BEFORE THE TENNESSEE STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
ZACHARY DEAL
Petitioner,
vs.
HAMILTON COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION,
Respondent. |
)
) No. 99-59
) A. JAMES ANDREWS
) Administrative Law Judge
)
)
) |
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND FINAL ORDER
Editor's Summary
INTRODUCTION
I. WITNESS CREDIBILITY
The court gave reduced weight to Ms. Jane Dixon's testimony.
In part, this is because Ms. Dixon steadfastly maintained she had an open
mind when it came to considering which methodology would be appropriate
for Zachary when the record clearly demonstrated she had a preconceived
and unwavering position as someone opposed to Lovaas style ABA in any form.
10. The court gives little weight to the testimony of
Ann Kennedy, a specialist in special education with HCDE who became an
educational diagnostician and consultant for autism for the HCDE during
the course of the hearing. In part, this is because Ms. Kennedy demonstrated
a closed mind and steadfast adherence to preconceived notions., showed
an appalling lack of knowledge.
11. The court finds Sandra Jerardi, a lead teacher for
HCDE, to have been both evasive and confrontational in her answers.
she excuses obvious flaws in a study which purports to validate methods
of which she approves. then contradicted herself a few moments later
, she continues to refuse even to consider Lovaas style ABA
II. FINDINGS OF FACT
There are no studies that indicate that school systems
can blend various methodologies or approaches to teaching autistic children
and achieve the same kind of results reported by Dr. Lovaas in his 1987
publication
III. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
A. PROCEDURAL VIOLATIONS
The HCDE M-Team personnel consistently went into IEP
meetings, where they were legally bound to assess Zachary's disabilities
and individual needs before selecting a methodology, with a predetermination
to deny Zachary's request for a Lovaas style ABA program. In so doing,
the HCDE personnel on the M-Team had "pre-selected" the extant HCDE program
regardless of Zachary's demonstrated individual needs.
B. SUBSTANTIVE VIOLATIONS
A. The school system did not offer a "methodology."
The HCDE termed their methodology the "eclectic" methodology
or approach. During the course of the hearing, however, the HCDE witnesses
distanced themselves from this label when it became clear that it was indefinable
and virtually meaningless as a descriptor for an organized methodology.
The evidence showed that the HCDE actually cobbled together
various components from other methodologies, primarily TEACCH. They did
so intuitively based on the experience and preferences of individual IEP
team members. When forced to produce historical data to demonstrate the
efficacy of these past choices, the HCDE could only claim a best outcome
success rate one third that of the reported best outcome children in the
Lovaas study group.
B. The home based Lovaas style ABA program is a recognized
methodology.
C. Extended school year services
are needed.
III. REIMBURSEMENT
IV. THE SPECIFIC ALLEGED
VIOLATIONS
The court FINDS that on a procedural basis the
HCDE's refusal to even consider Lovaas style ABA for Zachary during this
and subsequent IEP meetings denied Zachary Deal a FAPE. The court also
FINDS that even had the HCDE given full and fair consideration to Zachary's
proven learning style, denying Zachary Lovaas style ABA at the point in
which it was requested would have been a substantive denial of FAPE. Accordingly,
the court FINDS that a free appropriate public education for Zachary Deal
should have included at least 30 hours of intensive Lovaas style
|
INTRODUCTION
Zachary Deal is a seven-year-old boy with highly motivated college
educated parents. Zachary's parents became concerned when he appeared
slow in developing speech at eighteen months of age. At his two-year checkup,
Zachary's pediatrician reassured his parents and suggested they revisit
the issue if he had not begun speaking within the next six months. Around
this time, a relative suggested the possibility that Zachary might be autistic
and Mr. and Ms. Deal began to research the subject of autism on their own.
A colleague of Mr. Deal's referred them to both a Chattanooga child
psychologist, Dr. Susan Speraw, and to the Chattanooga Speech and Hearing
Center. Zachary was tested and found to be significantly delayed in speech
and language development. Because Zachary had not yet reached his third
birthday, the Deals were referred to the Tennessee Early Intervention System
("TEIS") for early childhood services. Under a TEIS developed plan, Zachary
received speech and language therapy as well as some in-home services.
Ms. Deal agreed to a referral to the Hamilton County Department of
Education ("HCDE") in February, 1997, and first met with a HCDE representative
in May of 1997. The HCDE and the
parents developed the first Individualized Educational Plan (IEP) for
Zachary right after his third birthday. Under the terms of Zachary's initial
IEP, and a second one prepared in October, 1997, Zachary attended the Ooltewah
Elementary School (OES) where he was assigned to a class with other developmentally
delayed children.
