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Range of Services and Least
Restrictive Environment
A full range of service options
is available to implement each student's individualized education
program (IEP) in accordance with the principle of least restrictive
environment. The term "least restrictive environment" refers
to the setting determined by the IEP team that gives the child
as much contact as possible with age-appropriate peers in
general education settings while meeting the child's unique educational
needs. It also means that special classes, separate schooling,
or other removal of a child with disabilities from the regular
educational environment occurs only when the nature or severity
of the disability is such that education in regular classes
with
or without the use of supplementary aids and services cannot
be achieved satisfactorily.
Students often receive services
in more than one setting. For example, a student may spend part
of the day in a general education classroom and part of the day
in a special education classroom. As a student's needs change,
different educational environments may be appropriate.
Fairfax County Public Schools'
IEPs, revised in March 1998 and again in January 2001 to reflect
the changes in IDEA '97 and Virginia regulations, specify the
special education services a student receives as well as the setting
(including general education and/or special education classrooms)
in which those services are delivered. The IEPs also specify the
student's participation in general education with no direct special
education support.
Fairfax County Public Schools
is committed to inclusive schools in which students with disabilities
can be educated with their peers while engaged in a challenging
curriculum that allows for progress towards their IEP goals.
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Related Services
Students who are eligible for
special education services may require the additional support
of a related service, defined as a service that is required to
assist a child with a disability to benefit from special education.
(Please note that related services are available only to students
who are eligible for special education services.)
Following the determination of
the need for special education services, the IEP team may determine
what related services, if any, are necessary for the student to
benefit from the education program. The IEP team then identifies
the service(s) on the IEP, decides who will deliver the support,
and determines the least restrictive environment in which the
service(s) can be provided. The classroom teacher or other appropriate
specialists may deliver the service. The goal for related services
is to provide the student with an education program based on the
student's individual needs. Like all special education services,
related services should support the student's access to the general
education curriculum, i.e., support curriculum goals, with as
little disruption as possible to the instructional program.
The following is a list of related
services with a brief description of each:
- Audiology: The interpretation of audiological results;
the assessment of the classroom environment and individual auditory
skills to make appropriate recommendations for assistive listening
devices and habilitation; consultations with classroom teachers
and support staff members regarding the student's hearing loss
and technical aspects of hearing loss; the monitoring of hearing
aid function and middle ear status and function using a variety
of audiological tests and equipment; and the provision of parent
counseling and in-service presentations to parents, teachers,
and staff members regarding hearing loss and technology. Audiologists
may act as liaisons between the school, the community, and hearing
health care professionals.
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- Counseling: Services
provided by qualified social workers, psychologists,
school
counselors, or other qualified personnel.
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- Early identification and
assessment of disabilities in children: The implementation of a formal plan for identifying
a disability as early as possible in a child's life (often referred
to as Preschool Child Find,
it includes the identification of children of all ages).
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- Medical services: Services provided by a licensed physician
to determine a child's medically related disability that may
result in the child's need for special education and related
services.
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- Orientation
and mobility services:
Provided to blind or visually impaired students to enable those
students to safely move within their school, home, and community.
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- Parent counseling and training: Helping parents understand the special
needs of their child and providing parents with information
about child development; helping parents aquire the skills that
will allow them to support the implementation of their child's
IEP.
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- Physical
and occupational therapy: The observation or evaluation of students
to determine the impact of motor and sensory problems on the
student's ability to benefit from special education services;
therapists working with the student and the educational team
to help the student move about the school, develop motor skills,
and increase general strength and endurance needed in the educational
environment; and direct assistance to the student in improving
the use of his or her hands, self-care abilities, appropriate
sensory processing, and the eye-hand coordination needed for
the student to benefit from the individualized (special) education
program. Therapists make suggestions to students and to the
educational staff members about ways to make accommodations
or modify the educational program and the school environment
to meet the needs of the student. Physical and occupational
therapists may provide information, ideas, adaptive equipment,
and suggestions for activities to the educational team or the
student. (State law requires that all physical therapy services
have a physician referral prior to beginning services.) Parents
should also note that school-based physical or occupational
therapy services are different than medically based services
in that the former address functioning related to educational
needs.
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- Psychological
services: Assessment procedures; interpreting assessment
results, especially as they relate to learning; consulting with
other staff members to plan school programs; and assisting in
developing positive behavioral interventions.
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- Recreation: The assessment of functioning in skill
areas related to recreational activities; the provision of recreation
programs and services. In Fairfax County, this is typically
done through the physical education program.
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- Rehabilitation counseling: Focuses on career development, employment
preparation, the achieving independence, and integration in
the workplace for a student with a disability. The Office
of Career and Transition Services meets this need for students
in Fairfax County.
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- Social work services: Preparing
a social case history about a child with a disability; providing
group or individual counseling with the child and family regarding
problems that affect the child's adjustment in school; serving
as a liaison to connect families with school and community resources;
and assisting in developing positive behavioral intervention
strategies.
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- Speech
and language services: Identifying, assessing, and diagnosing
specific communication deficits; providing habilitation for
communication deficits; and counseling and guiding teachers,
children, and parents regarding communication impairments.
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- Transportation: Travel to and from school and between
schools; the provision of specialized equipment, accommodations,
and/or supports if they are required to provide transportation
for a student with a disability.
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Special Considerations for
Families
Students are entitled to an evaluation by qualified personnel.
When appropriate, students are evaluated in the primary language
of the home or in the primary mode of communication. Interpretation
services may be requested by the school or parent.
Information to parents of special
education students is provided in the primary language of the
home or in the primary mode of communication (e.g., Braille) unless
it is clearly not feasible to do so. Parents may also request
that an interpreter be present at school meetings. Parents should
request this through the school.
Translations of this handbook
and other Fairfax County Public Schools documents related to special
education are available from the Parent Resource Center at (703)
204-3941, TDD (703) 204-3956 or the Central Student Registration
Section at (703) 876-5219.
- Children with disabilities
or their parents are also entitled to:
- Nondiscriminatory testing and
evaluation.
- Information on independent
education evaluations.
- Annual individualized education
program reviews.
- Triennial reevaluations for
eligibility and placement.
- Access to student records and
confidentiality of records.
- Availability of schools without
architectural barriers.
- Impartial due process hearings,
mediation, and/or administrative reviews to resolve disputes.
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