In order to receive this compensatory education you must prove that your child was harmed by not receiving the services agreed upon in the IEP. Note: If your child does not have an IEP, they cannot receive compensatory services. If you are concerned about their progress or academic performance, consider if you need to make a special education referral instead. For example, a child may not have received the reading remediation that was agreed upon in their IEP.
However, they received intensive private tutoring in the last quarter and attended a special camp over the summer that strengthened their reading skills. Both the tutor that worked with the child and data from baseline assessments will attest that this child has made the progress that would have been made had they been receiving their in school services.
Meanwhile, another student who did not receive their reading remediation did not get any outside support. That child has not regressed in their reading levels, but did not make progress toward the goals that were outlined in the IEP. Baseline testing shows that this student has not made progress since the delivery of services ceased. This child may be eligible for compensatory services. This example is especially important, because you will notice the child did not regress.
You need not prove regression to receive compensatory education, but rather lack of progress toward the agreed upon goals in the IEP. You will notice in both of these examples that baseline data is critical to decision making. The comparison of these levels will show if the child was harmed by the cessation of their services.
Many school districts have recently stated that they need the first semester of school to collect this necessary baseline data.
Parents should also continue to collect their own progress data during this time to include exactly which intervention services are provided to their child by the school district and those that have been reduced in time or not provided at all.
An experienced tutor may have suggestions as to what services would be needed to fill the gap created since the cessation of services.
Services Full metadata XML. Title Compensatory education definition. Authors Arendale, David R. Issue Date Publisher Sage Publications. Type Article. Abstract During the s a new approach called compensatory education was created to support access for academically underprepared and economically disadvantaged students. Compensatory education focuses on the individual student and the living and learning environment in which the student interacts.
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