The National School Board's Association ("NSBA") has noted a recent trend that students are being included on school boards. In at least one school district, Davenport, Iowa, at least one student who is on the school board is required to be a student with an IEP. On the whole it appears that most student who are allowed a role in school governance are based upon popular vote or other criteria that generally will not favor a student with special needs being included on the local board of education. For instance, in Tennessee, 4 students are to be included on the board two each from the "college track" and "technology track." Download School Governance.pdf
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In the nearly 10 years that I have been representing children with special needs, the question that comes to mind most often is--why do schools act the way they do ? Mostly the mental question is an effort to probe the myriad ways that schools conduct themselves in violation of the law, but paradoxically believe, often sincerely, that they are acting in accord with the law. The answer is that custom more than IDEA, 504, or any state law or set of regulations determines the schools actions. Which is not to say that real promulgated laws do not intrude on the actions of the school because that would be untrue. Custom, however, transcends any revisions in the law and continues to explain, at least in part, the actions of schools.
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Mislabeling students as mentally retarded is rampant in Fitchberg, Massachusetts according to the State Department of Education and the U.S. Department of Education. [Download Mislabeled_Students.doc]
Nearly one-fourth of all students in the district have been labeled mentally retarded which is nearly four times the state average. One investigatory report concluded the number of students who were mislabelled was "extraordinary."
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Paraprofessionals play an essential role for many children with disabilities under IDEA. Personally, my son has had a great paraprofessional for many years. She has had just the right balance of being supportive and backing off. She has been an advocate for him and a team player (in the non-negative sense) with the other school personnel. In a word she has been a crucial and wonderful part of my son's education.
However, the question is to what extent do schools overuse paraprofessionals as a quick and inexpensive "fix" instead of providing a certified teacher to teach students. This question is addressed in a set of guidelines and worksheets from the University of Vermont's Center on Disability and Community Inclusion as part of Project Evolve.
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Inclusion has many rationales. At its most basic, inclusion is based upon the mutual benefits, exchanges and learning that go on between children with disabilities and non-disabled peers. To me inclusion is a collision of two worlds. The world of people with disabilities and that of people without disabilities. While there is no compelling reason why there should be two separate worlds, historically that has been the reality. Over the decades, IDEA incrementally has fused these two worlds. This fusion has in my experience resulted in some meaningful and life changing lessons for both the disabled and the non-disabled.
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A new study from Indiana reveals severe short comings in the juvenile justice system. Overworked public defenders who lack sufficient training and motivation are among the findings. Many children go without representation or at best perfunctory representation in court. For special education students the findings of the report are especially troubling.
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