Complete report
Why
GAO (United States
Government Accountability Office) Did This Study
Almost
7 million children aged 3 to 21 received special education services under Part
B of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)in school year 2016-17.
IDEA contains options parents and school districts may use to address disputes
that arise related to the education of a student with a disability. These
options include mediation and due process complaints, which can be used by parents
and school districts; and state complaints, which can be used by any
organization or individual, including the child’s parent, alleging an IDEA violation.
GAO was asked to review parents’ use of IDEA dispute resolution options.
This report examines
(1) how often IDEA dispute resolution options are used, and whether use in
selected states varies across school district-level socioeconomic or demographic
characteristics; and (2) what challenges parents face in using IDEA dispute resolution
options and how Education and selected states help facilitate parents’ use of these
options.
GAO reviewed publicly
available data on dispute resolution at the state level and collected data at
the school district level from five states—Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey,
Ohio, and Pennsylvania—selected based on the number of disputes initiated and
school district characteristics, among other factors. GAO also reviewed
relevant federal laws, regulations, and Education and state documents; and interviewed
Education officials, state officials, staff from organizations providing technical
assistance in these five states, and other national advocacy organizations.
What
GAO Found
In
school year 2016-17, 35,142 special education disputes were filed nationwide,and
in five selected states GAO reviewed, dispute resolution options varied across
school districts with different socioeconomic and demographic characteristics.
The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) provides parents several
ways to file and resolve disputes about plans and services that school districts
provide to students with disabilities. A greater proportion of very high-income
school districts had dispute resolution activity as well as higher rates of
dispute activity than very low-income districts in most of the five states GAO reviewed.
GAO
also found that in most of these states, a smaller proportion of predominately
Black and/or Hispanic districts had dispute resolution activity compared to
districts with fewer minority students; however, predominately Black and/or
Hispanic districts generally had higher rates of such activity. Technical assistance
providers and others told GAO that parents used dispute resolution most often for
issues related to school decisions about evaluations, placement, services and
supports, and discipline of their children.
Parents
may face a variety of challenges in using IDEA dispute resolution, and the
Department of Education and states provide several kinds of support that, in part,
may address some of these challenges. Stakeholders cited challenges such as paying
for attorneys and expert witnesses at a due process hearing, parents’ reluctance
to initiate disputes because they feel disadvantaged by the school district’s
knowledge and financial resources, and parents’ lack of time off from work to
attend due process hearings. Education and state agencies provide technical
assistance to support parents’ understanding of their rights under IDEA and to
facilitate their use of dispute resolution options, for example, by providing informational
documents and phone help lines to parents.
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