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61. Afterschool.gov - Running A Program
Technology for special needs Technology Grants Technology Policy housingproperties throughout all 50 states, the district of columbia and Puerto Rico.
http://www.afterschool.gov/cgi-binh/dissub.pl?page=maintopic1&subpage=main1stpc8

62. Afterschool.gov -
Technology for special needs Technology Grants Technology Policy properties throughout all 50 states, the district of columbia and Puerto Rico.
http://www.afterschool.gov/cgi-binh/texts.pl?page=&subpage=main1stpc8&sid=8

63. DisabilityInfo.gov: Health: Children & Youth
Answers4Families Families with special needs Children Evaluation of theDistrict of columbia s Demonstration Program, Managed Care System for disabled
http://www.disabilityinfo.gov/digov-public/public/DisplayPage.do?parentFolderId=

64. Investigative Reporters And Editors, Inc. The IRE Journal: Alternative Schools
It seems that the school district had been caught doing the very same thing In a school for special needs students, a severely disabled boy was locked
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3720/is_200011/ai_n8923959
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IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc. The IRE Journal Nov/Dec 2000
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ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports Alternative schools Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc. The IRE Journal Nov/Dec 2000 by Desmon, Stephanie
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Costly mistakes hurt students There were simply too many new programs starting too quickly for any one system to handle. The alternative school aimed at helping students with emotional and academic problems simply pushed the Palm Beach County School District over the edge - and created so much turmoil that it would eventually bring down the superintendent of schools. The Palm Beach Post reported in February 1999 that the alternative school, approved by the local school board, would use classrooms on the campus of a local hospital. Called the Columbia Academy, it had a capacity for 60 students.

65. School Bus Transportation News At STN Media
2) Is a school district required to provide tokens or monies to secure when a school district charges nondisabled students for this service needs
http://www.stnonline.com/stn/specialneeds/bluth_osep.htm
What Are a School System's Obligations
to Provide Transportation Services to Students With Disabilities
By Dr. Linda Bluth
In a clear and precise manner, Thomas Hehir, director of the federal Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP) responded to a letter from the Superintendent of the Public Schools of the District of Columbia requesting clarification regarding the obligation of the District of Columbia Public Schools to provide transportation services to students with disabilities. Four questions were asked. These questions were: 1) Is transportation required for all students with disabilities? 2) Is a school district required to provide tokens or monies to secure public transportation for students with disabilities when it does not provide the same for non disabled students? 3) What is meant by "specialized transportation?" 4) If transportation is to be regarded in the same manner as other related services, are goals and objectives required on the IEP?

66. PDK International - Research Bulletin #13
If not, special education must be provided, and the school district must The district of columbia has its own circuit court, and the 13th circuit court
http://www.pdkintl.org/edres/resbul13.htm
RESEARCH BULLETIN Phi Delta Kappa Center for Evaluation, Development, and Research
November 1994, No. 13 Inclusion and the Law: Recent Judicial Developments
By Martha M. McCarthy Few concepts are at the same time as attractive and threatening as "inclusion." The term is generating considerable controversy among regular and special educators and policymakers. What does inclusion mean? When is inclusion appropriate? When is it required? These are simply a few of the questions eliciting diverse responses. The purpose of this bulletin is not to debate the advantages or disadvantages of inclusion, but rather to provide an overview of how courts are currently interpreting its legal status CONTEXT The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act of 1990 (IDEA), formerly the Education for All Handicapped Children Act of 1975, stipulates that children with disabilities must be provided a free appropriate public education in the least restrictive environment (LRE). This LRE mandate means that each state education agency must ensure that "to the maximum extent appropriate, children with disabilities, including children in public or private institutions or other care facilities, are educated with nondisabled children."(1) Under IDEA regulations, children can be placed in special classes or separate facilities "only when the nature or severity of the disability is such that education in regular classes with the use of supplementary aids and services cannot be achieved satisfactorily."(2)

67. DCPL: MLK: Library For The Blind & Physically Handicapped
in the district of columbia in cooperation with the Library of Congress, Persons who are blind, visually impaired or learning disabled due to an
http://www.dclibrary.org/lbph/

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Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library
Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Room : 215 (2nd Floor, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library)
Telephone Our mission: To provide the full range of library and information services to all persons with disabilities living in the District of Columbia in cooperation with the Library of Congress, hospitals, institutions, homes for the aged, schools, and other appropriate agencies. Residents with disabilities should be able to conveniently identify and obtain for their use library materials which will meet their needs in a format which they can use. This would include independent access to catalogs and databases and the support system necessary to obtain materials bibliographical and full text, in accessible format. Application for Talking Book Service

