Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Feds Release Guidance on Kids With Disabilities in Virtual Schools #VirtualSchool

Last month, OSERS released guidance on the rights of children with disabilities who attend virtual schools. According to the Department,

Over the last decade, there has been a proliferation of educational models involving varying degrees of in-person and online instruction and practice. Today’s guidance addresses the supervision responsibilities of states and the applicability of IDEA’s child find provisions to children attending public virtual schools. The letter also clarifies states’ responsibility to provide a free appropriate public education (FAPE) to children with disabilities attending public virtual schools.
“Children with disabilities attending virtual schools have the same right to a free appropriate public education as children attending brick and mortar schools,” said OSERS Acting Assistant Secretary Sue Swenson. “States and school districts must ensure that children with disabilities are getting the special education and supports that they need to be successful in school.”...

Among the letter’s key points:
  • The educational rights and protections afforded to children with disabilities and their parents under IDEA must not be diminished or compromised when children with disabilities attend virtual schools. 
  • States are responsible for ensuring that all school districts, including virtual schools that operate as school districts, implement the requirements of IDEA. 
  • To ensure FAPE to children with disabilities in virtual schools, each school district must implement the evaluation, eligibility, individualized education program (IEP) and least restrictive environment requirements under IDEA.
  • Each state also must have policies and procedures that ensure that children with disabilities who attend virtual schools are included in all general state and district-wide assessment programs, including assessments with appropriate accommodations and alternate assessments, where necessary and as indicated in their respective IEPs. 
  • In addition, each state and school district, must have child find policies and procedures in effect to ensure that all children with disabilities residing in the state, including those who attend virtual schools, who are in need of special education and related services, regardless of the severity of their disability, are identified, located, and evaluated.
  • School districts, including virtual schools that operate as school districts, should review the state’s child find policies and procedures as well as their own implementing policies, procedures, and practices to ensure that children with disabilities who attend virtual schools are identified, located, and evaluated.


You can read the six page Dear Colleague letter here. The press release is available here.

2 comments:

  1. As virtual schools become more popular it will be interesting to see how they will implement IEP's, as well as determine eligibility. After reading the six page letter it is clear that they will be held to the same standards as public schools of an LEA. I hope that students who choose to go this route with their education still receive the supports that they need to be successful.

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