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SPECIAL EDUCATION IN UNITED 
STATES OF AMERICA (USA)
Education for All Handicapped Children Act 
(EHA) Special education programs in the 
United States were made mandatory in 1975 
when the United States Congress passed the 
in response to discriminatory treatment by 
public educational agencies against students 
with disabilities. 
Individuals with Disabilities Education 
Act(IDEA).
Provide support services per IEP for 
students with identified disabilities, 
enabling them opportunities for 
success in high school. 
Satisfy legal mandates set by state and 
FeDeral law (per IDEA) regarding 
identified students with disabilities.
• Assist students to choose 
opportunities for success and 
development of self advocacy. 
• Commit to continued 
enrichment of skills and 
knowledge by special 
education personnel. 
• Adapt as needed to serve an 
expanding and identified 
special education population. 
• Expand inclusionary 
opportunities as appropriate.
IDEA entitles every student to a free and appropriate public 
education (FAPE) in the least restrictive environment(LRE). To 
ensure a FAPE, 
1. a team of professionals from the local educational agency meet 
2. Parents become part of the multidisciplinary team, along with 
the local educational agency professionals, and collaborate with 
team members to make decisions on educational placement. 
These choices are recorded in a written Individualized Education 
Program(IEP). 
3. The school is required to develop and implement an IEP that 
meets the standards of federal and state educational agencies. 
Parents have the option of refusing Special Education services 
for their child.
Under IDEA, students with disabilities are entitled to receive special educational 
services through their local school district from age 3 to age 18 or 21. To receive 
special education services, a student must demonstrate a disability in one of 13 
specific categories, including : 
autism 
developmental disability 
specific learning disability 
intellectual impairment 
emotional and/or behavioral disability 
speech and language disability 
deaf-blind 
visual impairment 
hearing impairment 
orthopedic or physical impairment, other health impaired 
(including attention deficit disorder) 
multiple disabilities 
traumatic brain injury
Implementation through Cooperative Federalism 
Special education programs at the district level are 
structured upon a cooperative federalism model and 
therefore governed by both state and federal law. The 
Court explains: 
IDEA is frequently described as a model of cooperative federalism. 
It leaves to the States the primary responsibility for developing and executing 
educational programs for handicapped children, [but] imposes significant 
requirements to be followed in the discharge of that responsibility.
Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) 
A Free Appropriate Public Education means special 
education and related services that: 
 Are provided at public expense, under public 
supervision and direction, and without charge, 
 Meet state requirements and the requirements of 
federal regulations 
 Include an appropriate preschool, elementary school, 
or secondary school education in the State involved, 
and 
 Comply with a lawful Individual Education Plan
Maintenance of Effort 
The purpose of federal special education funding is to 
maintain or improve the quality of special education 
services. This purpose would be undercut if additional 
federal dollars were "supplanted" by merely reducing 
the level of state or local funding for special education. 
For this reason, like many other such programs, the 
federal law and regulations contain accounting 
guidelines, requiring "maintenance of effort”.
The state says that federal funds provided to the local education 
agency : 
1. Shall be used only to pay the excess cost of providing special 
education and related services to children with disabilities; 
2. Shall be used to supplement State, local and other Federal 
funds and not to supplant such funds; and 
3. Shall not be used …to reduce the level of expenditures for 
the education of children with disabilities made by the local 
education agency from local funds below the level of those 
expenditures for the preceding fiscal year.
Qualifying Students for Special Education 
• By federal law, no student is too disabled to qualify for 
a free, appropriate education. Whether it is useful and 
appropriate to attempt to educate the most severely 
disabled children, such as children who are in a 
persistent vegetative state or in a coma, is debated. 
• While many severely disabled children can learn at 
least simple tasks, such as pushing a buzzer when they 
want attention or using a brain implant if they are 
unable to move their hands, some children may be 
incapable of learning
The Referral 
Parents who suspect or know that their child has a 
problem making adequate school progress should 
request an from their local school district. The 
request, called a "referral for evaluation," should be 
initiated in writing. 
The referral should be addressed to the principal of 
the local public school or the special education 
coordinator for the district, and should provide the 
child's name, date of birth, address, current school 
placement (if applicable), and the suspected area of 
disability or special need. 
