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Negotiating The Special Education Maze: A Guide for Parents and Teachers

Negotiating The Special Education Maze: A Guide for Parents and Teachers
Authors: Deidre Hayden, Cherie Takemoto, Winifred Anderson, Stephen Chitwood
Publisher: Woodbine House
Category: Book

List Price: $21.95
Buy New: $14.26
You Save: $7.69 (35%)



New (19) Used (5) from $9.98

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 439986

Media: Paperback
Edition: Fourth
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 275
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9.9 x 6.9 x 0.9

ISBN: 1890627461
Dewey Decimal Number: 371.910973
EAN: 9781890627461
ASIN: 1890627461

Publication Date: March 24, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
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Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Negotiating the Special Education Maze: A Guide for Parents & Teachers
  • Unknown Binding - Negotiating the special education maze: A guide for parents and teachers (Special education series)
  • Paperback - Negotiating the Special Education Maze: A Guide for Parents and Teachers

Similar Items:

  • A Parent's Guide to Special Education: Insider Advice on How to Navigate the System and Help Your Child Succeed
  • Wrightslaw: From Emotions to Advocacy: The Special Education Survival Guide
  • The Complete IEP Guide: How to Advocate for Your Special Ed Child
  • Wrightslaw: Special Education Law, 2nd Edition
  • How To Compromise With Your School District Without Compromising Your Child: A Field Guide For Getting Effective Services For Children With Special Needs

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
For more than 25 years, this classic guide has taken parents, guardians, educational advocates, and special educators step-by-step through the special education process. Now revised and updated, reflecting the latest changes to the special education laws, NEGOTIATING THE SPECIAL EDUCATION MAZE continues to provide thorough, time-tested advice based on the authors' years of experience helping parents advocate for their child.

The book covers all the crucial components parents and advocates need to consider from anticipating a child is not succeeding in a program or school to seeking an evaluation; from planning an Individualized Education Program (IEP) or Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP), to understanding classroom placement options and monitoring progress.

Key topics include:
Eligibility for services
Understanding the IEP process
How to write effective goals
Tips on participating in IEP meetings
Making sure IEPs are carried out and effective

The new fourth edition provides expanded information on:
Transitioning from high school to adult life
1. Employment
2. Independent living
3. Self-advocacy
4. Continuing education
Required statewide assessments for all students
Problem solving disagreements between families and schools
Due process and other legal recourses

Invaluable forms and charts help parents plan their IEP strategy, keep records and key contacts, log conversations and correspondence with important players, and track progress. This guide is one of the best tools available for understanding how to navigate the special education maze!


Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars A complete and comprehensive guide for parents and teachers of special needs children   June 7, 2008
Special Education can be a difficult thing to manage for parents - and it isn't because there's no one to help them. "Negotiating the Special Education Maze: A Guide for Parents & Teachers" is a guide to the strange problem of simply having too many options available to them. Covering each of the services available and specifying which kind of kinds are available to each of the types of ailments that would require special education, as well as looks as other alternative outlooks towards special needs children,. "Negotiating the Special Education Maze: A Guide for Parents & Teachers" is a complete and comprehensive guide for parents and teachers of special needs children and for community library education collections.


3 out of 5 stars Not necessarily the Parents' Friend   January 21, 2005
 7 out of 8 found this review helpful

This book gives a neutral overview of the IEP process and supplies you with a minimum of information necessary to participate in meetings. But it may not supply sufficient information to equip a student's advocates with the leverage to get mandated services. The IEP process can be quite adversarial, depending on the jurisdiction, with very substantial funds at stake in providing services. Teachers & other school district personnel may be under instructions NOT to give out information that will unlock services to parents; it can take knowing how to request services using the proper jargon, citing statutory provisions such as "AB3632" and "26.5" for mental health services in California, for instance. School District personnel may evince fear when hearing these requests posed with the proper jargon, in the IEP. Consult with student advocates, such as those searchable in California under the term "Developmental Disabilities Area Board". Professional advocates may accompany you to IEP meetings.


5 out of 5 stars This Book Helps Special Education Students Too   March 12, 2003
 5 out of 8 found this review helpful

Although this book was written for parents, it provides a clear explanation of the steps to become eligible for special education services, developing an Individualized Education Plan, and making sure that services are received.

This review appeared in the Annotated Bibliography Section of Learning A Living; A Guide to Planning Your Career and Finding A Job for People with Learning Disabilities, Attention Deficit Disorder and Dyslexia by Dale S. Brown


5 out of 5 stars Don't Go To An IEP Meeting Without It!   March 23, 2001
 60 out of 63 found this review helpful

If you are the parent of a child with special needs, and she is a student n public school, be ready to do some big-time advocating to ensure that she gets the special ed. services she needs. As a special education teacher I am amazed at how little parents know about their rights under the IDEA '97 legislation, and how little they advocate for their child at IEP meetings.

This book is a good start to get you, as the parent-advocate, in the frame of mind you need to be in when "negotiating the special education maze." My brief experience in the field has taught me that the most frustrated parents are those that are the least informed about what their rights are. Like trading stocks on the stock market, operating within the criminal justice system, or living in a foreign culture, the domain of special education has a culture, and rules all its own. If the parent does not know how to "play the game," you will be rolled by school districts that pay a lot of lip-service to providing an "education for all," but in practice are only concerned about the "best and the brightest."

I would also highly recommend doing two things if you are a parent of a special needs child, and you are just about to enter "the maze;"

(1) I would look in your local phone directory for a special ed. advocacy group, or some type of parent group, where you can join with other parents and learn about the special ed. field, and what is available in your area. (2) I would also join the Council for Exceptional Children as they are an excellent source of special ed. info. re: legislation, parent rights, advocacy, etc. I hope that this review helps in inspiring you to become better informed about the "system" so that you can obtain the best for your child. I want to stress again how important it is to (a) become as informed as you can regarding your rights as a parent, and your child's rights to a free and appropriate public education as stipulated by federal legislation such as IDEA '97. One of the frustrations I have had as a special ed. teacher is seeing how much lip-service school districts pay to special needs children, but how little is done for them in actual practice. I call special education "the last bastion of discrimination in the public schools." I want to write a book about this some day and call it "Separate and Unequal." ;) And I also want to stress (b) how important it is to become actively involved in a local parent advocacy group. There is strength in numbers, and there are battle-scarred veterans of the special ed. wars who have had to go at it with recalcitrant school districts hammer-and-tong to get even the bare minimum services for their child. I don't mean to be "negative," but I know what I am talking about.


3 out of 5 stars A Good Place to Start   June 27, 2000
 16 out of 21 found this review helpful

This book is a good place to start for parents or teachers who want general information on the Special Education process. Although it covers a wide range of topics, it gives only basic information, lacking the details that parents and teachers seek. Since I had already done quite a bit of research in this area, I was disappionted. The book was basically a review on information that I had already found. If you are looking for a place to start, this is a good book to get you going. If you have already looked into this area, then you may also find this book lacking.

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