mguilford1
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2010
- Messages
- 367
I'm sorry, but if someone wrote your son an IEP based on one observation, they broke the law, and I hope that folder never gets pulled for a federal audit.
I do this for a living. The form that I fill out just to CONSIDER whether or not to evaluate a child requires two observations in two different settings.
It is also NOT true that a school must evaluate a child based on the say-so of a parent. A parent can request an evaluation and there will be an initial determination meeting; however, if there are no areas of concern checked off on that initial form, there is simply nothing for me to evaluate and the process stops right there.
Also, to consider the category of Other Health Impaired, I must have a specific form completed by a doctor certifying the effect the health issue has on the student's educational learning. It does me no good to say the child has been diagnosed as ADHD; I need to know what the adverse effect on learning is.

A child doesn’t have to be failing to make a referral. It can be made if there are discipline issues, unsatisfactory performance on group achievement tests, extreme and ongoing anxiety about school, difficulty getting along with others, or a medical diagnosis of a disability. If the referral comes from someone other than the parent, including from the child’s teacher, the parent must be immediately notified in writing that a referral has been made.
why would a parent request an evaluation if there were no areas of concern at all? And the process does not stop just because the school says so! there is such thing as filing for due process!

My psychologist that diagnosed ADHD is not in the classroom to know what specifically is going on as far as education so how would he fill out this form? That is why there are evaluations and observations.
As a parent, guardian or advocate, you have a legal right to request that your public school evaluate your child for special education. Federal law, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act as amended in 2004 (IDEA), gives you that legal right. If the school district refuses to do an evaluation or, after evaluating the child, concludes the child is not eligible for special education services under IDEA, parents have other rights. If they are refused an evaluation or disagree with the evaluation, parents may be entitled to an independent evaluation at the school district’s expense. Finally, even if the child is not eligible for special education services under IDEA, the child may be protected by other laws: Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
Other health impairment (OHI)- This means the child has limited strength or alertness to the educational environment related to a health condition. It also can refer to a heightened alertness to stimuli, like in the case of ADD and ADHD. OHI can also include sensory integration dysfunction, anxiety disorder, asthma, sickle cell anemia, diabetes, epilepsy, lead poisoning leukemia, nephritis, food allergies.
I am glad my granddaughter does not go to your school!