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No Child Left Behind: Making the Most of Options for IDEA-eligible Students

By: Candace Cortiella (2005)

In this article:

The Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) is the nation's major federal law related to education in grades pre-kindergarten through high school. In its most recent Congressional reauthorization, ESEA became known as the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) of 2001.

NCLB requires all schools to bring all students to a proficient level in reading and math by 2014. This goal is reached through annual progress targets and measurable objectives for student progress. Measured through annual testing at certain grades, student performance determines whether a school achieves "adequate yearly progress" or AYP.

NCLB introduced several important provisions that provide opportunities for students attending Title I schools to change schools or obtain additional instructional support while their schools improve its performance. Students with disabilities have the same rights to these opportunities as students without disabilities. The information that parents of students with disabilities need to know and understand in order to maximize these options is the focus of this parent advocacy brief.

Understanding students options

School choice

After two or more consecutive years of not achieving AYP, a Title I school must:

Note: Schools must also offer transfer options to students when the school is determined to be "persistently dangerous" and/or a student becomes the victim of a violent crime at a school

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Important points about school choice

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Questions to ask when deciding to change schools

  1. How are students performing?
    Pay particular attention to the performance of subgroups, such as special education students. Special education services should enable students with disabilities to access grade level content standards and perform satisfactorily on district and state assessments.
  2. How are the students with diverse learning needs (e.g., students with disabilities and students with limited English proficiency) treated?
    Students with special needs should be fully integrated in the school environment, including extracurricular activities, and treated with the same respect as all other students in the school. Studies have shown that the more isolated special needs students are, the less access they have to the general curriculum.
  3. Are the teachers highly qualified to teach in their subject areas?
    Are special education teachers qualified in both special education and the subjects they teach? Become familiar with the requirements for teacher quality as required by NCLB and IDEA. Also, be sure that all teachers meet the qualifications, including special education teachers. If your child is experiencing difficulty in reading, check the availability and training of reading specialists trained in the essential components of reading instruction as defined by NCLB. (See the companion publications on page 8 for more information.)
  4. Do teachers have the skills and knowledge to teach students with special learning needs?
    Ask if general education teachers are provided with professional development that helps them understand the needs of students with disabilities, such as learning disabilities. Since most students with disabilities spend much of their instructional time in general education classrooms, this type of training is critical to student success.
  5. Are specialized staff available to address the special learning needs of a child (e.g., speech therapist, psychologist or aides)?
    Confirm that the school has the staff to deliver all specialized and related services needed by your child. Related service providers should work in a collaborative manner with general and special education teachers to foster student success.
  6. How far is the student willing to be bused?
    If your child has special health or behavioral issues, a lengthy bus ride to and from a new school may be troublesome. If your child requires special transportation, confirm that it will be provided at no cost to you.
  7. Does the student want to be in a school with his or her friends?
    If your child has established close friendships, a change in schools may be difficult. Consider if the gains of a new school will outweigh the loss of friendships for your child. An unhappy student is generally not a successful student.

Students with Individualized Education Programs (IEP)

Before making a final decision to change schools, be sure to visit the prospective school and discuss the student's specific needs with the school's staff. A review of the student's current Individualized Education Program (IEP) would be a good way to determine if the prospective school is equipped to deliver all necessary special education services, related services and supports.

When changing schools, the receiving school may adopt the existing IEP, in which case no new IEP is required since the move is considered a "change in location," not a "change in placement." This means, however, that the receiving school will execute all aspects of the existing IEP, including all specialized instructional services (including methodologies such as specialized reading programs), related services, participation with non-disabled students, appropriate accommodations, and inclusion in state- and district-wide assessments of student achievement.

If any of the services in the current IEP will change as a result of the school transfer, then the school of choice must convene an IEP team meeting and develop a new IEP that meets the student's needs.

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Choosing a school for your child

Choosing a School for Your Child, published by the U.S. Department of Education, offers step-by-step advice on how to choose among the schools available to your child. It identifies important factors you may want to consider before making a decision. Available online at ED.gov.

