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Overview
Strengthen Your School's IEP and 504 Plan Process and Protect Student Rights
IEPs and 504 plans are essential tools to ensure positive learning outcomes for many students. They also have the potential to cause legal issues for schools if they aren't properly planned and carried out. Join our experienced faculty for this comprehensive overview of legal liabilities in IEPs and 504 plans. Take away valuable information you can use to spot potential issues in your school's IEP and 504 plan process. Register today!
- Ensure students get the tools they need to succeed by properly determining if they are eligible for an IEP or a 504 plan.
- Implement legally appropriate 504 plans that ensure a level playing field for eligible students.
- Conduct IEP meetings that include all the necessary players and know what to do if someone is unable to attend.
- Handle situations where an IEP just isn't working, and modifications are immediately needed.
- Create behavioral intervention plans (BIPs) that consider the information contained in functional behavior assessments (FBAs).
- Protect the legal rights of students with IEPs and 504 plans in situations where discipline codes are broken.
Abbreviated Agenda
- IDEA or Section 504? Determining Eligibility Under Both Laws
- Developing and Implementing 504 Plans: Ensuring a Level Playing Field
- The IEP Development Process: Handling Difficult Issues
- Key Considerations for Implementing IEPs
- Functional Behavioral Assessments (FBAs) and Behavior Intervention Plans (BIPs): Ensuring Best Practices
- Discipline and Expulsion Essentials Under IDEA and Section 504
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Credit Details
Credits Available
| Credit | Status | Total |
|---|---|---|
| Iowa CLE |
|
6 Total |
| Illinois CLE |
|
6 Total |
| Missouri CLE |
|
7.2 Total |
| Pennsylvania CLE |
|
6 Total |
Select Jurisdiction
CLE
Agenda
-
IDEA or Section 504? Determining Eligibility Under Both Laws
- Section 504
- What Is a Disability Under Section 504?
- Major Life Activities: What Do They Encompass?
- Substantial Limitations: What Is the Bar?
- Impairment Determinations: What Can and Can't Be Considered?
- The IDEA
- Eligibility Categories
- ADHD and Other Difficult-to-Place Disabilities
- Required Need for Specially Designed Instruction
- Best Practices for Determining Eligibility
- IDEA-Eligible Students With Additional Medical Needs
- Handling Disputes With Parents Over Eligibility
- Section 504
-
Developing and Implementing 504 Plans: Ensuring a Level Playing Field
- Eligibility: What Should Be Considered
- What Accommodations Should and Should Not Do
- 504 Accommodations vs. Specially Designed Instruction (and Why It Matters)
- Distribution of 504 Plans
- Avoiding Modifications
- Reviews and Re-Evaluations
- 504 Plan Red Flags to Avoid
-
The IEP Development Process: Handling Difficult Issues
- IDEA Evaluation Report Essentials
- The IEP Meeting: What If Parents Refuse to Come?
- Third-Party Participation at IEP Meetings: Outside Agencies, Invited Guests, etc.
- Avoiding Predetermination on IEPs
- Parent Recording of IEP Meetings: Can Schools Prohibit It?
- Ensuring the IEP Team Has All Necessary Members
- Creating Measurable IEP Goals and Progress Requirements
- Creating a Prudent Paper Trail
-
Key Considerations for Implementing IEPs
- Who Should Receive a Copy? What Form Should It Be?
- Teacher Training: Necessary Requirements to Ensure Successful Implementation
- Progress Monitoring, Documentation, and Reporting
- What to Do When IEPs Aren't Working
- Mid-Year Revisions
- Who Can Make Them?
- When Should They Be Made?
-
Functional Behavioral Assessments (FBAs) and Behavior Intervention Plans (BIPs): Ensuring Best Practices
- What IDEA Says About FBAs and BIPs
- Who Should Be Involved in the Process?
