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EDUCATIONAL HELPS ...
Involving Parents in the IEP Process
ERIC EC Digest
#E611 Author: Stephen W. Smith
June 2001
Approx. 5 pages when printed.
Parents can play a number of important roles in
their relationship with their child's
school-organization members, care providers,
political advocates, and facilitators of professional
decisions. This digest examines the special roles of
parents of children with disabilities in planning for
the education of their children and discusses how
educators can work effectively with parents to create
meaningful individualized education programs (IEPs).
The parents' role as committee members and
educational decision makers in creating IEPs was
established in 1975 by the Education for All
Handicapped Children Act, now known as Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Even though
parent involvement is a defining feature of IDEA,
Congress, as part of the 1997 reauthorization of
IDEA, believed that parental involvement needed
strengthening. As a result, parents' rights and
responsibilities are again in the forefront as a
necessary ingredient for appropriate and
individualized educational programming, mandating
that schools provide an opportunity for active
parental participation in decisions about the
education of children. The involvement of parents in
the IEP process has many benefits: Increase the
teacher's understanding of the child's
environment Add to parents' knowledge of the
child's educational setting Improve communication
between parents and the school Increase the
school's understanding of the child Increase the
likelihood that, with improved understanding between
home and school, mutually agreed upon educational
goals will be attained.
Understanding Barriers to Parent Participation
When parents are not active in the IEP process,
educators may sometimes misinterpret their lack of
involvement. They may believe that parents are
satisfied with the decisions being made for their
child and do not see the need for further
participation, are apathetic about their involvement
in the IEP process, or do not have enough information
about their child's functioning and the nature of
the decisions to be made to allow them to
participate. Yet numerous barriers may preclude a
parent's active participation in the IEP process:
-
Communication problems and educational jargon.
Communication problems and lack of understanding of
the school system may result from the intricate and
sometimes arcane language used in the IEP.
-
Law-related elements, the meaning of statistical
analyses, and terminology about placement and
programming options (e.g., resource room,
mainstreaming, inclusion, self-contained) may
confuse or discourage a parent.
-
Lack of understanding of the school system, lack of
knowledge of how to help their child, or feelings
of inferiority. Sometimes parents feel ill equipped
to provide meaningful educational information about
their child that can help professionals develop
special education programming.
-
The professional staff's lack of understanding
of the student's culture or language may lead
parents to feel inferior or inhibited. For example,
some parents are from places in the world where
they were not allowed to question or disagree with
authority figures, and so they may be reticent to
assert their opinions with professionals.
-
Logistical problems. Parents' participation
might be hindered by lack of transportation or
child-care, or scheduling difficulties related to
work or other responsibilities.
Facilitating Meaningful Participation
An obvious barrier to parental participation is a
language difference. As much as possible, all
correspondence with parents should be in their native
language—not only to avoid confusion, but also
to establish trust in the IEP process. At times an
interpreter may facilitate more effective
communication.
Prior to the meeting, educators should solicit
information from the parents about their preferences
and needs regarding the conference, including a
convenient time and place.
School staff and parents can decide if the student
should attend the conference, with parental
preferences respected.
It would also be helpful to determine if the family
would like to invite an advocate to the meeting. A
family advocate (e.g., clergy member, friend,
counselor, university faculty, legal advisor,
nurse/doctor) can assist parents in asking questions,
understanding programming and placement options, or
identifying family-specific issues. An advocate can
assist a family in building a child-centered,
long-lasting partnership with district and school
personnel. When viewed as a promoter and supporter of
the child and family, an advocate becomes a valued
invited guest and not an adversary.
Parents must be formally notified in writing about
the purpose of the meeting, the time and location,
and participants. Including participants'
positions (principal or designee, special education
teacher, general education teacher, etc.) as well as
their names can help parents understand who they are
and why they will be attending the meeting.
At the outset of the meeting, educators should
-
greet the family members and advocate,
-
provide a list of all participants,
-
introduce all in attendance with a brief
explanation about their role in the conference,
-
state the purpose of the meeting,
-
make positive observations about the child,
-
emphasize that the parents possess helpful
information about the child and that they are
partners in this process,
-
provide enough time to complete deliberations, or
offer to reschedule the meeting to complete the
agenda. Include time to ensure that family members
understand their legal rights.
The Three Phases of the IEP Conference
Reviewing the evaluation and performance
level. Avoid educational jargon when reviewing
the results of the formal evaluation. Parents should
receive a summary of the findings that emphasize the
child's strengths, gifts, abilities, and needs.
