Special Education Action is a 501(c)3 nonprofit publisher covering special education.
Its mission is to ensure parents, educators, and students have the information and tools necessary to fully understand, address, and safeguard the unique needs of all students who require special education.
Recent Articles
Update on Fairfax County School Board’s Legal Action Against Parents
September 2021, Fairfax County School Board took legal action against me and fellow Fairfax County Public Schools parent Debra Tisler after we exercised our First Amendment Rights.
This article provides an update to the timeline I provided in the article “FCPS Threatens Legal Action Against Parents Who Exercised Their First Amendment Rights And Right To FOIA”.
You’ll find more information about FCPS’s history of breaches and failures to stop the breaches, the transcript for the October 22, 2021, hearing, and FCPS’s response to VDOE’s investigation.
FCSB Files Motion for Nonsuit after Suing Parents and Failing to Prevail in Court; Judge Signs Order to Nonsuit
Although the nonsuit removes the suit from the docket—as if it never happened—the suit happened and won’t be forgotten.
Prior restraint is not legal.
Court Transcripts: Fairfax County School Board vs. Tisler, et al.
The transcripts can be found in the article “Update on Fairfax County School Board’s Legal Action Against Parents,” which is a running update of what’s going on with the case.
I’m posting them again here, for easy access.
College Board Fails to Provide “Universal Features” to All Students; Students with Accommodations Suffer
“Universal features” are the “common administrative features” shared by College Board tests. These common features are supposed to be provided to all students, which in turn negates the need to ask for one of these “universal features”—such as a quiet testing environment—as an accommodation.
And yet . . . College Board continues its failure to ensure all students who have accommodations receive a testing environment that includes College Board’s “universal features”.
Fairfax County Public Schools Restraint & Seclusion Policy Training Videos
Although FCPS schools has committed to banning restraint and seclusion practices in all of its schools, “including private schools with whom FCPS contracts, by the start of the 2022-2023 school year,” questions remain about the training being provided to FCPS staff.
Restraint and seclusion videos in this article were created by FCPS and made public in response to a FOIA request.
Special Education Action YouTube Channel Launched
The videos feature responses from Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, such as Fairfax County Public Schools’ (FCPS) restraint and seclusion training videos, school web site pages (to preserve in case the pages are deleted), and documents (to preserve in case something happens to the hard copies).
Although the videos posted to date are FCPS focused, the intent is to include videos related to education throughout the United States.