It was during this initial assignment to OES that the Deals learned
about the Lovaas style applied behavioral analysis ("ABA") intervention
and its purported extraordinary results for young children afflicted with
autism. On their own, they began implementing a Lovaas style program to
teach Zachary at home. They selected a program developed by the Center
for Autism and Related Disorders ("CARD"). The CARD program is patterned
after a methodology developed and tested with autistic children by Dr.
Ivar Lovaas at the University of California at Los Angeles. The methodology
employs intensive one-on-one instruction in a format known as mass discreet
trials ABA. It relies heavily on extremely structured teaching and comprehensive
data collection and analysis.
Dr. Lovaas tested this approach to teaching autistic children in the
1980's and evaluated the results by comparing the gains in IQ and performance
of the children who received this intensive one-on-one ABA instruction
with a control group of children who received the normal interventions
offered by their local school systems. Dr. Lovaas published the results
of his experiment in 1987 and, for the best outcome students, he reported
dramatic gains in IQ and in their ability to function within the regular
education setting.
Virtually all students in the Lovaas study group showed significant
improvement in their disabling condition. A follow up study published by
another researcher in 1993 found that 47% of the students who had received
the ABA intervention went on to become "indistinguishable" in their regular
education classrooms. 1
Footnote
1 In the intervening years, the
educational community has engaged in an ongoing battle over the efficacy
of the Lovaas style intervention. Criticism has come from virtually every
direction, yet, it remains the most comprehensive scientific analysis of
a methodology for teaching autistic children to date.
Contemporaneously
with this hearing, the educators conducting the research at the federally
funded replication sites for the Lovaas ABA methodology began to publish
preliminary results. Some of these preliminary data were introduced as
exhibits to this hearing. The preliminary evidence presented at the
hearing indicated that the later tests of the Lovaas methodology were achieving
similar results. |
The Deals and Dr Speraw were convinced that Zachary was making exceptional
progress because of the ABA program they were funding in their home. In
a May, 1998 IEP meeting, the Deals asked that the Lovaas style ABA be included
in Zachary's summer services program and that HCDE pay for those services.
This request for payment came after Mr. and Mrs. Deal had observed Zachary's
progress in the system they were funding and providing in their home. When
HCDE refused the request for Lovaas style ABA for Zachary, the Deals asked
for data supporting the efficacy of the HCDE approach to teaching autistic
children. These types of data were never provided to the Deals.
The HCDE has never funded an intensive Lovaas style ABA program and
the HCDE had no evaluation data, self-generated or otherwise, on the effectiveness
of its preferred approach for teaching autistic children. Notwithstanding
the fact that it had virtually no scientific data to support the services
it offered the Deals for Zachary, HCDE, rejected the Lovaas based methodology
in large part because HCDE believed there was insufficient scientific proof
for that particular methodology.
The Lovaas style ABA also contradicts, at least in its initial application,
twenty-five years of special education philosophy and experience by eschewing
the mainstream/inclusion goal for the young autistic child in favor of
intensive one-on-one learning in a non-distracting environment. It is also
more expensive than traditional and more widely used approaches for teaching
autistic children.
The Deals rejected the IEP for 1999-2000 because it did not offer Lovaas
style ABA services and because they felt it did not provide sufficient
opportunity for Zachary to be educated with typically developing peers.
After rejecting the 1999-2000 IEP, the Deals enrolled Zachary in a private
preschool, the Primrose School, and on September 16, 1999 requested this
due process hearing.
Zachary performed well at the Primrose School and continued to make
significant progress in his ABA sessions. During the course of this hearing,
the Deals amended their original request and added complaints alleging
the HCDE violated the IDEA by denying Zachary related services and his
ABA program over the course of the summer.
The due process hearing in this matter was initiated by an eighteen
page request following, among other things, the HCDE's refusal to include
intensive Lovaas style ABA program in Zachary's IEP for the 1999-2000 school
year. After extensive pretrial discovery, litigation, and procedural wrangling,
the hearing began on March 15, 2000. Zachary's attorneys presented a comprehensive
and detailed argument for the Lovaas style ABA methodology and its positive
impact on Zachary Deal. The HCDE presented an equally thorough case in
defense of the interventions it offered for Zachary. Neither side left
a stone unturned or un-thrown in attacking the efficacy of the educational
approach advocated by the other side.
