Posted on 03/27/2004 7:16:59 PM PST by chance33_98
Berkeley Unified School District Denies Rights of Autistic Boy - Broken district out of legal compliance with least restrictive education plan
In a surprising example of California's educational crisis, an autistic boy attending fourth-grade in the Berkeley Unified School District has been denied services required by law to ensure he receive an equal education under the Disabilities Act. District officials have refused to address the situation, forcing parents to seek assistance via a California state hearing.
BERKELEY, CA, February 3, 2004 In spite of legally binding agreements made during repeated meetings of the Individualized Education Program team over the past year, Berkeley Unified School District continues to deny a 10-year old boy his educational rights under California State law.
According to Mrs. Donna Lehman, mother of 4th grader Gabriel Warner-Gonzales, her son is in a highly challenging environment with little support and is not receiving services agreed to by the district. Specifically: speech and language hours are in arrears; there has been no special training for his primary teacher or aide to assist them with understanding autism; his curriculum has not been appropriately modified to offer greatest chances of success; district inclusion resources do not exist; and Gabriel has an excessive commute by bus to an overcrowded school several miles from home.
Thats just the short list of whats not working here, states Mrs. Lehman, Berkeley and Rosa Parks Elementary in particular has been struggling to fix their system for a long time. In a letter sent home to parents at the beginning of the school year, the School District Superintendent asked for everyones patience and additional contributions, saying that they were still sorting through internal administration problems. Well I dont have patience, I have a special needs child who needs help right now, not after they fix their bureaucracy.
The Lehman family moved to Berkeley in mid-March of 2003 due to a work relocation from Pittsburgh, PA. It was the 2nd move in six months. But whereas the transition from their first move leaving Huntington Beach USD going to Colfax Elementary went smoothly and Gabriel was established in a new room with aide, speech, OT and personal support from the principal in only 4 days, it was an entirely different and disappointing experience coming to Berkeley.
Instead, it took 4 weeks for BUSD to place Gabriel and his sister Avalon. Dr. Michael Lehman, Ph.D., the childrens stepfather, was shocked, I would have expected with the University here and the reputation for education and community activism that Berkeley has to have found a wonderful school district. The opposite is true. BUSD is worse than any place weve been, including LA Unified, which was a nightmare. Added Donna Lehman.
Not only did the district take a month to put the children back in school, they said they had to commute five miles, or 25 minutes by car each way, and that Gabriel would be put in a Special Day Class with nine other boys and one teacher. For anyone unfamiliar with California special education law this might not sound awful, but according to Gabriels IEP for the year, which was transferred with him from the other districts, he was supposed to be placed in a general education classroom with inclusion support. Also, the SDC student/teacher ratio was way off. So right from the beginning, Berkeley was out of compliance.
Donna Lehman took this issue up with Ken Jacopetti, the Director of Special Services. But they asked for my understanding since it was so late in the year, and everything was impacted, remembers Donna, and I was desperate to get the kids back into a classroom setting. Im a marketing executive and have my own business to manage. Making multiple trips to the district offices and ferrying the kids back and forth was taking its toll, so I agreed temporarily. At the IEP meeting in June, I was assured that things would be rectified in the coming school year.
Which didnt happen. Other severe gaps and general mis-management by the special education department have made Gabriels life much harder. Donna is angry with the bait-and switch tactics employed by special education advisor Alan Joy, who promised to place Gabriel and his sister in a school closer to their neighborhood where there was already a full-inclusion teacher in place who had experience with autism. Instead, Alan waited until three days before school started to inform Mrs. Lehman that sadly there was no room at Thousand Oaks elementary a mere 2 miles away - and the children would again be bussed to Rosa Parks which takes 45 mins. in the morning and over an hour coming home each day. On the way, they pass another six elementary schools all closer to where they live.
Even under these circumstances, Gabriel has made some progress this year, mostly re-gaining lost ground from last year when he experienced a regression during May and June. The most assistance has come from special day instructor Jessica Schussett, a young, enthusiastic teacher who now functions as pseudo-inclusion assistant and additional support services rolled into one. Jessica has some training in autism and does her best to work with Gabriel, his parents, his teacher and aide.
But Gabriel is in a split 3rd/4th grade class the same room his sister is in and was moved twice even on the first day of school. No expectations were set. His schedule was not completed for six weeks. His aide was changed in the first month. The primary instructor stated loudly on the first day, He cant be in my class, I already have too many students. All of this and dealing with his own disability every day.
Autism is a little understood spectrum disorder affecting the way an individual processes stimuli. There has been an explosion of occurrence and/or diagnosis of this disorder in the last 5-10 years, especially in California. More and more children are entering public schools and needing to be integrated into the regular education classrooms, just like any other child with a disability. Not every district is equipped to deal with this, and Berkeley USD would be one of them.
Gabriel has now attended school in four different school districts, including the mammoth Los Angeles USD, which is where he started in pre-school through 1st grade. Donna Lehman relates, We were lucky we lived so close to so many people who were pioneers in dealing with the disease. Gabriel got immediate and intense early-intervention.
