Transition plans are a vital part of an IEP document for any
student over the age of sixteen. In California, the state law requires that no
later than age sixteen, a student’s IEP must include appropriate, measurable
post-secondary goals and transition services needed to assist your child in
reaching those goals. [Cal.Ed.Code §56345(8)(a)].
The goal of a
transition plan and the services contained in the plan is to enable the child
to move from school to post-school activities including postsecondary education,
vocational education, integrated employment, continuing and adult education,
independent living or community participation. To accomplish this goal, there
must be a coordinated set of activities designed and focused on improving the
academic and functional achievement of the student as required to meet the
goals established in the transition plan.
The transition plan must be based on the student’s needs, taking
into account the students’ strengths, preferences and interests. The services
to be provided may include such things as instruction, related services,
community experiences, and the acquisition of daily living skills. The
transition planning process may need to include appropriate assessments and
must include development of appropriate goals and objectives. It must also contain
a specifically designed and coordinated set of activities.
Many transition plans currently being developed are little more
than boilerplate, with few (if any) appropriate goals and objectives or
activities geared toward the particular student’s needs. By age sixteen,
parents and students need to be prepared to spend as much time on the
transition planning process and the goals developed for the transition plan as
they do on the underlying IEP. If the local educational agency or charter
school refuses or fails to develop an appropriate transition plan, the student
and his or her parents have the same right to file for due process as with any
other portion of the IEP with which they disagree.
Transition plans and services are intended to be meaningful, concrete
and helpful in a practical manner. Think of your student’s transition plan as
a bridge that spans from school to “life.”
Do not permit your student’s transition plan to be yet another “check
off the list” part of the IEP. And, when you cannot obtain the type of
transition plan your student requires, remember that you have the right to
challenge that failure through due process.