In the field of Special Education, September
is always the busiest month of the year.
The first month, the school admin are finalizing staff and class lists,
resource teachers are speaking with classroom teachers and educational
assistants about special needs students, classroom teachers are figuring out
their students names and what their schedule looks like, and support staff are
learning the students and how to best support them. In my experience, nothing really gets
finalized for the year until Thanksgiving weekend. Students are still moving, teachers are
determining IEP’s, and educational assistants are getting moved around.
I am constantly reminded of how much
dedication, passion and care my teaching colleagues possess. I know lots of teachers who constantly work
55-60 hours a week. They arrive an hour
early, stay 30-60 minutes after, and do all their grading and lesson plans on
the weekends. They will have multiple phone
calls every week, 200 papers to grade, 60 different lesson plans, and make a
thousand decisions in a week. And they
do it with grace, compassion, and respect for every student in their
class.
I share this because collaboration with your
school is always the best route to advocacy.
I know having to re-educate the school staff every year is frustrating
but it is necessary. When my wife and I
are working with our children’s staff, we always have two key points in
mind. One, we will have one big ask that
is the highest priority for the year.
This year, we want to see our son’s reading level increase by two grade
levels. We won’t determine how that is
to happen. We leave that to the teaching
professionals to figure out. Second, we
only ask for things the school can deliver.
We will ask for a quiet learning environment, a resource teacher who
understands FASD, board support people who understand ABA, behaviour and
sensory needs, a classroom teacher who maintains routine and establishes
relationship, admin who understand the difference between will and frustration,
and regular honest communication between staff and us.
There are two facts most people are not aware
of regarding special education. The
first fact is special education in Ontario has not been revised since
1999. When you consider in 1999, we were
still institutionalizing our special needs children for the rest of their
lives, we are using archaic procedures and policies as the basis of special
education. Most people don’t realize
IPRC’s came about because schools used to deny entrance to special needs
students. The IPRC process came about to
stop that practice. That is why in the
IPRC there are two things determined. If
the student is identified with an exceptionality, then they must be placed
somewhere within the school system in the environment that makes the most
sense. However, the Education Act was
amended in 2008 to eliminate the possibility of students being denied entrance
due to an exceptionality. And now, we
have accessibility laws that take it even further. This is why most school boards are easing out
of the IPRC process and going straight to IEP’s. There are now other laws that accomplish the
exact same thing as an IPRC.
The other thing most people don’t realize is
IEP’s only impact grading. The IEP
determines how the student gets graded for their report card. And grading is determined solely by the
teacher and their professional judgment.
The principal, the resource teacher, any school board personnel can
advise the teacher, but they do make the final judgment as to how the student
will be graded.
So how does educational assistant support get
determined? The Ministry of Education
establishes that criteria. The criteria
is the students must have two of three particular needs. They must have a medical need such as
feeding, toileting, mobility, breathing supports, a safety need such as a lack
of danger awareness, regular violence, regularly running away, or use of
weapons, or a functioning need such as lack of social skills, communication, or
intellectual challenges. Interestedly,
this criteria is exactly the same for Developmental Services and Community
Living. In other words, educational
assistants are for individuals who live fully dependent lives. Now there has been times in my children’s
lives where they were fully dependent on us and their support structure to
function. During those times, an
educational assistant was and is necessary.
However, the goal is always to eliminate the need for the educational assistant
and have them live interdependent lives with safe places, good people, proper
strategies and calm environments at a grade level they can do independently.
So what do you do if you can’t get the
collaboration you need from the school?
The IPRC meeting can be used for that purpose as well. The IPRC meeting can bring the principal,
resource teacher, guidance counselor and classroom teacher together with you
and your advocate. During the discussion
involving the identification, you can explain what FASD is, what it looks like
and why it should be defined as a physical disability involving the brain. During the placement discussion, you can talk
about the need for resource teacher involvement and possible educational
assistant support. And if one of the
members leave or aren’t present during the meeting, you can refuse to sign the
paper and request a second meeting in writing and make it clear all three
people need to be present. Ideally,
though, the school should respond positively to a simple verbal request to
meet. An IPRC request should be used
with discretion. If you have a concern
about the class, speak directly to the teacher and express the concern. If you feel you want to speak to resource or
the principal because your conversation with the classroom teacher wasn’t
fruitful, always do so. In my opinion,
an IPRC request should be used after 2-3 attempts with the classroom teacher,
resource teacher and principal have been made and your clear and simple request
is being dismissed. In my experience, it
loses its impact if it gets used frequently.
The school system is very large and very
complex at times. However, it doesn’t
need to be. Know your child, learn how
to collaborate with your school and keep it simple. Pick one goal at a time and focus on it. Remember, it is not a sprint, it is a journey
and even when things are bad, you are still gaining insight into long-term
solutions.
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