The Mike Drop! The State of Special Education Services; How to File an OCR Complaint Over Lack of Services
Descarga y escucha en cualquier lugar
Descarga tus episodios favoritos y disfrútalos, ¡dondequiera que estés! Regístrate o inicia sesión ahora para acceder a la escucha sin conexión.
Descripción
In this powerful episode, Mike Robinson, Founder, Global Cannabinoid Research Center, Cancer Survivor, Cannabis Advocate AND former registered Civil Rights lobbyist and non attorney that represented countless disabled children, discusses...
mostra másUnder A provision of the coronavirus relief package that passed at the end of March, Betsy DeVos had until Monday to recmmmend any additional waivers of federal education law to Congress. Already, states have been able to apply for waivers to skip annual tests and change how they spend certain federal education dollars. She issues no waivers.
NO STATE has been given the authority to NOT educate special education individuals in the same manner they would regular education individuals or to make the same allowances, as per the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).
https://edsource.org/2020/education-and-coronavirus-whats-the-latest/625119
Education and the coronavirus crisis: What’s the latest?
Under the federal Individuals With Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA, school districts must offer all students an equitable education or they are not supposed to offer it to any of them. Not many school systems have come up with a way to extend online learning and other critical services to the 7 million children with disabilities across the country. And some districts, because they cannot provide special education services at home, aren’t offering online instruction to any student. Now, there is tension between groups that advocate for these students — who each have an Individualized Education Program or IEP — and organizations that represent special education administrators. The advocates are demanding that school districts deliver education equitably, as the law requires, while administrators say they cannot do the same things they did when schools were open and need some flexibility.
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos won’t recommend giving school districts the option to bypass major parts of federal special education law, the department announced Monday. The move will be celebrated by disability rights advocates, who had feared that giving districts any wiggle room could pave the way for a more permanent undoing of civil rights for the country’s nearly 7 million students with disabilities.
https://www.chalkbeat.org/2020/4/27/21239124/no-special-education-waivers-betsy-devos-congress-recommendations-idea
To file a complaint with OCR: https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/docs/howto.html
Questions: https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/qa-complaints.html
Thank you Mike Robinson for your advocacy and education on this crucial action that can and should be taken by any and all for whom special education services have been stymied or non existent.
Mike's Links:
https://mikesmedicines.com
https://genevievesdream.com
https://globalcannabinoidrc.com
https://carouselchallenge.com
To contact Mike about the MILLION MILLIGRAM CBD GIVEAWAY: 50KREASONS@GMAIL.COM
For more information on "Mike Drops" stay tuned and check out https://tsctalks.com/tsc-talks-new-product/
For The Mike Drop on TSC Talks: https://tsctalks.com/special-contributor-mike-robinson/the-mike-drop/
Información
Autor | Jill Woodworth |
Organización | Jill Woodworth |
Página web | - |
Etiquetas |
Copyright 2024 - Spreaker Inc. an iHeartMedia Company
Comentarios