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Special Ed 101
School wants to move daughter into IEP, please help!
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<blockquote data-quote="TeDo" data-source="post: 416088"><p>Let them do the assessments. If she is found to have a math specific learning disability, the sd would give her the additional supports your tutor is now doing and it would be during the normal school day. I have found there is little, if any, stigma for kids with a subject-specific IEP. Also, she may have been doing well at the other school but I would question how she could be doing so well there and be so behind here. Typically, it is because the sd wasn't "up to par" with their standards. If that is the case, they did your daughter a great disservice. Let this new sd give her the help she needs. That is their job, not yours. If you don't agree with the assessments or the plan they come up with, it is your right to refuse. It won't hurt anything to let them do the assessments. Just remember, the final say is yours.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TeDo, post: 416088"] Let them do the assessments. If she is found to have a math specific learning disability, the sd would give her the additional supports your tutor is now doing and it would be during the normal school day. I have found there is little, if any, stigma for kids with a subject-specific IEP. Also, she may have been doing well at the other school but I would question how she could be doing so well there and be so behind here. Typically, it is because the sd wasn't "up to par" with their standards. If that is the case, they did your daughter a great disservice. Let this new sd give her the help she needs. That is their job, not yours. If you don't agree with the assessments or the plan they come up with, it is your right to refuse. It won't hurt anything to let them do the assessments. Just remember, the final say is yours. [/QUOTE]
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Special Ed 101
School wants to move daughter into IEP, please help!
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