 Referrals can also be made by general education 
teachers or guidance counselors.
The Evaluation 
After the referral process, the district will begin the evaluation. 
• The law requires a comprehensive and nondiscriminatory 
school evaluation involving all areas of suspected disability. 
• Testing must be in the native language of the child (if feasible). 
• Testing must be administered one-to-one, not in a group. 
• Teachers also document any interventions they have already 
been using in the classroom. 
• In addition to testing, an observation of the child either in 
school or in a comparable situation is required for an initial 
evaluation, and often at later stages as well. 
• To insure objectivity and cross-referencing, this observation 
must be conducted by a Person other than the child's 
classroom teacher.
• The observation need not be done exclusively 
in the child's classroom, especially when the 
child's suspected area of disability may 
become manifest in larger settings, such as 
the lunchroom, hallways or gym. 
• For children over twelve years of age, 
vocational testing is required. This 
requirement is in keeping with the spirit of 
the IDEA 1997 Amendments that encourage 
preparation of children for useful 
employment. 
• The privately obtained evaluative material 
and reports.
Classification 
 Once all the evaluative material is presented and 
reviewed at the meeting, the IEP team must first 
determine whether the child is eligible for special 
education services. 
 An eligible child will require special education 
intervention in order to enable him/her to receive the 
benefits of instruction and an education. If the team 
finds the child eligible for special education, they must 
then classify the child in one of 13 categories.
The following are the students in the U.S. and outlying areas aged 6 through 21 who 
received special education in the 2006-2007 school year. 
DISABILITY Students Percentage 
Learning disability (LD) 2,710,476 44.6% 
Speech or language impairment (SI) 1,160,904 19.1% 
Other health impairment (OHI) 599,494 9.9% 
Mental retardation (MR) (now known as 
523,240 8.6% 
Intellectually Disabled) 
Emotional disturbance (ED) 458,881 7.5% 
Autism 224,594 3.7% 
Multiple disabilities 134,189 2.2% 
Developmental delay 83,931 1.4% 
Hearing impairment (HI) 72,559 1.2% 
Orthopedic impairment (OI) 61,866 1.0% 
Visual impairment (VI) 26,352 0.4% 
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) 23,932 0.4% 
Deaf & blindness 1,472 0.0% 
The IDEA allows, but does not require, school districts to add the classifications 
of Attention- Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Pervasive Developmental 
Disorder (PDD) at their discretion.
Developing the Individual Education Program (IEP) 
The Individual Education Program is developed by a team 
(sometimes referred to as the Committee on Special Education) 
that must include at least one parent and the professionals who 
work with the student. 
Teachers and a representative from the school administration are 
generally required to attend these meetings. Parents may 
additionally include anyone they choose, for any reason they 
choose. 
Parents must be notified of the meeting in writing. The 
notification must indicate the purpose, time and location of the 
meeting and list the people who will be in attendance, including 
the name and position of each person. If parents are unable to 
attend at the appointed time, the meeting should be rescheduled 
to accommodate the needs of the family.
The Individual Education Program 
The IEP must include: 
1. A statement of the child's present levels of educational 
performance, which describes the effects of the child's 
disability on all affected areas of the child's academic 
and non-academic school performance. 
2. A statement of annual goals including short-term 
objectives. 
3. A statement of the specific special education and related 
services to be provided to the child and the extent to 
which the child will participate in regular education 
programs. 
4. The projected dates for the initiation of services
Determining the appropriate placement 
After the IEP meeting the parents must be given written notice of 
exactly where and how the services will be provided for their child. 
Most often, the suggested program will be located within the public 
school system in the district. When a student's disability is such that 
his or her needs cannot be met in the district, the school district 
may suggest a placement in an out-of-district program. These 
programs can include a Day Treatment Program, a Non-public 
Special Education School, a Residential School or Home Instruction. 
In all cases, parents should visit the sites that are recommended to 
observe the program to determine if the program is appropriate for 
their child.
Procedural safeguards 
Procedural safeguards are procedures in special education 
explained to a parent or guardian in order for them to be informed 
throughout the special education process. Typically they are 
presented at a team meeting, but can be provided sooner. They 
include: 
Notice of procedural safeguards 
Required content 
Parental participation in process 
Right to participate in all meetings, including identification, 
evaluation, placement, and all discussions regarding the 
educational plan. 