Experts at UCLAs Neuropsychiatric Institute (NPI) diagnosed Gabriel with autism in 1997. After two months in the Early Childhood Partial Hospitalization Program, run by Dr. BJ Freeman, Ph.D. (http://tarjancenter.ucla.edu/whatwedo/services/clinprog.htm), he was placed in what is called a Full Inclusion (FI) pre-school setting with a one-on-one aide to assist with language communication, behavior issues and general prompting for focus.
Donna talks about the reality of working with autism, The early days were really rough. Gabriel was not very verbal and he tantrumed a lot. He attended half-day pre-school, then went to individual speech therapy three days a week with Dr. Alicia Elliott of the Elliott Insitute; he also went to a social/speech group on Saturdays; received occupational therapy twice a week at another hospital outpatient facility and he had a behavior therapist/tutor work with him in our home another two days each week.
The integrated program of services paid off. With the exception of the two months when Berkeley mis-placed him, Gabriel has been successfully integrated in a regular school setting. His reliance on special services has decreased every year. For instance, he no longer needs O.T. He also requires less and less support from a one-on-one aide. His response to classmates continues to mature, and he now has a small circle of friends who he joins in playing with during recess.
While this is encouraging and good news, it does not mean that BUSD or any other district has less responsibility to educate children like Gabriel in the most appropriate manner and environment. Berkeley has a long way to go before they can claim to be doing any such thing.
For more information about Autism, visit: http://www.cureautismnow.org
For information about services for special needs in the East Bay Area, contact the Regional Center of the East Bay in Oakland at 510-393-1200 http://www.rceb.org
To reach Berkeley USD: Director of Special Education: Ken Jacopetti 510-644-8986 Special Education Resource: Alan Joy 510-644-8928
Hoping you don't volunteer anywhere within any NJ school districts. There is a very active autism ping list here in FR and I believe I can speak for at least a few of the members saying we aren't placing our kids in the most typical setting they can tolerate "in the name of being PC". Be happy that you are on the other side of this and will never have to hear scathing comments coming from someone such as yourself.
I hope you can answer a question for me. My understanding is that IF something can be written into an IEP it becomes as good as law. Perhaps the law does not require special training, but if it was written into the IEP that the teacher get special training, wouldn't failing on that be not following the IEP and thus, against the law?
That's a really good question. Here's the answer as I know it.
Items written into an IEP fall under very precise categories. First there is a present level of performance. Here is where the teacher describes the child as specifically as possible. Next, come goals--these SHOULD be quantitative and definable by any observer, ie. Johnny will multiply 2 digits by 2 digits with 90% accuracy on 3 of 5 tries. Goals should ONLY be written for access points, such as reading, writing, math, and for some kids, social/behavior/organizational. Then the team discusses accommodations. This is how the environment should be manipulated so that the student can access the curriculum. Common accommodations are seating near instruction, tests read, calculators, word processors, etc. If the child has a math disability, there is no need for word processing and vice versa. However, teachers who are clueless will present the parent with a "shopping list" of aaaaaaaall possible accommodations and then the IEP ends up with ridiculous stuff. Best practice says to start with the disability and work out. Then, if the kid is 14, there is a transition section. That's pretty much it in an IEP.
I guess it is possible that something could be written into the accommodation section, but only an incompetent administrator would let something like that through since that is not the purpose of that page. But, I'm talking taking the Peter Principle to its greatest limit.
However, all that being said. IF a parent browbeat a committee into requiring training it would be required, but only for the life of the IEP, which can be no more than one year.
Children are natural savages, it is the job of parents and society (in the form of its members adhering to a moral code and perpetuating it) to civilize them. In many cases the parents don't and the society can't.
That is an interesting point that could be argued (as it was in Golding's Lord of the Flies). My fairly recent experience as a parent has led me to be more inclined to believe that we turn children into "savages" by treating them as though they are. Of course it isn't all one or the other.
I have not treated my own children as "little savages" and I am (so far) very pleased with how they are coming along.
Thank you for your post and thank your wife as well. There is a photo of my special little girl in my profile and at 2.5 years old and after 10 months of therapy, she is nearly "indistinguishable from her peers" as her doctors now have stated. I have no doubt in my mind that she will eventually thrive in a normal school setting, possibly as early as kindergarten and become a functional and productive adult with perhaps some "quirks". However, along the way I have met some profoundly autistic children and it's a sad situation. To make such comments without having walked a day in these parents's shoes is plain cruel, as you said. FReepers have autistic children too and none of us asked to be here. Many of us pursue outside private therapy and are not solely relying on the government alone, just to clear THAT up. It's times like these where I think the Demilibs may be onto something when they spout that we conservatives "only care about children when they are inside the wound".
I can think of at least one situation where a student has his own separate classroom, his own teacher, and three or more paraprofessional staff who work only with him. Counting paraprofessional staff this is at least a four to one teacher-student ratio.
I guess my point is that the product of laws and litigation over the last 30 years has created a situation that is more complicated, expensive and fraught with legal land mines than most people can begin to realize.
Really, I thought that it was 6-1 or 12-1 with an aide. I worked with medically fragile infants/children for 15 + years and under state licensing regs we were required a 6-1 / 12-2 ratio during all hours of instruction. Frankly if the state wanted to HELP some of these children they wouldn't be "mainstreaming" them at all. They'd be using that education money that they are giving for these schools having these kids enrolled for specialized day schools with the proper setups.
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