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One thing that I like most about AJE is that they gave me knowledgeable information that helps me to better understand what is expected of DC schools –LB
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The family at AJE has played one of the important services in helping my family with resources in my son’s educational success - LB
My daughter and I have been affected badly but with the support of AJE I have the strength to talk to teachers and administrators . –NB
I believe organizations like AJE are helpful to families especially since their services are free of charge. - DM
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Author Archive for admin

DC Takes Steps to Address Bullying

by admin
May 3rd, 2012

The D.C. City Council took the first step in passing the Youth Bullying Prevention Act of 2012 and is on track to finalize the legislation by the end of the month. The bill will cover the city’s public schools system, the Department of Parks and Recreation, the city’s public libraries, and the University of theDistrict of   Columbia.

The bill requires the Mayor to appoint a task force that will help develop a comprehensive anti-bullying policy. The task force, which will be made up of teachers, administrator, school mental health professionals, parents/guardians, youth, direct service providers and advocates will create a model policy.  The task force will then provide guidance and support to the various entities covered in the bill  to ensure that they adopt a an anti-bullying policy that is comprehensive and appropriate. We look forward to the Mayor and the task force beginning this important work.  All city facilities that engage with our youth must be safe and respectful places and given the proper tools and training to address bullying behavior.

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Stories of DC Youth

by admin
April 30th, 2012

WAMU, the local public radio station in WashingtonDChas been airing an ongoing series of stories they call American Graduate.  The stories of are students here in theDistrict   of Columbia in both charter schools and the public school system. Although the focus of the series has been on attendance and truancy in schools – the issue of special education and students not receiving appropriate, quality education has underscored many of the stories. In the piece that aired today, we hear how the school system was unable to meet the educational need of a multi generational family and how it compounded the other challenges they faced. Unfortunately these families did not have the

benefit of AJE to support, educate, train or advocate for them. Listen and see what difference we could make in their lives.

 

http://wamu.org/news/12/01/24/breaking_the_cycle_when_dropping_out_runs_in_the_family

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OSSE 2013 Proposed Budget: What’s in it for students with special needs?

by admin
April 4th, 2012

The District of Columbia budget review season has garnered attention and increased the discussion about how to expand the quality of public education for all children. The proposed 2013 District of Columbia budget includes $5.9B in local funds. Of this local budget, $1.59B (27.1%) is being allocated for public education.

For parents of children in PreK-12, the Office of the State Superintendent of Education (OSSE) and the District of Columbia Public Schools (DCPS) budgets are at the core of the public education quality debate. OSSE’s proposed local budget for 2013 is $828.9M. One specific area in this budget that has attracted attention is the decrease in proposed funding for non-publics. Non-Publics are privately operated schools that specialize in providing educational services to special education students with severe needs that cannot be met in the public school. The proposed local 2012 funding for non-publics was $150.2M, whereas the 2013 proposed funding is $109.9M. This is a $40.3M decrease in proposed funding. This difference raises questions about reintegration of students from non-publics into the public schools. It also implies that the process for parents seeking a non-public placement is likely going to become even more strenuous.

The proposed 2013 budget for OSSE includes $16M local funding for special education. OSSE goals for 2013 in special education are to create a Medicaid Recovery System, implement Early Intervention Expansion plan, achieve or exceed IDEA Part C Performance Benchmarks, implement special education quality initiative and expand Part C of IDEA. With continuing efforts by OSSE to lower the eligibility criterion for Part C and increase early identification, there is a growing concern by community advocates of where additional dollars will be obtained to serve the increase number of children who will be identified as a result of these changes to Part C.