68. Special Education Legislation - FAQ
Board of Education (1954); Sacramento City Unified School district v. The Education of Children and Youth with special needs What Do the Laws Say?
http://ericec.org/faq/spedlegl.html
Special Education Legislation (updated July 2003)
    The ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities and Gifted Education (ERIC EC)
    The Council for Exceptional Children
    1110 N. Glebe Rd.
    Arlington, VA 22201-5704
    Toll Free: 1.800.328.0272
    E-mail: ericec@cec.sped.org
    Internet: http://ericec.org
How has federal legislation on disabilities affected the field of special education? Following are selected citations from the ERIC database and the search terms we used to find the citations. You can search the ERIC database yourself on the Internet through either of the following web sites: ERIC Citations The full text of citations beginning with an ED number (for example, EDxxxxxx) is available:
  • In microfiche collections worldwide; to find your nearest ERIC Resource Collection, point your web browser to: http://ericae.net/derc.htm
  • For a fee through the ERIC Document Reproduction Service (EDRS): http://edrs.com

69. A Bad IDEA
Also, school officials can often exclude specialneeds students from In theDistrict of columbia, one-third of the education budget is expended on 10
http://www.connsensebulletin.com/badidea.html
A Bad IDEA Is Disabling Public Schools
'Perverse Incentives' in an Unfunded Mandate
Just as before the 1997 Reauthorization of IDEA, a concerted attack is beginning on it. Note this commentary's recommendation that the " ' specific learning disabilities' category should be exised from the law" and the statement that "Evidence suggests that the IDEA does not produce academic gains." Education Week
American Education's Newspaper of Record
September 5, 2001 A Bad IDEA Is Disabling Public Schools
'Perverse Incentives' in an Unfunded Mandate By Clint Bolick Education Week The IDEA has become systematically dysfunctional and damaging to public schools. A powerful toxin infects our nation's education system, imperiling the ability of every public school to fulfill its mission. It is not school vouchers or inadequate funding, but the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA. Tracing back to the 1975 legislation enacted to ensure equal educational opportunities for children with disabilities, the IDEA now covers 6.1 million schoolchildren at a cost of $41.5 billion annually, accounting for 40 percent of all new education funding over the past 30 years. Because only 12.5 percent of the money is provided by the federal government, the idea constitutes the largest unfunded federal mandate in American education. Far worse, it creates perverse incentives that have deepened stratification within public education to the detriment of minorities and the poor.

70. Welcom To The University Of The District Of Columbia
The Bachelor of Arts Degree Program in special Education focuses on the education of for the district of columbia and other school jurisdictions.
http://www.universityofdc.org/print.php?sid=3&aid=251

71. National Clearinghouse For Educational Facilities: Creating Accessible Schools
Board of Education of the district of columbia (348 F. Supp. School FacilitiesAccessibility for the disabled Still an Issue. (GAO Report No.
http://www.edfacilities.org/pubs/accessibility.html
James Ansley
ADAPT Associates
June 2000
fter three decades of legislation and litigation, America's public schools are opening their doors to children with disabilities. Inclusive schools are becoming the norm, and equal educational opportunity is now the right of every child. Successfully preparing children who are disabled in company with their nondisabled classmates for full participation in American society first requires that we make our schools accessible. Appreciation of both the context and the complexity of accessibility should inform the efforts of all engaged in the development and operation of our schools. Accessibility's goal is larger than building barrier-free structures, and its achievement is far more challenging than simply adhering to standards and codes. The following discussion, focusing on accessibility as it applies to school facilities, is intended to provide a systematic overview of issues bearing on what is recognized by many as a formidable endeavor. Historically, the educational experience of children with disabilities was characterized by neglect, inequity, and mistreatment. "Prior to the 1970s, most physically and mentally disabled students were, in fact, excluded from public schools or were not identified as disabled" (Otto 1998, p. 9). Where programs and facilities did exist to serve disabled children, they tended to be centralized and segregated. While the educational advantages of neighborhood schools were touted on behalf of able-bodied students, those with disabilities were often bussed en masse to special schools.

72. National Clearinghouse For Educational Facilities: Creating Accessible Schools
Mainstreaming brought students with special education needs into general classrooms School Facilities Accessibility for the disabled Still an Issue.
http://www.edfacilities.org/pubs/accessibility3.html
James Ansley
ADAPT Associates
June 2000
fter three decades of legislation and litigation, America's public schools are opening their doors to children with disabilities. Inclusive schools are becoming the norm, and equal educational opportunity is now the right of every child. Successfully preparing children who are disabled in company with their nondisabled classmates for full participation in American society first requires that we make our schools accessible. Appreciation of both the context and the complexity of accessibility should inform the efforts of all engaged in the development and operation of our schools. Accessibility's goal is larger than building barrier-free structures, and its achievement is far more challenging than simply adhering to standards and codes. The following discussion, focusing on accessibility as it applies to school facilities, is intended to provide a systematic overview of issues bearing on what is recognized by many as a formidable endeavor. Historically, the educational experience of children with disabilities was characterized by neglect, inequity, and mistreatment. "Prior to the 1970s, most physically and mentally disabled students were, in fact, excluded from public schools or were not identified as disabled" (Otto 1998, p. 9). Where programs and facilities did exist to serve disabled children, they tended to be centralized and segregated. While the educational advantages of neighborhood schools were touted on behalf of able-bodied students, those with disabilities were often bussed en masse to special schools.

