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Ms. S. v. Vashon island sd

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... education setting to the maximum extent appropriate as determined by the 4-part test (Sacramento City Unified SD BOE v. Rachel H.). – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ms. S. v. Vashon island sd


1
Ms. S. v. Vashon island sd
  • By Jillian Durgen, Kim Kokias, Patty Solano-Fah,
    Lindsay Wilson

2
Facts
  • G. is the child of Ms. S and has a diagnosis
    of Down Syndrome and Mild Mental Retardation
  • G. began receiving special education services in
    Seattle Public Schools
  • 1992-1993 Kindergarten G.s educational
    placement was ½ day general education and ½ day
    special education
  • 1993-1994 1st Grade Ms. S. requested a general
    education placement, which Seattle felt was not
    educationally appropriate. The district
    compromised by offering placement at an
    alternative school setting which was a unique,
    experimental multi age classroom combining
    special education and general education students.
    Ms. S agreed, but did not sign the IEP.
  • 1995-1996 3rd Grade G. moved to the Vashon
    Island School District

3
Facts, continued.
  • Ms. S. received a letter that the district wanted
    to place G. in a temporary 30-day self-contained
    special education placement until she was
    properly assessed.
  • Ms. S. did not sign the paperwork. On the same
    day, she wrote back to the director of Student
    Services, stating that the district was refusing
    to assess G. until she was placed in a
    self-contained classroom.
  • In September, October, and November, several
    unsuccessful attempts from the district were made
    to Ms. S. to assess and evaluate G. and to
    discuss an IEP.
  • Due to attendance, VISD filed for due process.
  • The ALJ ordered VISD to reassess G.
  • Ms. S. disagreed with the results and demanded an
    IEE. VISD filed for another due process hearing.

4
issues
  • Did VISD violate the procedural requirements of
    the IDEA by failing to have an IEP in place at
    the beginning of the school year?
  • Did VISD predetermine Gs placement before
    involving Ms. S. ?
  • Did VISD fail to implement the last agreed upon
    IEP under stay put?
  • Did VISD attempt to schedule the first meeting to
    initiate or change Gs placement without prior
    written notice, contrary to statutory and
    regulatory command?
  • Did VISD violate the substantive provisions of
    the IDEA by failing to place G, to the maximum
    extent appropriate in a general education
    classroom with normally developing peers?

5
Holding
  • Because VISD had an IEP in place at the beginning
    of the school year, FAPE was not violated.
  • VISD did not violate the parents procedural
    rights to participation in the IEP process.
  • VISD did not violate the stay put provision and
    were not obligated to provide identical placement
    provided by the old agency.
  • There were minor procedural violations in
    providing notice, but those technical errors did
    not deny FAPE.
  • VISD offerred G. an interim placement that
    provided for mainstreaming to the extent
    appropriate.

6
Reasoning/Rationale
  • If a child with a disability has been receiving
    special education in one district, and moves to
    another, the new district may implement the last
    IEP from the old district (WAC 34 C.F.R.
    Pt.300app. C, no. 6 (1995).
  • The school district repeatedly provided the
    parent with the opportunity to participate
    (Roland M. v. Concord Sch. Comm).
  • The new district must adopt a plan that
    approximates the students old IEP as closely as
    possible until dispute between parent and school
    district is resolved (Honig).
  • Not every procedural violation amounts to a
    denial of a FAPE (Amanda J., 267 F.3d at 892)
  • Under the 4-part test, LRE was offered to G.
    (Rowley, Clyde K. v. Puyallup, Sacramento City
    Unified SD BOE v. Rachel H.)

7
Significance
  • The court upheld LRE student is entitled to
    education with nondisabled peers in a general
    education setting to the maximum extent
    appropriate as determined by the 4-part test
    (Sacramento City Unified SD BOE v. Rachel H.).
  • Not every procedural violation amounts to a
    denial of FAPE.
  • If a school district does not have an identical
    program to the one that is specified in a
    transfer students previous IEP, they do not need
    to create an identical program. They must offer
    a new placement that is sufficiently close to the
    previous placement.
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