Parent right to review all educational records 
Parent right to an independent evaluation 
Prior written notice
Prior written notice when a school proposes to initiate a 
service, conduct an evaluation, change a placement, or 
modify an IEP; or when the school refuses to provide a 
parent-requested service, identification, evaluation or change 
of placement or IEP 
Content of prior written notice 
Right to submit a complain 
Mediation 
Voluntary mediation to be provided by SEA at no cost to 
parents 
Impartial due process hearing
Impartial hearing/mediation 
Parents may disagree with the program recommendation 
of the school district. In that event, parents may reject 
the district's recommendations by notifying the school 
district in a clear and concise manner of the reasons for 
the rejection of the IEP recommendation. This notice 
must be given in writing within 30 days of receipt of the 
program recommendation
The IDEA provides for two methods of 
resolving disputes between parents and 
school districts. These include: 
1. Mediation 
2. Impartial Hearing
Student conduct and discipline 
A student that has engaged in behavior that is in 
violating of student conduct codes that is punished with 
a suspension or change in placement exceeding 10 days 
must be given a Manifestation Determination Hearing. 
The purpose of this hearing is to determine whether the 
bad behavior is caused by the disability. If it is, then the 
school district will attempt to change the student's 
program to address the problem or move the student 
into a more restrictive environment
Diagnosis 
Diagnosis is a term that is more 
appropriately applied to medical classification 
systems, and individual professional's impression 
of a person's difficulties.
Least Restrictive Environment 
The least restrictive environment (LRE) mandate requires that all 
students in special education be educated with typical peers to 
the greatest extent possible, while still providing FAPE. The LRE 
requirement is intended to prevent unnecessary segregation of 
students with disabilities, and is based on Congress' finding 
students with disabilities tend to have more success when they 
remain or have access to typical peers. 
School Systems must allow one of the following persons; 
Special Education Professional 
Psychologist or a Behavioral Specialist 
.
African-Americans in Special Education 
The studies found that grossly disproportionate numbers 
of minority students are identified as eligible for services, 
and too often placed in isolated and restrictive educational 
settings. When compared with their white counterparts, 
African-American children were almost three times more 
likely to be labeled "mentally retarded," according to a 
paper by Thomas B. Parrish, managing research scientist at 
the American Institutes of Research.
Bilingual Special Education 
This bilingual population is distributed 
throughout the United States with heavier 
concentrations in the southwest and 
northeast. The highest concentration is in 
the large urban areas.
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Sped in usa ppt gpb

  • 1. SPECIAL EDUCATION IN UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (USA)
  • 2. Education for All Handicapped Children Act (EHA) Special education programs in the United States were made mandatory in 1975 when the United States Congress passed the in response to discriminatory treatment by public educational agencies against students with disabilities. Individuals with Disabilities Education Act(IDEA).
  • 3. Provide support services per IEP for students with identified disabilities, enabling them opportunities for success in high school. Satisfy legal mandates set by state and FeDeral law (per IDEA) regarding identified students with disabilities.
  • 4. • Assist students to choose opportunities for success and development of self advocacy. • Commit to continued enrichment of skills and knowledge by special education personnel. • Adapt as needed to serve an expanding and identified special education population. • Expand inclusionary opportunities as appropriate.
  • 5. IDEA entitles every student to a free and appropriate public education (FAPE) in the least restrictive environment(LRE). To ensure a FAPE, 1. a team of professionals from the local educational agency meet 2. Parents become part of the multidisciplinary team, along with the local educational agency professionals, and collaborate with team members to make decisions on educational placement. These choices are recorded in a written Individualized Education Program(IEP). 3. The school is required to develop and implement an IEP that meets the standards of federal and state educational agencies. Parents have the option of refusing Special Education services for their child.