The proposed 2013 local OSSE budget also includes a $51.7M increase in funding for charter schools. This difference is based on several factors, including the rising increase in enrollment for charters. Currently, 41% of the students in the District of Columbia attend charter schools. Other areas that are expected to see increased changes in the proposed 2013 OSSE budget are Early Childhood Education and Transportation. OSSE has made stellar gains in early childhood with increased enrollment in school. The District of Columbia currently ranks #1 nationally for the number of 3 and 4 year olds enrolled in preschool. OSSE is also responsible for providing transportation services to students who qualify for transportation. There is a $1.5M increase in Transportation funding in the proposed 2013 budget. OSSE plans to replace its aging yellow school buses with new multi-purpose vehicles that resemble the style of Metro-Access vans. This replacement in fleet will also help to remove the negative stigma and bullying experienced by special needs children who ride the yellow school buses. OSSE also plans to launch an alternative transportation outreach campaign and create a transportation policy for the District.

Overall, OSSE has achieved many accomplishments from last fiscal year and has big future plans to continue to improve the quality of education for all children in the District of Columbia. Parents and community advocates are anticipating the future improvements.

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Charter Schools and Students with Disabilities: Preliminary Analysis of the Legal Issues and Concerns

by admin
March 26th, 2012

(from www.copaa.org)

In the wake of “National School Choice Week,” COPAA is pleased to release the brief  Charter Schools and Students with Disabilities: Preliminary Analysis of the Legal Issues and Concernswritten by the Center for Law and Education under contract with COPAA. The stated purpose of National School Choice Week is to “shine a spotlight on effective education options for every child.” Charter schools have long been touted as one of the most promising educational choice options, yet the research remains limited, inconsistent, and for the most part, inconclusive as to whether charter school students are actually more effectively learning and performing than students of similar backgrounds enrolled in traditional public schools. Disturbingly, data shows that students with disabilities (especially low incidence, more significant disabilities) are denied meaningful access to and a free appropriate public education within charter schools.

Having the ability to choose assumes parents of all children have available school options, yet research suggests that families’ access to the educational marketplace is unequally constrained. It is essential to the degree that such schools of choice continue to exist that they are held accountable for ensuring access to all students, for providing meaningful teaching and instruction designed to improve educational outcomes that are not limited to test scores but the kind of knowledge and skills all students need to be college and career ready.  Charter school administrators, LEA officials, and State education officials must be vigilant in the presence of competing incentives to ensure that each student with a disability has equal access and is provided with an education consistent with their rights under the law.

This paper examines the extent to which students with disabilities are being served by the approximately 5000 publicly funded charter schools, which are predominantly, but not exclusively, located in urban, under-performing school districts, and 20 percent of which are operated by charter-school management organizations (CMOs) controlling multiple entities. The paper:

1) provides a brief description of the rapid development of charter schools, including their purpose and intent as well as the characteristics that distinguish charter schools from traditional public schools;

2) describes the overriding legal principles and current federal statutes governing the operation of charter schools; and,

3) identifies an array of systemic issues and concerns that interfere with students with disabilities having meaningful access to charter schools that operate as part of an existing local education agency (LEA) and those that operate independently as their own LEA.  For example, attention is paid to the under-representation in charter schools of students who have more significant disabilities with more resource intensive educational needs and the exclusion of these students through selectivity, controlled outreach, counseling out, and other push out practices. In this context, the paper examines the legal rights of students with disabilities to be free from discrimination, to receive a free appropriate public education, to be educated with students without disabilities in the regular education classroom to the maximum extent appropriate, and to be provided an equal opportunity to access publicly funded charter schools.

Key Points

• The evidence suggests that the quality and performance of charter schools is very mixed and varies significantly from state to state. Despite what can only be described as underwhelming evidence of academic improvement (primarily based on test score data), charter school enrollment has dramatically increased to more than two million students.

• Research suggests that families’ access to the educational marketplace is unequally constrained by such factors as connection with social media or other influential networks through which knowledge about particular school choices and the process is shared; language barriers; socioeconomic status; and the ability of parents to arrange transportation for their school-age children.

• Charter schools as recipients of federal funds under Section 504 and as state or governmental entities under Title II of the ADA, cannot discriminate against individuals with disabilities, and have an affirmative obligation under both statutes to provide meaningful and accessible outreach to ensure the fair recruitment of school-age children with disabilities and an equal opportunity for admission.

