| Basics for Parents: Your Child's Evaluation
The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) Our country's special education law is called the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). The IDEA is a very important law for children with disabilities, their families, and schools. The evaluation process described in this Basics for Parents is based on what this law requires. If you want to know all the law's requirements, you may wish to request a copy of the law and its regulations. The Purpose of Evaluation: Finding Out Why Many children have trouble in school. Some, like Laura, have trouble learning to read or write. Others have a hard time remembering new information. Still others may have trouble behaving themselves. Children can have all sorts of problems. It's important to find out why a child is not doing well in school. The child may have a disability. By law, schools must provide special help to eligible children with disabilities. This help is called special education and related services. You may ask the school to evaluate your child, or the school may ask you for permission to do an evaluation. If the school thinks your child may have a disability and may need special education and related services, they must evaluate your child before providing your child with these services. This evaluation is at no cost to you. The evaluation will tell you and the school:
Four Evaluation "Musts"
Step 1: Using What Is Known A group of people, including you, will evaluate your child. This group will begin by looking at what is already known about your child. The group will look at your child's school file and recent test scores. You and your child's teacher may provide information to be included in this review. The evaluation group needs enough information to decide if your child has a disability. It also needs to know what kind of special help your child needs. Is there enough information about your child to answer these questions? If your child is being evaluated for the first time, maybe not. Step 2: Collecting More Information The group of people, including you, involved in your child's evaluation will tell the school what information it still needs about your child, and the school must collect that information. Before the school can conduct additional testing, school personnel must ask you for permission. They must tell you what the evaluation of your child will involve. This includes describing (a) the tests they will use with your child, and (b) the other ways they will collect information about your child. Once you give your informed written permission, the school may evaluate your child to collect the additional information it needs.
Tests are an important part of an evaluation, but they are only a piece. The evaluation should also include:
Professionals will observe your child. They may give your child tests. They are trying to get a picture of the "whole child." It's important that the school evaluate your child in all areas where he or she might have a disability. For example, they will want to know more about:
Evaluating your child completely will help you and the school decide if your child has a disability. The information will also help you and the school plan instruction for your child.
Step 3: Deciding if Your Child is Eligible for Special Education The next step is to decide if your child is eligible for special education and related services. This decision will be based on the results of your child's evaluation and the policies in your area about eligibility for these special services. It's important that your child's evaluation results be explained to you in a way that's easy to understand. In other words, it's not enough to talk about your child's scores on tests. What do the scores mean? Is your child doing as well as other children his or her age? What does your child do well? Where is your child having trouble? What is causing the trouble? If you don't understand something in your child's evaluation results, be sure to speak up and ask questions. This is your child. You know your child very well. Do the results make sense, considering what you know about your child? Share your special insights. Your knowledge of your child is important. Based on your child's evaluation results, a group of people will decide if your child is eligible for special education and related services. Under the IDEA, you have the right to be part of any group that decides your child's eligibility for special education and related services. This decision is based in part on IDEA's definition of a "child with a disability." You should know that:
______________ IDEA's Categories of Disability
______________ As a parent, you have the right to receive a copy of the evaluation report on your child. You also have the right to receive a copy of the paperwork about your child's eligibility for special education and related services. Click here for more information on your rights and responsibilities as the parent of a special education student. If your child is eligible for special education and related services (such as speech therapy), then you and the school will meet and talk about your child's special educational needs (see Step 4 below). If your child is not eligible for special education and related services, the school must tell you so in writing. You must also receive information about what to do if you disagree with this decision. If this information is not in the materials the school gives you, ask for it. You have the right to disagree with the eligibility decision and be heard. Also ask how the school will help your child if he or she will not be getting special education services. Step 4: Developing Your Child's Educational Program If, however, your child is found eligible for special education and related services, the next step is to write an Individualized Education Program (IEP) for your child. This is a written document that you and school personnel develop together. The IEP will describe your child's educational program, including the special services your child will receive. In Summary: Four Steps in Evaluation Your child is having trouble in school. Someone notices, maybe you, maybe a teacher. You both want your child to do well in school. The first step is to evaluate your child to find out what is causing your child to have problems. Step 1: Using what's already known
Step 2: Collecting more information
Step 3: Deciding your child's eligibility
Step 4: Developing your child's educational program
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Adapted from information
published by the National Information Center for Children and Youth with Disabilities
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E-Ready is funded by a grant from the
NEC Foundation of America Copyright
© 2001-2006 by The Source for Learning, Inc.
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