To obtain print copies in English or Spanish, write: ED Pubs, Education Publications Center, U.S. Department of Education, P.O. Box 1398, Jessup, MD 20794-1398;
Fax: (301) 470-1244;
E-mail: edpubs@inet.ed.gov;
Call toll-free: 1-877-433-7827 (1-877-4-ED-PUBS). If 877 services are not yet available in your area, call 1-800-872-5327 (1-800-USA-LEARN).

Those who use telecommunications devices for the deaf (TDD) or a teletypewriter (TTY), should call 1-877-576-7734; or order online at www.edpubs.org.

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Supplemental educational services

After three or more years of not achieving AYP, a Title I school must:

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Important points about supplemental educational services

Students with Individualized Education Programs (IEP)

Important terms to know

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Questions to ask when selecting an SES provider

Note: These questions use reading difficulty as the focus for SES services; however, the same questions would apply to difficulty in math.

  1. How did you or your company become a provider of SES?
    Each SES provider had to complete an application checklist with detailed information about the services provided, evidence that the services work, the qualifications of the instructors and how the services align with the state's educational standards. The State Department of Education analyzed each application and approved providers who met the requirements.
  2. What are your qualifications/training and the qualifications of your staff?
    Depending on the area(s) your child is working on, the instructors may have different qualifications. You should ask about the kind of college and even graduate degree held by the instructors and the experience they have in teaching children to read. The instructor might be a reading specialist or a speech-language pathologist with special training in reading. The instructor should be able to explain the evidence behind the approach(es) used.
  3. Will you complete any testing on my child? If so, what will it show?
    Testing should be designed individually for your child. Some important areas to test related to reading are: reading rate; reading accuracy; reading fluency; sight word identification; decoding skills; phonological awareness skills; working memory; rapid naming; spelling; written language. The provider should obtain information from your child's school about areas of difficulty and look at the identified areas of need on your child's IEP (if s/he has one). The provider should also ask you what specific problems you have observed when your child tries to read and write.
  4. How will you select the academic goals to work on?
    Once testing is completed, the results will help identify the areas of strength and weakness. The information provided by you, the child's teacher(s) and a review of the IEP (if your child has one) will also help identify goals.
  5. How will the extra help provided by you help my child in school?
    The goals selected should be related to the core content areas, specifically for the area(s) your child needs to work on. If your child has an IEP with goals for improving reading and written language skills, the supplemental services should target those areas.
  6. How will you share information with my child's teacher?
    The information provided by the SES provider is confidential. It is probably in your child's best interest if the SES provider shares the results of any testing and the progress reports with the child's school. You will be asked to sign a Release of Information form so this can happen.
  7. How will I know your work is helping my child make progress?
    The instructor should be giving you feedback after each session — as well as intermittently — as the intervention is provided. This will probably be an oral report. You should also expect to receive a written summary at the end of the intervention (or perhaps more frequently) that clearly documents progress on the targeted goals. Look for measurable information (e.g., the child was 60% accurate at the beginning of the period and can now complete the task with 85% accuracy; the child had a standard score of 4 on the initial test and now has a standard score of 6).

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About the author

Candace Cortiella is Director of The Advocacy Institute (www.AdvocacyInstitute.org), a nonprofit focused on improving the lives of people with learning disabilities through public policy and other initiatives. She also serves on the Professional Advisory Boards of the National Center for Learning Disabilities and Smart Kids with Learning Disabilities. The mother of a young adult with learning disabilities, she lives in the Washington, D.C. area. The author thanks Nancy Swigert of The Reading Center in Lexington, KY, a state approved SES provider, for her assistance with this publication.

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Cortiella, C. (2005) No Child Left Behind: Making the Most of Options for IDEA-eligible Students. A Parent Policy Brief from NCLD.
© 2005 National Center for Learning Disabilities, Inc. All rights reserved. This publication is provided free of charge by the National Center for Learning Disabilities. Wide dissemination is encouraged! Copies may be made and distributed in keeping with the following guidelines: The publication must be reproduced in its entirety, including pages containing information about the author, the National Center for Learning Disabilities, and Schwab Learning. Copies of the publication may not be sold.