As a private consultant I have the pleasure of supporting families
as they work to become knowledgeable members of their son’s or daughter’s IEP
team. They are often anxious weeks before the scheduled date, worrying if their
student will receive the supports and services they need or if they are going
to lose a service that has been helping. They worry about their struggles in
understanding what the assessments mean and they become anxious over whether or
not goals will be written in the areas of need. They worry if they will have
prepared enough to fight for everything their students need. They can become
intimidated and withdraw or defensive and lose their tempers.
We all know that the parents’ commitment to the education of
their child with special needs does not stop when the school bus comes to pick
them up or when they drop their child off for school. It is an ongoing
commitment to understanding the learning differences of their child, the latest
research and strategies developed to help their student and to the learning of
the complex system involved in the preparation of IEP documents, the
individualized special education plan for their student.
Being a knowledgeable partner at the IEP table means understanding
how to be prepared for these meetings and how to participate at them. It means
having a calm and professional voice. This
means parents must
1)
Understand the current level of performance on
each goal area being addressed.
2)
Review
the quarterly reports that are sent home and when the benchmark has not been
met . . . Ask why not and ask what needs to change in order for your student to
make progress. It might be time to identify different teaching strategies or
make accommodations in teaching materials.
3)
Observe
each part of your student’s program (classroom, therapy, lunch, recess) before
the meeting.
4)
Set up appropriate ways that teachers and
therapists can communicate progress
and challenges from the school day (email group, daily log, face to face, phone
calls).
5)
Learn to understand that the child’s assessments identify the strengths and
learning challenges. Then goals
are written to address the challenges. Services are then offered to support the
goals written. Parents need to be sure that there are enough goals written to
truly get the services needed. Parents also have the right to obtain outside
assessments and offer them at the IEP meeting to help determine goals and
services.
6)
Not forget that the evaluation of their student
does not move forward without their signature on the assessment form, so be
sure to sign them as soon as possible.
7)
Prepare
for meetings by keeping consistent and accurate records on their student
(IEP documents, assessments, progress reports, correspondence and
requests). It is always best to
put all requests in writing with signatures and current date of the request.
Prepare their own agenda to keep them focused at meetings when their emotions
are high. Use a highlighter on assessments to identify learning challenges. Ask
for breaks at meetings when needed. If they do not understand a goal or how the
child is going to be measured, ask for clarification. They can also take
documents home to review and process before signing.
8)
Develop a positive
relationship with the teacher, therapists, instructional assistants,
principal, program specialist and the director of special education.
9)
Think in terms of outcomes when determining needs: “What do we want for our child?”
10) Prioritize their student’s needs. What
is the most important thing to see addressed?
11) Try
finding common ground and work
towards developing shared understandings when there is a difference between you
and the school team. Keep your student’s need in focus as you address one
difference at a time.
12) Respect, value, listen and offer appreciation
to teachers, therapists and instructional aides. Offer thanks at IEP meetings.
13) Bring
a picture of your student to keep everyone focused on his or her needs and to
build a connection to a real person being served.
When this process becomes too overwhelming, some families
will choose to work with a local disability family network and bring an
advocate with them. Some families will hire a private consultant and others
will bring a special education attorney with them.
In recent years, due to the decrease in special education
funding, the tensions have increased between the families and the districts.
Multiple student IEP meetings, each over 2 hours long, are being held with 6 to
10 people at the table presenting, discussing and arguing about assessments,
needs, goals and services. Meetings get tape recorded for later legal use and
in some cases decisions are sent to mediators to determine a solution when the
team is unable to come to an agreement.
These types of solutions can destroy partnerships. When the
partners cannot find a common ground and work together, trust is lost and the
long-term partnership sadly destroyed.
So, my advice to families is to acquire the necessary
knowledge required to be an equal
partner early. Understand your student’s
special education needs and establish positive, clear communication skills with
every member of the team early. Document, document, document, and get involved
in your student’s education by volunteering, observing, and demonstrating
respect and appreciation.