptable delivery model of LRE in IDEA? I realize it isn’t the preferred and disgruntled that students needs are not being met. Moreover, it is disappointing that students report that they don’t like the stigma of having to leave to get help identifying them as being slow. Any good research to justify going back to a more inclusive model please advise.

  7. I am a special education teacher who currently servicing over 30 special education students from 5 different grade levels and three different subjects. Due to the large number of students I service, I do not have a conference period and no other assistance in the classroom. My instructional aides currently services my inclusion students and I have voiced my concerns for additional staff to meet the needs of the students. This has been an issue long before I arrived and more students are qualifying for special education services. While I have tried to meet the needs of the students, without additional help or another certified special education teacher to assist in the division of this large amount of students our students suffer. What do I do to rectify this situation?

    • You can look in the ed code for your state and it should give you caseload numbers. If you are indeed working over your numbers allowed by the ed code, you should contact your union representative and have them get involved. I agree with getting everything in writing. What county state are you in? Do you have a contract? What do you teach? How is it you service 30 students. Do you have a self contained class? How is it you are sending kids to general education with an aide leaving you with no support in the classroom.

  8. My son has an IEP for written expression but he does not want to be pulled out of the regular education classroom to receive Special services. He just entered middle school and feels it sets him apart. Will his IEP be completely terminated, or can he still receive accommodations in the regular classroom that are listed on his current iep without receiving direct services if we ask that he not be pulled out for services during the regular school day?

    • There are other options that might meet his needs and the campus might be willing to implement. For some services students do not need to leave the class all period, &/or every day. Services could be provided before or after the school day or non-instructional times. Some schools use the co-teaching model. Some states may allow accommodations to be provided, even if the student is not receiving special ed instruction. But frequently states & districts want to do this under the Section 504 rules.

    • He will need to engage in all the services and minutes that are listed in the offer of FAPE. In the services section, you can add push in or pull out in the comments section under the service (Amendment time!). But services like APE, OT, SLP services likely can’t be done in the classroom. However, unfortunately he needs to do all services or the school will be out of compliance or you can agree to remove all services.

  9. I moved to a district where the school doesn’t practice any kind of pull-out. The special ed teachers do only either self-contained or pop into an inclusion class for 2 hours a week. I was told that my dyslexic son now only gets 2 hours a week with a qualified special ed teacher and isn’t going to have any of the small classroom individualized learning he had in the resource room because he “isn’t severely retarded or non-verbal autistic.”

    It infuriates me. Inclusion has its place. Self contained classes have a place. Moving to only either one or the other is just a way to not hire as many special ed teachers and drastically cuts the help and resources kids like mine get.

    • I tell parents to think long term–if you are stuck with this school district -do not waste time trusting that district to remediate your son. What are his goals (college, vocational school, etc)? Look at the goals and ensure that he receives proper instruction and even if needed assistive technology. You may need to do this on your own until you work it out with the school but don’t waste time. Talk to the disaiblity offices at your state and local colleges to see how students with dyslexia use assistive tech and accommodations. Review dyslexia summer programs for your son. Involve him so he learns to self advocate. His strength will be in recognizing his own deficits but most of all his strengths. Those strengths will help him SOAR high!!!

    • Placement & services are to be based on a child’s needs. It does not sound like that is the case you describe. The federal dispute resolution processes exist for situations like this. These should be described in materials the school gives parents. You can contact your state parent training and information center. http://www.parentcenterhub.org/find-your-center

    • If your district considers someone with a severe intellectual disability and someone with autism (non-verbal or not), to be one category of learner, then I think you should find a different school district to live in!

      (Sorry – I had to get that off my chest!)

      As Chuck said, this is not a decision that is subject to a district policy. This is a decision made by the IEP TEAM – of which you are member. IDEA requires schools “…must ensure that a continuum of alternative placements is available to meet the needs of children with disabilities…” see IDEA Sec. 300.115 Continuum of alternative placements

      How they pay for it isn’t your problem, but you could suggest they dip into their Auxiliary Services and IDEA Part B funding…they’ll figure it out!