  • 6. Under IDEA, students with disabilities are entitled to receive special educational services through their local school district from age 3 to age 18 or 21. To receive special education services, a student must demonstrate a disability in one of 13 specific categories, including : autism developmental disability specific learning disability intellectual impairment emotional and/or behavioral disability speech and language disability deaf-blind visual impairment hearing impairment orthopedic or physical impairment, other health impaired (including attention deficit disorder) multiple disabilities traumatic brain injury
  • 7. Implementation through Cooperative Federalism Special education programs at the district level are structured upon a cooperative federalism model and therefore governed by both state and federal law. The Court explains: IDEA is frequently described as a model of cooperative federalism. It leaves to the States the primary responsibility for developing and executing educational programs for handicapped children, [but] imposes significant requirements to be followed in the discharge of that responsibility.
  • 8. Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) A Free Appropriate Public Education means special education and related services that:  Are provided at public expense, under public supervision and direction, and without charge,  Meet state requirements and the requirements of federal regulations  Include an appropriate preschool, elementary school, or secondary school education in the State involved, and  Comply with a lawful Individual Education Plan
  • 9. Maintenance of Effort The purpose of federal special education funding is to maintain or improve the quality of special education services. This purpose would be undercut if additional federal dollars were "supplanted" by merely reducing the level of state or local funding for special education. For this reason, like many other such programs, the federal law and regulations contain accounting guidelines, requiring "maintenance of effort”.
  • 10. The state says that federal funds provided to the local education agency : 1. Shall be used only to pay the excess cost of providing special education and related services to children with disabilities; 2. Shall be used to supplement State, local and other Federal funds and not to supplant such funds; and 3. Shall not be used …to reduce the level of expenditures for the education of children with disabilities made by the local education agency from local funds below the level of those expenditures for the preceding fiscal year.
  • 11. Qualifying Students for Special Education • By federal law, no student is too disabled to qualify for a free, appropriate education. Whether it is useful and appropriate to attempt to educate the most severely disabled children, such as children who are in a persistent vegetative state or in a coma, is debated. • While many severely disabled children can learn at least simple tasks, such as pushing a buzzer when they want attention or using a brain implant if they are unable to move their hands, some children may be incapable of learning
  • 12. The Referral Parents who suspect or know that their child has a problem making adequate school progress should request an from their local school district. The request, called a "referral for evaluation," should be initiated in writing. The referral should be addressed to the principal of the local public school or the special education coordinator for the district, and should provide the child's name, date of birth, address, current school placement (if applicable), and the suspected area of disability or special need.  Referrals can also be made by general education teachers or guidance counselors.
  • 13. The Evaluation After the referral process, the district will begin the evaluation. • The law requires a comprehensive and nondiscriminatory school evaluation involving all areas of suspected disability. • Testing must be in the native language of the child (if feasible). • Testing must be administered one-to-one, not in a group. • Teachers also document any interventions they have already been using in the classroom. • In addition to testing, an observation of the child either in school or in a comparable situation is required for an initial evaluation, and often at later stages as well. • To insure objectivity and cross-referencing, this observation must be conducted by a Person other than the child's classroom teacher.
  • 14. • The observation need not be done exclusively in the child's classroom, especially when the child's suspected area of disability may become manifest in larger settings, such as the lunchroom, hallways or gym. • For children over twelve years of age, vocational testing is required. This requirement is in keeping with the spirit of the IDEA 1997 Amendments that encourage preparation of children for useful employment. • The privately obtained evaluative material and reports.
  • 15. Classification  Once all the evaluative material is presented and reviewed at the meeting, the IEP team must first determine whether the child is eligible for special education services.  An eligible child will require special education intervention in order to enable him/her to receive the benefits of instruction and an education. If the team finds the child eligible for special education, they must then classify the child in one of 13 categories.
  • 16. The following are the students in the U.S. and outlying areas aged 6 through 21 who received special education in the 2006-2007 school year. DISABILITY Students Percentage Learning disability (LD) 2,710,476 44.6% Speech or language impairment (SI) 1,160,904 19.1% Other health impairment (OHI) 599,494 9.9% Mental retardation (MR) (now known as 523,240 8.6% Intellectually Disabled) Emotional disturbance (ED) 458,881 7.5% Autism 224,594 3.7% Multiple disabilities 134,189 2.2% Developmental delay 83,931 1.4% Hearing impairment (HI) 72,559 1.2% Orthopedic impairment (OI) 61,866 1.0% Visual impairment (VI) 26,352 0.4% Traumatic brain injury (TBI) 23,932 0.4% Deaf & blindness 1,472 0.0% The IDEA allows, but does not require, school districts to add the classifications of Attention- Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD) at their discretion.