The hearing began on March 15, 2000 and concluded on February 13, 2001.
Because of the voluminous record, the court allowed counsel ample time
to prepare their lengthy post- trial briefs and reply briefs. During the
twenty seven full days of testimony, the court heard twenty different fact
and expert witnesses testify on virtually all aspects of Zachary Deal's
disability, his various educational placements, the progress he has or
has not made, and the efficacy of the educational methodologies and related
services he has and has not received or accessed.2
footnote
2 The parents continued to provide
Zachary with the home based Lovaas style ABA program they said they would
provide for him regardless of the outcome of the due process hearing. Both
parties waived the 45 day requirement for a due process decision and both
parties agreed that the issues deserved a full and fair hearing and a complete
record upon which to base a decision. Thus the lengthy hearing had little
or no practical effect on Zachary's education. |
In addition to observing witnesses and listening to testimony, the court
has reviewed tens of thousands of pages of exhibits and several video tapes.
Finally, the court, at the insistence of the HCDE and after the testimony
was concluded, personally observed Zachary (1) in his regular education
class, (2) at a "pull out" speech therapy session at his school, (3) at
a recess session playing with his classmates, (4) at a second speech therapy
session with his private speech therapist, and (5) participating in a Lovaas
style ABA therapy session in his home.
The court cannot imagine a more complete record upon which to base
its findings.
Back to Summary
I. WITNESS CREDIBILITY
Often the finder of fact, be it a jury or an administrative law judge,
has to form opinions as to credibility on precious little information.
Because of the detailed examinations and cross examinations by opposing
counsel, however, the court had an opportunity to observe the important
witnesses at great length and is quite confident in assigning weight to
their testimony.
After viewing their demeanor, responsiveness, and whether or not witnesses
were forthright in their answers as opposed to evasive or combative, the
court makes the following findings as to witness credibility and the weight
to be given to particular testimony:
1. The court finds Dr. Susan Speraw credible.
2. The court finds Dr. James A.. Mulick credible and well versed
by virtue of both
education and experience in the various methodologies available to
address the needs of autistic children.
3. The court finds Irise Chapman, the Director of Exceptional Education
for the HCDE, credible.
4. The court finds Dr. Ilene Schwartz, an expert on autism and methodologies
applicable to the treatment of autism, to be credible and gives great weight
to her testimony. Although Dr. Schwartz was produced as an expert on behalf
of the HCDE, her testimony was balanced and well supported by her education
and experience and rang true in all respects. Dr. Schwartz testified knowingly
about the history, theory, and current practice in Lovaas style ABA. Tr.
6650-53. Her open mind and obvious commitment to furthering the knowledge
base for educating autistic children made her a compelling witness.
5. The court finds Mr. Keith Amerson, an employee of and advocate for
the Center for Autism and Related Disorders, credible.
6. The court finds Ms. Julie Reyes, a pre-school teacher in the private
Primrose School credible.
7. The court gave reduced weight to Ms. Jane Dixon's testimony. In
part, this is because Ms. Dixon steadfastly maintained she had an open
mind when it came to considering which methodology would be appropriate
for Zachary when the record clearly demonstrated she had a preconceived
and unwavering position as someone opposed to Lovaas style ABA in any form.
See, e.g., Davenport at Tr. 1008-12. Ms. Dixon also maintained that she
had never told the Deals that cost was a factor involved in HCDE's decision
to deny Lovaas style ABA to Zachary even though the Deals produced a tape
recording of a meeting they had with Ms. Dixon in which Ms. Dixon clearly
announces that cost is a factor. Tr. 2436-37.
8. The court finds Lisa Steele, an experienced special education teacher
with HCDE, a credible witness.
9. The court does not credit the testimony of Paula Wiesen, an experienced
speech and language pathologist and preschool CDC teacher with HCDE. See
e.g., Tr. 1557, wherein Ms. Wiessen equates sitting in the vicinity of
typically developing children with interaction and Tr. 1558, 1787, 1791
wherein she evades straightforward questions. In particular, the court
finds that when she stated that she could not possibly have said whether
or not Zachary needed summer services it was an untruthful answer. Tr.
1569-70. The record demonstrates clearly that she had sufficient training,
education, and first hand experience with Zachary to have made a recommendation
one way or the other.
10. The court gives little weight to the testimony of Ann Kennedy,
a specialist in special education with HCDE who became an educational diagnostician
and consultant for autism for the HCDE during the course of the hearing.
