@TheMs.Leanne
Leanne Pritchett
@TheMs.Leanne · 4:56

How a child qualifies for Special Education according to Federal Law

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The school district can provide you with info about special education policies in your area or refer you to a district or county office for this information. Okay, so let's actually get to the categories they are autism, deaf blindness, deafness, emotional disturbance, hearing impairment, which is not the same as full blown deafness, intellectual disability, multiple disabilities, orthopedic impairment, other health impairment, specific learning disability, not the same as dyslexia

https://sites.ed.gov>idea cahelp.org/parents_students/services/id-referral_process/disability_categories #qualifyingforspecialeducation #idea

@LadyFi
Evelyn Phipps
@LadyFi · 1:42
They take her out for a couple of seconds or more and that makes her sad. So she doesn't learn like she needs to because she's discouraged. But I didn't know that there were so many categories for this. And then my daughter, she had dyslexia and I said had because she's doing so much better, my other daughter. So I think that there are a lot of categories for children with disabilities. But this information here was very crucial
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@TheMs.Leanne
Leanne Pritchett
@TheMs.Leanne · 2:04

@LadyFi

Actually, the way it's labeled in terms of getting services in an IEP specific learning disability because it falls under that umbrella and you can get services. I mean, granted, she's 17, I think, if I got that right, but it's something that even though she's doing really well, it is something that never truly goes quote away. Just so you're aware of it
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