  • 17. Developing the Individual Education Program (IEP) The Individual Education Program is developed by a team (sometimes referred to as the Committee on Special Education) that must include at least one parent and the professionals who work with the student. Teachers and a representative from the school administration are generally required to attend these meetings. Parents may additionally include anyone they choose, for any reason they choose. Parents must be notified of the meeting in writing. The notification must indicate the purpose, time and location of the meeting and list the people who will be in attendance, including the name and position of each person. If parents are unable to attend at the appointed time, the meeting should be rescheduled to accommodate the needs of the family.
  • 18. The Individual Education Program The IEP must include: 1. A statement of the child's present levels of educational performance, which describes the effects of the child's disability on all affected areas of the child's academic and non-academic school performance. 2. A statement of annual goals including short-term objectives. 3. A statement of the specific special education and related services to be provided to the child and the extent to which the child will participate in regular education programs. 4. The projected dates for the initiation of services
  • 19. Determining the appropriate placement After the IEP meeting the parents must be given written notice of exactly where and how the services will be provided for their child. Most often, the suggested program will be located within the public school system in the district. When a student's disability is such that his or her needs cannot be met in the district, the school district may suggest a placement in an out-of-district program. These programs can include a Day Treatment Program, a Non-public Special Education School, a Residential School or Home Instruction. In all cases, parents should visit the sites that are recommended to observe the program to determine if the program is appropriate for their child.
  • 20. Procedural safeguards Procedural safeguards are procedures in special education explained to a parent or guardian in order for them to be informed throughout the special education process. Typically they are presented at a team meeting, but can be provided sooner. They include: Notice of procedural safeguards Required content Parental participation in process Right to participate in all meetings, including identification, evaluation, placement, and all discussions regarding the educational plan. Parent right to review all educational records Parent right to an independent evaluation Prior written notice
  • 21. Prior written notice when a school proposes to initiate a service, conduct an evaluation, change a placement, or modify an IEP; or when the school refuses to provide a parent-requested service, identification, evaluation or change of placement or IEP Content of prior written notice Right to submit a complain Mediation Voluntary mediation to be provided by SEA at no cost to parents Impartial due process hearing
  • 22. Impartial hearing/mediation Parents may disagree with the program recommendation of the school district. In that event, parents may reject the district's recommendations by notifying the school district in a clear and concise manner of the reasons for the rejection of the IEP recommendation. This notice must be given in writing within 30 days of receipt of the program recommendation
  • 23. The IDEA provides for two methods of resolving disputes between parents and school districts. These include: 1. Mediation 2. Impartial Hearing
  • 24. Student conduct and discipline A student that has engaged in behavior that is in violating of student conduct codes that is punished with a suspension or change in placement exceeding 10 days must be given a Manifestation Determination Hearing. The purpose of this hearing is to determine whether the bad behavior is caused by the disability. If it is, then the school district will attempt to change the student's program to address the problem or move the student into a more restrictive environment
  • 25. Diagnosis Diagnosis is a term that is more appropriately applied to medical classification systems, and individual professional's impression of a person's difficulties.
  • 26. Least Restrictive Environment The least restrictive environment (LRE) mandate requires that all students in special education be educated with typical peers to the greatest extent possible, while still providing FAPE. The LRE requirement is intended to prevent unnecessary segregation of students with disabilities, and is based on Congress' finding students with disabilities tend to have more success when they remain or have access to typical peers. School Systems must allow one of the following persons; Special Education Professional Psychologist or a Behavioral Specialist .
  • 27. African-Americans in Special Education The studies found that grossly disproportionate numbers of minority students are identified as eligible for services, and too often placed in isolated and restrictive educational settings. When compared with their white counterparts, African-American children were almost three times more likely to be labeled "mentally retarded," according to a paper by Thomas B. Parrish, managing research scientist at the American Institutes of Research.
  • 28. Bilingual Special Education This bilingual population is distributed throughout the United States with heavier concentrations in the southwest and northeast. The highest concentration is in the large urban areas.