In part, this is because Ms. Kennedy demonstrated a closed mind and steadfast
adherence to preconceived notions. See, e.g., Tr. 1811, wherein she testifies
that she believes intense instruction is itself aversive for autistic children
and Tr. 1821-25 and Tr. 1884-1889, wherein she constructed her own "experiment"
to evaluate Lovaas style ABA. The experiment consisted of two hours per
week of what she believed ABA therapy would look like despite the fact
that the Lovaas report found anything less that ten hours per week showed
no effects whatsoever. Also, during her testimony in November of 2000,
Ms. Kennedy, testifying as a HCDE autism expert, showed an appalling lack
of knowledge or interest in the results of the Lovaas replication studies.
Tr. 5492.
11. The court finds Sandra Jerardi, a lead teacher for HCDE, to have
been both evasive and confrontational in her answers. See, e.g. Tr. 2249,
2165, 2349, 2350, 2574. In addition, many of her answers lacked credibility.
See, e.g., Tr. 2352, 2611, and 2168, wherein her answer as to why she referred
to this matter as a sensitive case lacked credibility and Tr. 2176-81,
wherein she excuses obvious flaws in a study which purports to validate
methods of which she approves. Additionally, Ms. Jerardi testified that
Zachary did not need a twelve month IEP because he was making such good
progress (Tr. 2917) and then contradicted herself a few moments later when
she testified that she had not seen any results that would cause her to
seriously consider Lovaas style ABA services for Zachary (Tr. 2943). She
also testified that once a methodology is working for a child it would
be inappropriate to change methodologies, yet, she continues to refuse
even to consider Lovaas style ABA for Zachary despite the fact that it
has been demonstrated to be effective for him. Id.
12. The court finds Lisa Holder credible.
13. The court finds Tamilla Burt credible.
14. The court finds Philip Deal credible.
15. The court finds Maureen Deal credible.
16. The court finds Donna Palmer, a HCDE school psychologist, credible.
17. The court finds Judy Bailey, a behavior analyst and the Associate
Director of Professional Support Services with the TEAM Evaluation Center,
credible.
18. The court finds Tracey Lynn Ford, the mother of an autistic child
who had received HCDE services, credible.
19. The court finds Jan Marie Lewis, a speech and language service
provider for HCDE, to be credible.
20. The court finds Scott Hooper a school psychologist with HCDE not
credible When he testified, Mr. Hooper demonstrated that he would go to
any length to testify favorably for HCDE. He often took very strong positions
favorable to the HCDE in areas and on subjects where he had little or no
knowledge or expertise. For example, he enthusiastically criticized the
Lovaas style ABA even though he had never taken the time to observe a complete
session Tr. 5851; and significant parts of the record in this case before
he testified. Tr. 6024, Tr. 6034, Tr. 6040-41. See also, Tr. 5860, wherein
Mr. Hooper touts an alternative to Lovaas style ABA when the alternative
had no research foundation or support whatsoever. He did this while simultaneously
criticizing the Lovaas methodology because of perceived flaws in the research
study design.
Back to Summary
II. FINDINGS OF FACT
Having weighed the credibility of witnesses and based on the record in
this case, the court finds the following facts:
1. Zachary Deal was born on July 19, 1994 and moved to Tennessee with
his parents when he was 18 months old. Tr. 1247-48.
2. At 2 years of age his parents, Philip and Maureen Deal discussed
their concern that Zachary could not speak with their pediatrician. Tr.
1247-48.
3. At this same period of time, his mother became concerned that he
might be autistic and began seeking out information on that condition.
Tr. 1249.
4. Mr. Deal also sought help and was referred to Dr. Susan Speraw.
Tr. 1252
5. Dr. Speraw has a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology and has taught developmental
psychology at the University of Tennessee College of Medicine. Tr. 42,
46.
6. Dr. Speraw was qualified and accepted by the Hamilton County Department
of Education (HCDE) as an expert in developmental pediatrics, psycho-educational
testing, autism, and appropriate intervention for autistic children. Tr.
75.
7. Autism is a neurological disorder that impacts a child's ability
to communicate, to process information, to form~ social relationships;
and to interact with the world. Tr. 54.
8. Autistic children need intensive instruction to learn things that
for most people seem to be second nature. Tr. 57.
9. Until the last ten to fifteen years, the traditional view of autism
had been that, barring mis-diagnosis or unknown factors, an autistic child
would remain mentally retarded or cognitively limited for life. Tr. 436.
