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Independent Educational Evaluations (IEEs): What you need to know
Do you disagree with the results of your child’s school evaluation? Or are you worried it wasn’t thorough enough? You have a right to request an independent educational evaluation (IEE) under the Individuals with Disabilities in Education Act (IDEA). And it’s not just an IEE you have a right to — it’s one at public expense.
Here’s what you need to know about IEEs.
As a parent or guardian, you always have the right to a private evaluation. Families usually pay for this on their own. But sometimes the school may agree or be forced to pay. When this happens, it’s called an independent educational evaluation at public expense.
An IEE at public expense is different from a typical private evaluation. It’s still a private evaluation performed by a qualified professional. But the school pays for it. And the evaluator is picked from an approved list of professionals who do not work for the district.
An IEE has to meet the same standards that are required of a school evaluation. For instance, the credentials of the evaluator and the location of the evaluation have to be comparable to the school’s. The school has to tell you what those standards are. Other than that, the school can’t put any other conditions or deadlines in place.
IDEA gives parents the right to request that the school pay for an IEE if they disagree with the results of the school’s evaluation. Here are some other reasons a parent might ask for an IEE:
The school evaluation didn’t find evidence of a disability, but you think it’s wrong.
You don’t think the disability your child has been diagnosed with is correct, or you think the results of the testing aren’t accurate.
The school’s evaluation didn’t examine all the issues you think it should have.
It’s important to know that when you disagree with an evaluation, you only have the right to one IEE request for each evaluation the school conducts.
The results of the IEE have to be considered by the school to make sure it’s providing your child with a free appropriate public education (FAPE).
Also, the results can be used as evidence in future due process hearings. That’s worth knowing in case the results aren’t that different from the school’s evaluation and you have to decide on your next steps.
All credit is given to Understood for All, Inc. for this information.