73. US: Congress Approves School Voucher Plan For Nation's Capital
DC schools are in desperate need of funding. In December, the school board the city’s school board president and the head of the district of columbia
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/feb2004/vouc-f27.shtml
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By Eula Holmes 27 February 2004 Use this version to print Send this link by email Email the author The US Senate last month gave final passage to a $14 million-a-year private school voucher program as part of an omnibus spending bill that includes funds for many federal agencies. The legislation cleared the Senate on January 22 by a vote of 65-28. The House of Representatives had already approved the spending measure in early December. President Bush praised the voucher plan, which he signed into law January 23. Rather than provide the funds to lower class size, increase the number of teachers, repair the thousands of dilapidated school building around the country and provide quality public education to all children, the Bush administration is pushing vouchers as another step in the destruction of public education. Vouchers have been consistently voted down in statewide decisions from 1972 to 2000. In 1972, in Maryland, voters defeated a voucher program 55 to 45 percent; in Michigan in 1978, the vote was 78 to 26 percent; in 1992 in Colorado, 67 to 33 percent; in California in 1993, 70 to 30 percent; in Washington State in 1996, 64 to 36 percent. Again in Michigan in 2000, vouchers were rejected 69 to 31 percent; and finally again in California in 2000, a voucher program was defeated 71 to 29 percent.

74. Special Needs - Exceptional Needs Workshops
Link to special needs Resource Group Oxford School district Oxford, Mississippiamysmith281@hotmail.com, Shannon McConnell JPL Pasadena, California
http://serch.cofc.edu/special/workshops_enws3.htm
+ SERCH Home Page
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ENWS III at Goddard Space Flight Center (July 26-31, 2003) was a success! Read about the outcomes of the workshop. This document requires that you have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which can be downloaded at the Adobe Reader website
+ Read Outcomes

ENWS III : Informal Education Exceptional Space Science Materials for Exceptional Students (ENWS) III: Informal Education
Goddard Space Flight Center - Greenbelt, MD
Maryland Science Center - Baltimore, MD
Workshop Description This phase III workshop emphasized looking at informal education venues and discussions on how to make them more accessible to individuals with special needs. Outcomes included the development of the Exceptional Needs Working Group (ENWG) composed of educators and product developers interested in producing better NASA education materials for use in ALL learning environments, including special needs settings. This working group collaborates via listserv to share ideas, thoughts and announcements among the group.

75. CoSN: The Consortium For School Networking
America s schools need a new conversation between those responsible for general a survey of K12 school district technology leaders and special
http://www.cosn.org/about/press/012705.cfm
CoSN Announces Leadership Initiative to Expand Access to Technologies for All Students Accessible Technologies for All Students Initiative to Create Dialogue Between General and Special Education Technology Decision Makers For more information contact: Elizabeth Engel, Vice President, Marketing
Consortium for School Networking
202/861-2676, ext. 120
elizabeth@cosn.org
Press Release: Ted Richane
The Fratelli Group
trichane@fratelli.com
Washington, D.C. (January 27, 2005) - The Consortium for School Networking (CoSN) today launched a multi-year initiative designed to increase achievement and success for all students through the use of accessible technologies. Accessible Technologies for All Students will bridge the divide between those in charge of assistive technologies (AT) and those responsible for information technologies (IT) at the K-12 school district level. Currently, interaction between these education communities is rare, due to separate programs, educational goals, funding sources, staffs and instructional priorities for students. "America's schools need a new conversation between those responsible for general education and those responsible for special education around how technology can assist all students," said Bob Moore, Chair of CoSN and Executive Director of IT Services at Blue Valley USD #229 in Overland Park, KS. "This new initiative will demonstrate how successful districts are overcoming these obstacles and what tools can be employed to extend access to technology to students of all abilities."