10. Zachary's parents had Zachary evaluated at the Chattanooga Speech
and Hearing Center on February 4, 1997. T. 1252; Ex. 2.
11. The Chattanooga Speech and Hearing Center found Zachary to be delayed
from 22-25 months in developing his speech and language and referred the
Deals to the Tennessee Early Intervention System (TEIS). Tr. 1252-54.
12. TEIS provides services for special needs children who have not
yet reached the age of eligibility for services from their local public
school system. Id.
13. Although the Deals do not remember receiving a copy, Zachary was
also the subject of a physical therapy evaluation during this same period
of time. Tr. 1254-55, 3917.
14. The physical therapy evaluation noted "toe walking" but was otherwise
unremarkable. Tr. 1255.
15. The Deals also had Dr. Speraw complete a psychological evaluation
of Zachary. Tr. 118, 1256.
16. Dr. Speraw could not test Zachary's intelligence because he had
not developed to the two year level. Tr. 115.
17. Mr. Jason Palmer of TEIS then prepared an initial plan for dealing
with Zachary's deficits. Ex. 3.
18. Based on Mr. Palmer's recommendation, the Deals toured the Siskin
Center, a facility serving special needs children. Tr. 1257-58.
19. Mrs. Deal found the Siskin Center to be chaotic and devoid of typically
developed preschool children. Tr. 1258-59.
20. The Deals decided on an Individualized Family Service Plan prepared
in consultation with TEIS. Tr. 1259-60.
21. The in-home teacher provided by TEIS, made 35 visits to the Deal's
home prior to Zachary's third birthday. Tr. 4255-56; Ex. 300.
22. The IFSP prepared by TEIS did not recommend a formal occupational
or physical therapy assessment. Ex. 7; Tr. 4255.
23. On February 20, 1997, Mrs. Deal gave TEIS permission to refer Zachary
to HCDE. Tr. 1264-65; Ex. 300.
24. Ms. Jane Dixon, an HCDE Special Education Supervisor, met with
Mrs. Deal on May 19, 1997 and at the meeting she discussed programs available
for autistic children without mentioning the Lovaas style ABA as a methodology
for the parents to explore. Tr. 3444.
25. At the time of the May 19, 1997 meeting, TEIS had not forwarded
its information to HCDE nor' had HCDE taken affirmative steps to obtain
it. Tr. 1269.
26. HCDE arranged for an initial assessment of Zachary in June, 1997.
Tr. 1272.
27. A number of assessment input documents were prepared in June, 1997.
Exs. 15-19, Exs. 21-22.
28. HCDE scheduled an Individualized Education Plan (IEP) Team meeting
for July 30, 1997. Ex. 24.
29. HCDE and Zachary's parents completed an initial IEP for Zachary
on July 30, 1997. Tr. 1276; Ex. 29.
30. A regular education teacher did not participate in the July 30,
1997 IEP Team meeting. Tr. 3464.
31. Zachary Deal presented as essentially nonverbal in August of 1997,
Tr. 3530.
32. Zachary Deal presented with some self stimulation behaviors routinely
observed in autistic children such as hand flapping and toe walking.
33. The initial IEP was approved by the Deals and called for a thirty
day assessment of Zachary at Ooltewah Elementary School (OES) and called
for Zachary to receive two
forty-five minute sessions of individual speech therapy per week during
the thirty day assessment period. Ex. 29; Tr. 1271, 1277.
34. During the 30 day assessment period, Zachary attended school from
8:30 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. five days a week. Ex. 29.
35. On October 24, 1997 the IEP was revised to include three fifteen
minute sessions each day of speech therapy. Exs. 35-38.
36. Ms. Wiessen, the speech therapist provided by HCDE for the 1997-98
school year, kept poor records and lost many of the records she did make
in a move. Tr. 1506-07.
37. In August, 1997, Zachary was placed in a Comprehensive Development
Class (CDC) at OES. Tr. 1292-93.
38. In August of 1997 the Deals learned about and began exploring Lovaas
style ABA as an appropriate methodology for addressing Zachary's special
needs. Tr. 3453.
39. Dr. Speraw wrote a letter on October 13, 1997, recommending that
Zachary receive intensive one-on-one Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) training.
Ex. 34.
40. Lisa Steele was Zachary's teacher in the CDC class at OES for the
1997-98 school year and Zachary's parents had great confidence in Ms. Steele..
Tr. 1293, 3447.
41. The IEP Team felt that Zachary would receive additional support
in a CDC class. Ex. 29.
