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Special Ed
Jennifer,
I am a single mom 2 kids, my 14 yr old son we diagnosed when he was in 2nd grade it was not until he was in 7th grade that he recieved an IEP and that is because I never gave up trying. You are your best advocate for your child. First and foremost you should ask for copies of everything, meeting notes, if they ask you to read something over and sign it right there DON"T, tell them you want to take it home to read it over and get it back the next day, question everything, they are NOT God and they don't know your child. You can ask for specific things in an IEP, weekly updates from teachers, if there are problems you want to know right away(give them a time frame, behavior that day, work issues 2nd time it happens, something to that affect). Do NOT let them tell you something can not be put in the IEP, if you are not sure about something tell them to explain it in detail. The other thing I do is that I request a meeting 1 month into the new shcool year with the whole TEAM as they call it around here. You want everyone on board and if there are issues let them know or ask if there are issues. They say they meet 1 time a year, but you can request a meeting at the beginning of each school year. If someting isn't going right for your child address right away. Don't hold back for any reason. If you need more info just ask. I wish you the best, you are doing a great thing for your child.
Quote: Jennifer said:
Ok, I found out that our results meeting is on Feb 26 - at this time he will either be approved for an IEP or a 504 (Not sure I understand the difference). If he is approved for an IEP, then the Special Ed teacher (they aren't sure who) will have 10 days to prepare this. After that???? Not sure. Also, the last time I requested test results prior to a meeting, they never sent them to me and I didn't get them until the meeting.
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