Saturday, February 19, 2011

Working Together On Behalf Of the Student Ought to Be the Main Meeting Goal

At a recent I.E.P. Meeting to discuss assessment results for a second grader, I was somewhat taken aback by the administrator's attitude toward myself and the parents of the child. Based on test results, the child qualified as a student with a disability. The administrator not only neglected to inform the parents of the name of the disabling code, she also attempted to end the meeting without an explanation of what the code meant! Who does this? Imagine being that parent. Obviously you are concerned about your child's education. Otherwise you wouldn't even be sitting at the table. You just found out your child qualifies as a student with a disability and the school is not even going to tell you what that disability is, let alone define it for you! As the student's advocate, I asked what the disabling code was and then asked that the code be explained to the parents. The administrator told the parents the name of the code and the school psychologist gave an explanation of it.
The minutes of the meeting were not shared before being printed out. In addition, there was no mention in the minutes that the team would reconvene in 30 days to develop and approve the I.E.P. As the child's advocate, I had to ask for this statement to be placed in the minutes.
On a final note, I also had to ask that the minutes be shared with the team.
We go back in 30 days to develop and hopefully,approve the I.E.P. I will give it some careful thought as to how I will approach the team and especially the administrator. I feel compelled to re-introduce myself and state that I am there on behalf of the student and that our main
goal as a team ought to be to put together an I.E.P. that meets all of the student's needs as
a special Ed student in their school.