42. The CDC class contained only special needs children and did not
include any typically developing children/peers. Tr. 1292-93.
43. The CDC class included children who were developmentally delayed,
mentally retarded, language impaired, health impaired, and autistic. Ex.
483; Tr. 3629.
44. Zachary was the least verbal child in the CDC class at OES. Tr.
1323.
45. Lisa Steele communicated with Zachary's parents through daily notes.
Ex. 448.
46. Zachary routinely joined in the activities with the other children
in the CDC class. Tr. 1428-35.
47. Zachary attended the CDC class five days a week until March when
an M-Team reduced his program to three days a week and his parents expanded
his Lovaas style ABA program at home. Tr. 1337-38, 1438-41; Ex. 42.
48. Zachary Deal had no significant interaction with typically developing
peers while he was
assigned to the CDC class at OES. Tr. 1311.
49. A significant percentage of the children in the CDC class modeled
inappropriate behaviors. Tr. 1548-50.
50. On March 18, 1998, an M-Team recommended reducing Zachary's hours
of attendance at OES to Monday and Wednesday for half of a day and on Friday
so that Zachary could devote time to his home Lovaas style ABA program.
Tr. 1337-3 8; Ex. 42.
51. The Deals had Dr. Speraw conduct a second psychological evaluation
of Zachary in April, 1998. Ex. 130.
52. On April 28, 1998, an M-Team reviewed Zachary's program and began
preparing the IEP for the 1998-99 school year. Tr. 1403; Exs. 48, 50.
53. On May 11, 1998, an M-Team meeting was convened which considered
Extended School Year Services for Zachary. Tr. 1403-04; Ex. 56.
54. Parent and HCDE fact and expert witnesses agreed that Zachary is
likely to regress over the summer months if he does not continue to receive
special education services. Tr. 516-17; Tr. 1001; Tr. 5758-59; Tr. 2823;
Tr. 6808. The court finds that Zachary is likely to regress during the
summer months unless he receives special education services.
55. At the May 11, 1998 meeting Zachary's parents presented the results
of their home based ABA program to HCDE personnel and asked that HCDE fund
the program. Tr. 1457; Ex. 56.
56. At the May 11, 1998 IEP meeting, Sandra Jerardi told the Deals
that there were certain things she would like to give (Zachary) but that
she could not because she could not give the same service to everybody.
Tr. 2951.
57. The Deals agreed with the ESY program for the summer of 1998. Ex.
66.
58. In May of 1998, Zachary's parents requested data on the efficacy
of the HCDE program for autistic children but were never provided with
any such data. Tr. 3803.
59. The summer program for Zachary for the summer of 1998 did not include
Lovaas style ABA services. Ex. 66.
60. Prior to the Deal's request that HCDE pay for Zachary's ABA program,
HCDE personnel were complimentary of Zachary's progress with ABA. Tr. 3681.
61. No HCDE personnel ever discussed with Lisa Steele, Zachary being
assigned to a regular education classroom. Tr. 1485.
62. Summer services were appropriate for Zachary for the summer of
1998. Tr. 1344-45.
63. The HCDE has consistently rejected providing Lovaas style ABA services
to Zachary or any other student in their system. The school system primarily
hinges its steadfast refusal to even consider this methodology on its belief
that Lovaas style ABA has not been scientifically proven to be effective.
Tr. 1271;
64. Lovaas style ABA is an organized systematic approach to teaching
based on operant conditioning and requires the systematic collection of
data on the child's acquisition of discreet skills. Speraw at Tr. 235.
65. Lovaas style ABA seeks to understand behavior, predict behavior
and the direction it will change, and control the change in behavior. Tr.
436.
66. Lovaas style ABA teaches autistic children how to organize information
in their environment. Speraw at 236.
67. Dr. Ivar Lovaas of UCLA conducted an intervention in the 1980's
that included intensive, one-on-one discreet trials in an ABA format for
an experimental group of preschool children diagnosed with autism and compared
the results to a control group which did not receive the intensive ABA
intervention. Ex. 63.
68. Virtually all children made significant progressed within Lovaas'
experimental group and recorded IQ gains. The 47 percent termed "best outcome"
achieved dramatic IQ gains and were later described in a follow-up report
done in 1993 as "indistinguishable" in the regular education setting. Ex.
63.
69. The Lovaas style ABA methodology relies on intensive one-on-one
early intervention, and the earlier the better. Tr. 410.
