February 2008
A legacy resource from NICHCY
Author
Lisa Pagano
Office of Special Education Programs
U.S. Department of Education
with special thanks to…
Marshall Peter, Dick Zeller, Philip Moses, and John Reiman
CADRE | Consortium for Appropriate Dispute Resolution in Special Education
__________________________
Module 18 is all about IDEA’s mechanisms for resolving disputes between families and schools. It looks at:
Module 18 is available in English only (except for the handouts for participants, which are also available in Spanish). The module includes:
Please help yourself below, and download the components you need to learn on your own and/or to train others regarding IDEA’s numerous mechanisms that give parents and schools a means to resolve disagreements.
_____________________________
Component #1: Slideshow
English only
Component #2: Trainer’s Guide
The Trainer’s Guide illustrates how each slide operates and provides detailed discussion of the content on each slide. It’s available in both a nicely laid out PDF file with thumbnail graphics of the slides and as an accessible Word file (from which you can freely copy and paste content to other documents). Which would you like?
Component #3: Handouts for Participants | Folletos para Participantes **
In English and in Spanish
The handouts for Module 18 are included in a packet of handouts designed to cover the entire umbrella topic of Theme E, Procedural Safeguards under IDEA 2004. If you’ve downloaded the handouts for Theme E already (for example, as part of training on Modules 17 or 19), you have the handouts you need for Module 18. If you haven’t downloaded any handouts for Theme E yet, here they are in 2 different formats and 2 different languages.
English Handouts, Theme E
Word | Handouts for Theme E (Accessible Word file)
Spanish Handouts, Theme E
Word | Folletos para Tema E (Accessible Word version)
Note about the Spanish Translations:
In preparing the handouts in Spanish, NICHCY has chosen to use a certain vocabulary set for the terminology most frequently used in IDEA. IDEA itself is extremely and purposefully consistent about its terminology, and we felt it critical to do the same in Spanish. However, we fully recognize that there are many ways to say the same thing, and Spanish is rich with alternatives from country to country, region to region. So we’ve also prepared a glossary of the terminology used in IDEA, how we’ve rendered that terminology in Spanish, and other ways of rendering it that families may also hear. Share this with participants as you see fit or use it to guide your own translations. The glossary of terminology is available in two formats, PDF and Word:
There! Module 18 is all yours!
Please remember that these materials are designed to be a thorough and authoritative source of info on dispute resolution under IDEA 2004. That’s why they are so detailed. As a trainer, you are free to adapt the info we’ve offered to serve the purposes and needs of your audiences and the amount of time you have to spend with them.
____________________________
Quick-Jump Menu to Other Modules
1: Top 10 Basics of Special Education
2: Key Changes in IDEA
5: Disproportionality and Overrepresentation
6: Early Intervening Services and Response to Intervention
7:Highly Qualified Teachers (withdrawn with the reauthorization of NCLB as the ESSA in 2015)
8: NIMAS
9: Introduction to Evaluation under IDEA
10: Initial Evaluation and Reevaluation
11: Identification of Children with Specific Learning Disabilities
12: The IEP Team
13: Content of the IEP
14: Meetings of the IEP Team
15: LRE Decision Making
16: Children Enrolled by Their Parents in Private Schools
17: Introduction to Procedural Safeguards
18: Options for Dispute Resolution (you’re already here)
19: Key Issues in Discipline
SOURCE ARTICLE: Center for Parent Information and Resources
Give us a call at (727) 523-1130 or (800) 825-5736 or request a callback by clicking below.