Diagnostic personnel should explain the tests and
provide parents with a copy of the results. Be sure
that parents understand the findings of the
evaluation, and give them the opportunity to ask
questions. Provide a chance for them to express their
views of the child's abilities and needs,
especially from the home point of view. Parents need
to feel that the evaluation is an accurate reflection
of their child.
Developing instructional goals and
objectives. When developing the student's
instructional goals and objectives, it is crucial
that parents, advocates, and students share their
expectations about the student's future
participation in school, the home, and the community.
Educational and vocational goals and objectives
consistent with the expectations of the student and
family can then be developed and prioritized with the
student's needs in mind. At the same time,
parents, advocates, and other family members can
indicate which objectives they can help teach or
reinforce at home. Procedures for evaluating
achievement of goals and objectives should be
discussed and schedules set.
Determining placement and related services.
Parents, advocates, and other family members can
provide invaluable information to help determine
placement options and related services for the
student. The placement option selected (regular
education classroom, resource room, self-contained
class, separate building, home or hospital) must
allow the student to participate in typical school
experiences with typical peers as much as possible.
Since parents may have concerns about the integration
of their child in a school setting, including
questions of safety, attitudes of regular education
teachers towards special education students, program
quality, transportation, and potential for failure,
these concerns should be addressed in the planning
for the child.
Accommodations in the classroom and in testing must
be listed, and when applicable, plans for family
services, behavioral interventions, and meeting
transition needs must be developed. Necessary related
services, such as speech pathology and audiology or
psychological services, must be identified. At this
point it is necessary to determine dates for
initiating services and their anticipated duration
and to identify individuals who will be responsible
for delivering the services. At the end of the
conference, clarify and summarize major decisions and
the responsibilities of participants, including
family members and advocates. Identify strategies to
ensure that future communications with parents are
ongoing and collegial in order to maximize the
benefits of the program for the student. Thanking the
parents, family members, and advocate is paramount in
emphasizing that their active participation is a
valued and essential part of the decision-making
process.
What to Do When People Disagree
Team members should recognize that there is always a
chance for disagreement. If this happens, everyone
involved in the IEP process should keep in mind that
the student's interests are the main objective,
and regardless of the outcome, school personnel and
parents will still have to work together.
The best, fastest, and least costly way to solve a
conflict is through informal problem solving. If team
members are unable to resolve the conflict, an
outside person, whose selection is agreed upon by all
parties, can act as an independent facilitator to
bring clarity to the problem. This should be someone
who can listen attentively and whom everyone trusts.
All involved in the process should keep open minds
and again, try to do what is best for the student.
Some situations demand more formal means of
resolving differences. IDEA is clear about the legal
rights of state and local education agencies and
parents as well as specific procedures that must be
followed when IEP team members disagree. Mediation is
a voluntary and confidential process that brings
conflicting parties together to obtain a written
agreement. If an agreement cannot be reached in
mediation with a trained mediator, the more formal
"due process hearing" is in order. Due
process hearings are long, tedious procedures that
can be extremely costly for everyone involved. They
start with a signed complaint and are administered by
a qualified and impartial person. The decision made
as the result of a due process hearing is final
unless school personnel or parents file an appeal to
the state board of education.
In summary, supporting the active participation of
parents and advocates in the IEP process will focus
the IEP on the intent of IDEA: the development of a
comprehensive program, with goals and objectives that
are relevant and acceptable to parents, regular
teachers, and special education teachers. Active
participation assumes that the parental role as
educational decision maker is one that is supported
by the school system and will lead to closer
communication between home and school.
Resources
Harry, B., Kalyanpur, M., & Day, M. (1999).
Building cultural reciprocity with families. Baltimore,
MD: Paul H. Brookes Publishing Company.
Dunst, C., Hamby, D. Tivette, C., Raab, M. &
Bruder, M. (2000). Everyday family and community life
and children's naturally occurring learning
opportunities. Journal of Early Intervention, 23(3),
151-164.
Parent Advocacy Coalition for Educational Rights
(PACER) Center, 8161 Normandale Blvd., Minneapolis, MN
55437 (952-838-9000),
http://www.pacer.org
Federation for Children with Mental Health
Needs, 1101 King Street, Alexandria, VA 22314
(703-684-7710),
http://www.ffcmh.org
ERIC Digests are in the public domain and may be
freely reproduced and disseminated, but please
acknowledge your source. This publication was
prepared with funding from the Office of Educational
Research and Improvement, U.S. Department of
Education, under Contract No. ED-99-CO-0026. The
opinions expressed in this report do not necessarily
reflect the positions or policies of OERI or the
Department of Education.
Copyright © 2007 ASGC. All rights reserved. Autism Society of Greater Cleveland P.O. Box 41066, Brecksville, Ohio 44141 (216) 556-4937
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