70. Children with testable IQs below 35 and children with multiple
handicapping conditions are much less likely to achieve positive outcomes
from a Lovaas style ABA intervention. Tr. 532.
71. The Surgeon General of the United States has endorsed the Lovaas
style ABA methodology as a promising intervention for autistic children.
Ex. 473.
72. There are no similar studies or even outcome reports for any other
methodology including the "eclectic" model employed by HCDE. Tr. 456.
73. There are no studies that indicate that school systems can blend
various methodologies or approaches to teaching autistic children and achieve
the same kind of results reported by Dr. Lovaas in his 1987 publication.
Speraw at Tr. 114-15.
74. Dr. Speraw had seen significant progress in children with autism
who had received an intensive ABA intervention. Tr. 120.
75. The evidence shows that Lovaas style interventions of ten hours
per week or less have no effect. Tr. 520;
76. Following the 1987 publication of the Lovaas program and results,
the same type of progress was observed for children in Northern California
who had received Lovaas style ABA versus little or no progress in children
who had received more standard interventions. Tr. 473.
77. Similar results were also reported by Dr. Sven Eikeseth. Ex. 317.
78. The federal government has funded replication sites to test the
validity of Lovaas reported results. Tr. 460-61; Tr. 643-44; Ex. 316.
79. The results from one such site, the Wisconsin Young Autism Project,
appear to replicate the original Lovaas findings. Ex. 316, Tr. 642.
80. There is no study in the field of autism more reliable than the
Lovaas study and its progeny. Tr. 5121.
81. Dr. Lovaas' study is the most rigorous study in the field of autism
interventions to date. See, e.g., testimony of Dr. Ilene Schwartz, a HCDE
expert witness on methodologies for treating autism at Tr. 6693-94.
82. The data to date indicate that a Lovaas program of between 20-40
hours per week is required to produce meaningful IQ boosts for autistic
children. Tr. 471.
83. In May of 1999, the New York State Early Intervention Committee,
after reviewing biological treatments and available educational methodologies
for addressing the needs of autistic children, recommended Lovaas style
ABA for young children diagnosed with autism. Tr. 644-47; Tr. 884-85; Ex.
324.
84. Lovaas style ABA is among the best practices available to teach
children with autism. Tr. 6713, testimony of HCDE expert, Dr. Ilene Schwartz.
85. HCDE rejects the validity of the Lovaas study and its results and
embraces the position of the professionals in the field who have published
articles critical of the Lovaas style ABA approach to treating children
with autism. See, e.g., Exs. 433, 435, 438, 439.
86. Autistic children who are placed in special education classrooms
as opposed to being placed in classrooms with typically developing peers
can learn unwanted behaviors from the other and sometimes more challenged
special education students. Tr. 750.
87. The Deals decided to fund a Lovaas style ABA home based program
provided by the Center for Autistic and related disorders (CARD).
88. A system for teaching autistic children called TEACCH is a major
methodology employed by school systems. Tr. 437.
89. TEACCH was developed at the University of North Carolina and is
currently a statewide program within North Carolina. Tr. 437.
90. TEACCH is a cradle to grave support system based on the assumption
that the core clinical problems in autism are lifelong. Tr. 439.
91. TEACCH or major components of TEACCH are much more prevalent in
HCDE and institutions with which it contracts (e.g., Signal Center, Siskin
Center, TEAM Evaluation Center) than Lovaas Style ABA. Tr. 3434; 4957-58.
92. The HCDE does not have a methodology as such and instead relies
on assembling components of other strategies/methodologies for educating
autistic children.
93. TEACCH is a humane and effective methodology for addressing the
needs of older autistic children and younger autistic children who have
not shown or who are incapable of making the progress and IQ gains demonstrated
by Lovaas style ABA. Tr. 649.
94. TEACCH is a less expensive methodology for a school system to implement
than Lovaas style ABA. Tr. 4976.
95. TEACCH does not address some of the primary deficits of children
with autism. Schwartz at Tr. 6707.
96. Dr. Mulick, who has seen and evaluated almost 2,000 children with
autism, has only seen
children who received intensive Lovaas style ABA become "indistinguishable"
in the regular education setting. Tr. 657.
97. Dr. Speraw tested Zachary again on April 27, 1998 after he had
received services from HCDE at OES and intensive ABA therapy provided by
his parents. Tr. 122-23.
98. Although he became frustrated at times with the test, Zachary's
IQ now tested at 93 which is in the average range. Tr. 126-27.
