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Special education speedup requested

Ravenswood schools are not following court orders for program improvements promptly enough, lawyers argue in a motion on behalf of disabled students.

BY THAAI WALKER
Mercury News

Lawyers representing a group of disabled students say the Ravenswood City School District is moving too slowly to implement court-ordered changes in its special education program and have asked a federal court to intervene.

The lawyers filed a motion for contempt Monday against the Ravenswood district in U.S. District Court in San Francisco. They allege that the school district has failed to comply with a corrective action plan that the federal court instructed the district to carry out in March 1999. The court might review the motion as early as April.

The action also accuses the California Department of Education of failing to ensure that Ravenswood carried out the corrective action plan. The Department of Education is charged with monitoring school districts’ compliance with special education laws.

Bill Koski, one of the attorneys representing the students, said Monday that the district has had nearly two years to carry out the plan. But as of Jan. 31, he said, the district had completed only 32 percent of the corrective activities that it had agreed to complete by that date.

The deadline for meeting all the requirements of the plan is June, but it is clear that deadline won’t be met, Koski said. Earlier this month, the district asked for an additional two years to carry out the plan.

“We have no reason to believe that giving them another two years will make any difference,” Koski said. “We’re just asking the court to make them do what they promised they were going to do.”

But Urrea Jones, an attorney representing the school district, said the district has been unable to meet its deadlines primarily because two key administrators who oversaw the special education program resigned from the district earlier this year. The district has had a difficult time filling those positions, he said.

Jones said he had not yet seen the motion.

“It is not contemptuous,” he said of the district’s perceived lack of action. “I know the plaintiffs are frustrated — we’re frustrated. But you need people to do a job.”

The current allegations stem from a 1996 lawsuit brought against the district and the California Department of Education by the parents of nine Ravenswood students. The parents accused the district of failing to provide their disabled children with a proper education as required by the federal Individuals With Disabilities Education Act.

To avoid a trial, the district, among other things, agreed to better training for and recruiting of special education teachers and a plan to integrate children with disabilities into classes with non-disabled peers.

Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 03/20/2001 - 9:33 PM

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Pattim,

Sorry for the delay in writing and responding back to you….I have been busy also. The kids are at PaPa’s house for spring break which is a nice break for us right now.

My 5 3/4 year old son…will be 6 years old soon…has had some IQ testing done..plus other tests….she told me that he had an iq of about an 2 3/4 years old. He was given the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-III, Expressive One-Word Picture Vocabulary Test-Revised, Slosson Intelligence Test Revised, Goodenough-Harris Draw A Person Test, Preschool Languade Scale-3, Detroit Test of Learning Aptitude-Primary:2, Test of Auditory-Perceptual Skills-Revised. Out of a possible 100……he ranged from 45%-50%. The doctor…..The speech pathologist did mention that he was immature and has an inability to go and express himself. Tell me what you think?

Susan L.
Sorry for the delay

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 03/21/2001 - 12:33 AM

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I know someone involved with this case. She feels that the Feds have to sue the state to get the district to comply. Alice Parker, Super. of CA Dept. ED siad and a meeting my source was at that she would like the state to be sued because it is the only way that children will be served.

Helen

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 03/21/2001 - 5:10 AM

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I would encourage you to immerse your child in language based activities. Have the SLP give you directions on how you can accomplish this. Is your child the youngest in the family? Perhaps that may contribute to immaturity? Sometimes the youngest kid in a family is the one that siblings and others do things for because they want to shower love upon their youngest sibling, but when this happens the youngest child doesn’t learn to speak up for themselves and learn how to be more mature. I am not frequenting LDOnline because I am just too busy with my college load. I am a TA in phonetics and I have college students who don’t get phonemic awareness, let alone counting syllables and accented ones at that. Your son sounds like he is in good hands, keep the speech services as they will be of great benefit to him. If I can be of further assistance let me know.

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