76. GOVERNMENT RELATIONS LETTERS
When you vote on the fiscal year 2004 district of columbia Do NOT LeaveSpecial needs Children Behind by eliminating their existing rights and
http://bec.brookline.mec.edu/Brooklineschool_com/governmentRel.html
Home Who We Are Contact Us Calendar ... Town of Brookline
Government Relations Letters
VOUCHERS September 26, 2003 Senator John Kerry
304 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Senator Kerry:Senator Edward Kennedy
315 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Senator Kennedy:
The Brookline School Committee opposes federally funded vouchers in the District of Columbia, as it would be the first federally funded voucher program in the nation.
When you vote on the fiscal year 2004 District of Columbia appropriations bill (S. 1583), please vote to oppose D.C. vouchers.
Vouchers eliminate public accountability. Vouchers shift millions of taxpayer dollars to private schools that are not financially or academically accountable to the public. A D.C. voucher program will drain millions fr om public education. Our own district has serious financial needs . The millions of dollars earmarked for private schools in D.C. should be sent home to your school district (and others nationwide) to help meet federally under-funded mandates, like NCLB and IDEA, and to help improve achievement for all students.
Very truly yours

77. Child Welfare League Of America: Children's Voice Article: Article
Before, the credit had been up to $6000 for a specialneeds child. and theDistrict of columbia are failing to comply with major portions of IDEA.
http://www.cwla.org/articles/cv0209serving.htm

Home
Children's Voice Articles
Children's Voice Article, September/October 2002
Serving children with disABILITIES
Second of Two articles ( Part One
By Kelly Mack and Steve Boehm

Children with disabilities encounter challenges in all areas of daily life, struggling against low expectations and inaccessibility. And all aspects of child welfareadoption, foster care, housing, juvenile justice, and other programstouch the lives of children with disabilities.
Child welfare workers are increasingly aware of children with disabilities and how to address their needs, whether they be affordable housing, health care, help transitioning to adulthood and independence or a loving family in which to grow up. For those who care for, work with, or are concerned about children and youth with disabilities, the challenge is not curing their disabilities but rather incorporating their differences and talents into society so they can participate and lead healthy, happy lives.
Special Needs of Children-and Parents
In foster care and adoption, and throughout the field of child welfare, special needs describes not only children who have disabilities, but also older children, children belonging to nonwhite racial groups, sibling groups who need to be placed together, and children who have other needs additional to those of their peers.

78. Governor's Council On Disabilities
9th Congressional district columbia First Appointed 4/20/01 Friendship Villageopens their doors to the staff of the special School district.
http://www.gcd.oa.mo.gov/2004AR.shtml
Skip Navigation OA Commissions
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Annual Report ... Contact information
Phone number: (800) 877-8249
2004 Annual Report
Table of Contents History Mission/Vision Council Membership Organizational Structure ... Personal Independence Commission
History
Mission - Vision
Mission
To provide leadership and support so people with disabilities achieve inclusion and independence.
Vision
A state where people with disabilities fully participate in all aspects of community life. Back to table of contents
Council Membership
20 members and a chairperson comprise the Council. The Governor appoints members. The appointment of the chairperson requires the advice and consent of the Missouri Senate. Members represent each of the nine U.S Congressional Districts. The majority of members are people with disabilities. Mr. James Tuscher, Chair
rd Congressional District
St. Louis
First Appointed: 3/11/93 Ms. Karen Benson
th Congressional District
Mount Vernon
First Appointed: 10/9/01 Mr. Stanley Brown
Member 11
St. Louis

79. PPI Rethinking Special Education For A New Century By Edited By
We all share the responsibility to help ensure that specialneeds students The more urban a school district, the lower the percentage of minority
http://www.ppionline.org/ppi_ci.cfm?knlgAreaID=110&subsecID=900030&contentID=334

80. Individuals With Disabilities Education Act Burden Of Proof: On Parents Or Schoo
The inadequacies of the district of columbia Public School System Amber’smother asked the school district to provide special education for Amber.
http://www.ncd.gov/newsroom/publications/2005/burdenofproof.htm
Contact Information:
National Council on Disability
1331 F Street, NW,
Suite 850
Washington, DC 20004 202-272-2004 Voice
202-272-2074 TTY
202-272-2022 Fax Comments and Feedback:
info@ncd.gov

Search for: Individuals with Disabilities Education Act Burden of Proof: On Parents or Schools? Schaffer v. Weast pending IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES Position Statement National Council on Disability
1331 F. Street, NW, Suite 850
Washington, D. C. 20004-1107 202-272-2004 General Information 202-272-2074 TTY 202-272-2022 Facsimile www.ncd.gov Publication Date: August 9, 2005 The views contained in this report do not necessarily represent those of the Administration, as this document has not been subjected to the A-19 Executive Branch Review process. National Council on Disability Members and Staff Members Lex Frieden, Chairperson Patricia Pound, First Vice Chairperson

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