Today the State Board of Education will consider some proposed amendments to special education regulations as part of its regular meeting. (Agenda here.) While many of these proposed changes are housekeeping (grammar corrections, standardizing acronyms, deleting anachronistic deadlines), others derive from the recent Education Transformation Task Force Report and would alter the complicated dance performed by parents and district personnel as they wend their way through years of paperwork entailed in creating Individualized Education Plans (IEP’s) for students with disabilities.
The proposed amendments are long so, as a public service, here’s a few highlights. My sense is that these changes are intended to rejigger the balance between reasonable and appropriate provision of special education services by school districts and the rights of parents and their children. The Task Force implied that this delicate balance had perhaps shifted a little bit towards the parents and against the districts. I’d guess that these amendments are meant to provide a bit of course correction, in addition to streamlining some of the more onerous and gratuitous paperwork.
I’d also note that the tone of the proposed amendments is just a tad defensive. In the one case (I found) where the DOE didn’t echo the suggestions of the Task Force, the proposal says, “The Department did not accept the task force recommendation…” See? We are independent thinkers!
Anyway, here are some of the proposed changes, set to be vetted by the State Board this morning:
Another amendment allows changes in IEP’s without formal meetings. Another proposes “to delete the requirement of identifying a specific liaison to postsecondary resources as it is not a Federal requirement.” (Hmm. Seems short-sighted.)
The DOE also proposes to “to provide school districts the flexibility of determining when sub-parts of an assessment, rather than the entire assessment, are appropriate to complete a reevaluation. The amendment will reduce unnecessary testing of students with disabilities and allow child study teams to conduct only the necessary assessment components to determine continued eligibility.” Makes sense, although one could argue that evaluations – those not necessary to prove eligibility – help to determine the child’s present level of functioning.
Other proposals give districts more flexibility to group students by extending the gamut of years from 3 to 4. Another allows more latitude on class sizes.
There’s more flexibility for private special ed schools too: “The Department proposes an amendment to remove the requirement that all personnel serving students with disabilities in approved private schools for students with disabilities be highly qualified in accordance with Federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) regulations.”
And remember the promise to cut red tape? Here’s an example:
Based on a task force recommendation, N.J.A.C. 6A:14-7.6(h) is proposed for amendment to remove “with prior written approval of the Department of Education” to allow approved private schools for students with disabilities to operate extended academic year programs without prior approval of the Department. The proposed amendment will eliminate unnecessary regulatory burdens for the Department, as the student’s IEP provides sufficient requirements for extended academic year programs. Thus, a more rigorous and targeted form ofoversight already exists.
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