U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights FOIA Responses

Fairfax County Public Schools Failed to Comply with Federal Regulations; Continued to Deny IEEs

Virginia’s Independent Education Evaluation (IEE) regulations will be changed to align with federal regulations.

Local educations agencies (LEA) are required to follow the federal regulations (even before the state regulation change) or they will be found in noncompliance.

However, seven months passed before Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) presented this information to special education lead teachers—even though it was already found in noncompliance for failure to comply with federal regulations.

IEP Progress Reports: What Should Be Reported Vs. What Is Reported

What should be in Individualized Education Program (IEP) progress reports and what actually is in IEP progress reports often are two different things.

Imagine it is time for your annual work review. Your employer presents a report that states you didn’t make progress, or didn’t make enough progress, toward your goals for the year. However, when you read the report, there’s no data backing your employer’s decision, nor is there a performance plan for moving forward. You don’t know why you didn’t progress and you don’t know what you need to do in order to progress.

The same issues occur with IEP progress reports.

Second Virginia Hearing Officer Rules Reading Program Inappropriate for Student with Dyslexia

For the second time in about a year, a Virginia Hearing Officer ruled that the program “Just Words” is inappropriate for a student with Dyslexia. In both cases, the due process hearing focused on a student attending Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS), in Virginia.

The law firm Blankingship & Keith represented FCPS in both cases, too. Although the first hearing officer ruled “Just Words” to be inappropriate for a student with Dyslexia, FCPS continued to enroll students with Dyslexia in it, and FCPS and Blankingship & Keith continued forward in the second hearing, arguing “Just Words” to be appropriate for a student with Dyslexia.

View Fairfax County Public Schools’ “Concurrent Instruction Professional Development Guidebook”

This post shares Fairfax County Public Schools’ (FCPS) “Concurrent Instruction Professional Development Guidebook”.

Documents, images, and videos noted within the guidebook are included as well.

The Things Supreme Court Judges Say: Deference to Educators

Imagine this:

For the last five school years, the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE) has found your school division in noncompliance. The VDOE is known for its failure to ensure noncompliance is corrected, which means the noncompliance continues because 1) no one is holding the school division accountable; 2) school division staff aren’t properly trained; 3) carelessness; and 4) some division staff would rather fight you than remain in compliance.

The Office of Civil Rights just launched an investigation into your school division.

Add to the above that some teachers from your school division don’t tell the truth during due process hearings—and, although you’ve provided the school division proof of this, the school division continues to do nothing.

Should deference be given to such educators?

Let’s hear from the Supreme Court.

The Things School Division Lawyers Say: Deference to Educators

Should deference be given to educators? Does a degree related to education and/or a certain number of years working within the field of education entitle them to a certain level of respect? Or, should respect be based on their actions, on their record of working within the field of education?

What if those educators are the root of a child not receiving FAPE?

Should respect be paid to the principal with 40 years in education, whose ignorance bred illiteracy within her school? What of the teacher with two years of experience, whose ego won’t let him believe he could possibly be wrong, so he fights everything a parent says—and lies—just to stay in the right? What of the procedural support liaison who toes the county’s line rather than addressing the student’s need—the one who advised you to “Remember, this is public school,” when she thought it unrealistic for the school to provide the services needed to fully address your student’s unique needs?

Do these “educators” deserve respect? Should deference be given to them?

IDEA Advocacy Alert: Contact Your U.S. Representative and Senators; Ensure Funding For Special Education

This alert was issued by the Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates (COPAA).

Please take action today to ensure that dedicated funding it allocated to support students with disabilities.

The Things Hearing Officers Say: Deference to Educators

Too often, “deference to educators” is a trigger phrase among parents of students with special education needs.

While there are educators who are of great worth, parents too often have sat in IEP meeting after IEP meeting, opposing educators whose lack of training, lack of experience, lack of empathy—and sometimes all three—are negatively impacting students. Add to this, educators who make a parent’s opposition personal, to the point they oppose everything a parent states, just to oppose it, with all focus on their egos rather than the needs of the child.

So, what happens when the school division counsel argues for deference to educators as part of his due process hearing final brief? Does deference have to be given to the very educators who have so often been the root of all the problems?

The Things State Local Education Agencies Say: Forms for Filing a State Complaint

This is the first post in a new series, titled “The Things They Say”. It will feature verbatim comments from state education agencies, local education agencies, school lawyers, school staff, school witnesses in due process hearings, and a number of other organizations and individuals.

The goal is to share information that will help other families 1) know how issues in their states and/or school district have been handled and 2) know established patterns of behavior that they might face; and 3) advocate for change.

Each post will be updated as new information is received. For example, this post features an example related to the Virginia Department of Education. The goal is to have something representing every state added to this post.

Negative Impact of VDOE’s Inaccurate Information Continues

The Virginia Department of Education’s (VDOE) failure to provide accurate information to parents continues.

June 3, 2017, VDOE was made aware of bad/broken links in its “Parent’s Guide to Special Education Dispute Resolution” document.

Almost four years later, the bad/broken link in question— https://www.doe.virginia.gov/VDOE/dueproc—is still listed 11 times the parent’s guide.