• As compared to their traditional public school counterparts, there is evidence that charter schools in large urban districts and throughout the country tend to enroll disproportionately greater numbers of students with high incidence disabilities – such as specific learning disabilities – and lower numbers of students with low incidence, more significant disabilities (e.g., intellectual disabilities and autism) with more educationally intensive and costly needs.

• Eligible students with disabilities have a right to FAPE and cannot be excluded from “choice” programs as a result of their disability, nor can they be required to waive services as a condition of participation in any publicly funded choice program.

• Even among families who request that their child with a disability be admitted to a charter school as their “school of choice,” researchers have found that students are “counseled out” and encouraged to leave the school during and subsequent to the enrollment stage.

• Based on data reflecting the underrepresentation of students with disabilities enrolled in inclusive, diverse charter schools, it is evident that serious issues of unfairness and discrimination still need to be addressed in order to provide parents of children with disabilities an equal opportunity to exercise the same choice to enroll their children with disabilities in an inclusive and diverse charter school.

• With respect to students requiring extensive special education services, the imbalance is dismal. For example, during the 2005-2006 school year, there were only three children with intellectual disabilities in all San Diego non-conversion charter schools combined; traditional schools across the district, meanwhile, educated almost one thousand students with intellectual disabilities. New Orleans, Los Angeles, and Washington, DC – three districts that rely heavily on charter schools – currently face claims of systemic discrimination based on administrative and judicial actions brought under the IDEA and Section 504.

• A survey evaluating special education programs and services of 23 charter schools in New Orleans that found “an astonishing number of 504 plans.” As alleged in the administrative complaint filed against the SEA and Louisiana Board of Education, several of the surveyed special education coordinators acknowledged that the Section 504 plans were developed to avoid referring students for special education evaluations.

• Decisions governing the legal status of charter schools – i.e., the extent to which they are considered part of an LEA or an independent LEA as well as their respective relationships with the larger LEA of which they are a part, and with the SEA – have significant implications for the delivery of special education services to eligible students with disabilities enrolled in or seeking to enroll in charter schools. Educational researchers have identified this relationship between the charter school and the LEA as the most important factor affecting a charter school’s compliance with IDEA and Section 504 in providing special education and related services.

• Students enrolled in any charter school should have a clear expectation that they will be taught a curriculum aligned with their State’s challenging academic content and academic achievement standards by highly qualified teachers, will participate in the State’s assessments that are used to measure the progress of the schools and school districts and that their performance outcomes will be reported in the aggregate and disaggregated by the required subpopulation groups.

• Charter schools must be held accountable for ensuring access to all students, for providing meaningful teaching and instruction designed to improve educational outcomes that are not limited to test scores but the kind of knowledge and skills all students need to be college and career ready.

• As the charter school movement continues to expand nationwide, disability advocates are likely to find themselves positioned on both sides of the debate surrounding the efficacy of educating students with disabilities in charter schools. Regardless of the policy opinions driving the debate, the law is clear. Students with disabilities who are educated in public schools, either traditional or charter, must be provided FAPE in the LRE. Although charter schools may be freed from some of the restraints placed on traditional educational institutions, they are not free from the requirements of IDEA or Section 504.

• It is not legally or morally acceptable that these so-called “schools of choice” that are concentrated in urban communities and supported with public funds, should be permitted to operate as segregated learning environments where students are more isolated by race, socioeconomic class, disability, and language than the public school district from which they were drawn.

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Are you ready to choose a school for the 2012-2013 school year?

by admin
January 24th, 2012

It’s almost that time again!  DCPS Out of Boundary Lottery and charter school applications are due soon for enrollment for next year!  It seems like the time to get those applications in comes around sooner each year.  But have no fear, AJE is here to assist you.  The DCPS Out of Boundary Lottery is entirely online so you will need a computer.  Come visit us at one of our Parent Centers anytime from 9 am 5 pm to use our computers and get assistance with this process.

In order to choose the right school, tell us what’s important to you!  Check out our twitter page and let us know: https://twitter.com/#!/AJEInc

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