  10. Our district has an open enrollment policy that lets any student in the district open enroll in any school. Within this model, there are what they call “focus” schools, which are similar to magnet schools with special educational models. They are not charter schools but are made up entirely of students who choice in. “Focus” schools only have “resource” level of supports, whereas neighborhood schools have “intensive learning centers” AKA resource rooms. The district counsels out children with identified intellectual disabilities (including my own 4yo with Down syndrome) from attending the focus schools. We open enrolled in the Montessori school anyways, against their counsel but with support of the school principal, and wonder what our legal rights are?

    • Lauren, the answers to your questions will be specific to your state. Suggest you contact an advocate or attorney with expertise in special education matters in your state.

      Requesting a consult to develop a game plan for your son at his age will be helpful. To find attorneys and advocates in your area, go to the Yellow Pages for Kids site at http://www.yellowpagesforkids.com and/or COPAA at http://www.copaa.org.

  11. My son who is Autistic is in a private school. Son was in General Education class and then thrown into a Special Autistic Support class. I am really furious because he learns a lot from his peers. I confronted the school about his placement and they replied that the teacher and other students cannot stand him and he is interrupting their right to learn. I mentioned that my son has rights as well and I will be pulling him out of school. Their reply was oh well you can pull him out but you have to pay for the rest of the school year! What should I do?

    • I don’t know about the legal issue, I guess it depends on your agreement/contract with the private school when your son started.

      I would also remove my child from that school. They obviously don’t deserve to have him there. The research supporting IDEA’s least restrictive environment rules is pretty well settled. “Mainstreaming” as much as possible benefits everyone, not just the student needing additional support.

      We have some flexibility in our area with open enrollment and parents can choose where to send their children, or they move to exceptional districts – (and these aren’t always in affluent areas, BTW!) If you have some choice too, research different schools. Visit the school, talk to parents, invite yourself to community events — and keep fighting for your son!

  12. I teach at a school that places children in classes based on their state assessment score. All of the students that have special education services are placed in the same class by grade level. The students are aware of this, and oftentimes I hear them saying they are “the dumb class”. Is this practice legal? If so, how is it beneficial to students?

    • Students are aware of when they are being “tracked” and it impacts them. Yes, it easier to place them all in the same room to track special ed services but is it wise. I had my child removed from a lower tracked class. My child wanted college prep and had goal. The behaviors in the lower tracked classroom were alarming as they also sometimes placed behavioral students in those classes, and the teacher had no control in the classroom. I advocated that the instructional design and delivery did not comply with my child’s IEP and my child was removed ASAP and placed in a small group and received the appropriate instructional model and delivery. I also politely mentioned the word “tracking” and well the school did not want to admit that they were tracking students.

  13. I’m concerned, first my daughter had no para support in her new school and now they have clustered her in all special education rooms when she can function in normal class rooms, just needs para support and adjusted assignments. She learns alot from her peers.

  14. When changing a special education student’s schedule from a general education elective course to a special education study skills class, isn’t that placing them in a more restrictive environment?

      • I agree. My child’s school created a study skills class instead of putting a bunch of the kids in elective classes–that study skills class gave them the “extra” they needed to make progress and continue on into high school. It supplemented their education in addition to what they were already learning. It was a creative way to really give those kids more academics, experimental learning projects, etc. I thought it was a great idea and truly inspired the kids to higher goals–my child and others went on to college. It was a unique approach and the school district tried something new–and it worked. Most of these kids were just below scores on state assessments and LD–very creative learning objectives.

  15. I really like what you said about how special education services should be delivered in regular education classes and not removing the children from each other except in special circumstances. My little brother was often to be separated from his classmates and had a hard time with it since he’s very social and no danger to anyone. Thank you for the clarification on the law and how it would affect someone with his disabilities.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Please help us defeat spam. Thank you. *