- Meeting Key Evaluation Requirements
- How to Use the Information
- BIPs and Their Relation to IEPs
- Creating BIPs That Are Useful for Staff
- Crisis Components and BIPs
- Behavior Plans and Section 504
- Handling Disagreements With Parents
-
Discipline and Expulsion Essentials Under IDEA and Section 504
- Providing Services During Disciplinary Removal
- How Manifestation Determination Reviews Apply
- Protections for Children Not Yet Eligible for Special Education and Related Services
- Changes in Placement
- Suspensions and the Ten-Day Rule
- Legal Rules Governing Removal or Expulsion
- Interim Alternative Educational Settings
- Other Available Remedies
- Multiple Suspensions and Denial of Free Appropriate Public Education
Who Should Attend
This basic-to-intermediate level program on creating legally compliant IEPs and 504 plans is for:
- School Principals and Vice Principals
- School Superintendents and Assistant Superintendents
- School Psychologists
- School Counselors
- Special Education Teachers
- General Education Teachers
- Attorneys
- Paralegals
Speakers
Speaker bio
Chaseray L. Griffin
is an attorney with Fagen Friedman & Fulfrost, LLP. He represents public and private employers, specifically elementary and secondary education and regional financial institutions. In this capacity, Mr. Griffin provides counsel to clients on various matters, including compliance with federal, state and local laws. Mr. Griffin earned his J.D. degree from the Loyola University New Orleans College of Law and his B.A. degree from the Loyola University New Orleans. He is admitted to practice in the state and federal courts of the state of Louisiana, and he is also admitted to practice in Illinois.
Speaker bio
Matt Cohen
is the founder of Matt Cohen & Associates, LLC. He is well known for his work in special education law and has extensive experience in healthcare and mental health law. Mr. Cohen is admitted to practice in Illinois. He has been the principal litigator in a number of important special education cases, and is the primary or collaborating author of several amendments to the mental health and special education laws of Illinois. Mr. Cohen has lectured nationally on a wide variety of special education topics, as well as on mental health and confidentiality law, and has authored numerous articles on these subjects. In 1997, he was invited to the White House to participate in the signing ceremony for IDEA'97. Mr. Cohen also has participated in various federal, state, and local task forces, advisory boards, and study groups. He is a member of the Illinois Attorney General's Advisory Council on Disability Rights, where he chairs the Special Education Committee. Mr. Cohen also is a founding board member of the Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates, (COPAA), a national special education advocacy organization. He is a past adjunct professor of law at Loyola University Law School. Mr. Cohen earned his J.D. degree from the University of Minnesota in 1981 and his B.A. degree from Grinnell College in 1977.
Speaker bio
Thomas A. Mayes
is an attorney for the Iowa Department of Education. Before joining the Iowa Department of Education, he was staff attorney for the Iowa Court of Appeals, staff attorney in Iowa Legal Aid's Waterloo office, and law clerk to Justice James H. Carter of the Supreme Court of Iowa. Mr. Mayes is licensed to practice in Iowa and New York. He is a member and former president of the National Council of State Education Attorneys. Mr. Mayes earned his bachelor's degree from Baylor University; his J.D. degree, with highest distinction, from The University of Iowa College of Law; and his master's degree in educational leadership from Lehigh University.
Speaker bio
Nicole D. Snyder
is the chair of the special education law practice group at McKenna Snyder LLC. She concentrates her practice in the areas of special education law, charter school law, education law, school reform and insurance defense. Ms. Snyder represents clients in a variety of matters pertaining to state and federal laws and regulations, including but not limited to IDEA and Section 504. Prior to entering private practice, she clerked for the Honorable Bonnie Brigance Leadbetter of the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania. Ms. Snyder has been admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, U.S. District Courts for the Eastern, Middle and Western districts of Pennsylvania, Third Circuit Court of Appeals, Supreme Court of New Jersey, U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, and the Supreme Court of Ohio. She is also a member of PBA's Legal Services for Exceptional Children Committee, and has been an invited lecturer at state and national conferences on special education and education law topics; including sessions at PBI's Exceptional Children's Conferences, Pennsylvania Coalition of Public Charter Schools' conferences, Education Law Association and Lehigh University. Ms. Snyder is also a registered lobbyist. She earned her B.A. degree, magna cum laude, from Villanova University and her J.D. degree from Villanova University School of Law.
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