99. The HCDE held an IEP meeting on October 9, 1998 to continue developing
an IEP for Zachary for the 1998-99 school year. Tr. 3656; Ex. 102.
100. The October 9, 1998 IEP meeting focused on creating an IEP for
the 1998-99 school year. Zachary's parents suggested approximately 600
goals for Zachary and HCDE suggested 78 goals. Tr. 5150.
101. Another IEP meeting was held on October 15, 1998 to finalize an
IEP for the 1998-99 school year. Exs. 99, 102, 105, 106.
102. The Deals did not agree with the IEP approved by the IEP team
for the 1998-99 school year and filed a minority report. Ex. 113.
103. There was eventual agreement between the HCDE and the Deals on
the goals and objectives for 1998-99 but disagreement on Zachary's need
for intensive one-on-one ABA instruction. Tr. 4617; Ex. 113.
104. No regular education teacher attended the February 19, 1999 IEP
meeting. Ex. 172.
105. Jane Dixon told the Deals that they could not ask questions during
the March 3, 1999 IEP meeting. Tr. 3766-68.
106. An M-Team considered the Deals' request for summer services for
Zachary for the summer of 1999 and denied any services. Ex. 211.
107. Zachary's parents also requested home based Lovaas style ABA for
Zachary's summer program for the summer of 1999. Tr. 146 1-62.
108. The HCDE suggested 78 goals for Zachary's 1998-99 IEP. Tr. 5150.
109. Of the 600 goals suggested by Zachary's parents for the 1998-99
school year, 137 were incorporated into the IEP and Zachary accomplished
99 of them. Tr. 5150.
110. Zachary also accomplished 130 of the goals HCDE refused to put
into his 1998-99 IEP.
Tr. 5150.
111. Ms. Dixon investigated Zachary's parents' dispute with the IEP
and interviewed various teachers and providers without interviewing any
of the ABA providers even though Lovaas style ABA formed the bulk of Zachary's
educational program at that time. Tr. 2414-17.
112. HCDE denied the Deal's request for Lovaas style ABA for Zachary
in part because HCDE believes it is more expensive than HCDE's current
approach. Tr. 2435-3 7.
113. Dr. Speraw again tested Zachary on June 2, 1999. Zachary had been
receiving 28 hours of intensive one-on-one Lovaas style ABA intervention,
two hours a week of speech therapy provided by his parents, and occupational
therapy and other services at OES. Tr. 130-132.
114. Dr. Speraw observed a "joy of living" in Zachary in June of 1999
that had not been seen before. Tr. 313.
115. In June, 1999, Zachary was ready to go into a classroom with typically
developing peers. Tr. 313.
116. On the June 2, 1999 evaluation Zachary's IQ was recorded at 105,
12 points higher that the previous year. Tr. 134.
117. Dr. Speraw also noted "tremendous progress" in Zachary's interpersonal
skills and ability to reason. Tr. 138.
118. Dr. Speraw observed Zachary on March 9, 2000 at the Primrose School
and found him to have made significant progress since her evaluation the
previous June and saw him interacting appropriately with the non-disabled
children in his 4K class environment. Tr. 176-180.
119. Dr. Speraw has observed at least 50 children who have received
a variety of therapies/interventions, including children receiving only
HCDE interventions, and has found the ABA approach to be the most effective.
Tr. 314.
120. Lovaas style ABA may be cost effective over time by allowing a
higher percentage of autistic children to become normal functioning productive
adults. E. 311.
121. In addition to the challenge of autism, Zachary suffers from a
physical condition known as verbal dyspraxia (sometimes called apraxia)
which makes it difficult for him to vocalize. Tr. 98384.
122. CARD employs various sub-strategies for addressing autistic behavior,
including discreet trials, prompting, shaping behaviors and responses,
reinforcement, differential reinforcement, sequencing of events, and chaining.
Tr. 771, 783.
123. CARD encourages socialization by focusing on increasing imitative
skills, increasing the ability to follow instructions, and increasing play
skills. Tr. 781.
124. The CARD ABA program is a complex, orderly, structured program
and Zachary responds well to it. Tr. 3 164-73.
125. When the Deals were organizing and funding Zachary's Lovaas style
ABA program during the 1997-98 regular school year, HCDE personnel had
only positive things to say about the intensive ABA methodology. E.51,
pp. 43, 45, 52, 53; E.58, p.61.
126. Prior to the Deals requesting funding for Zachary's ABA program
from the HCDE, Ms. Sandra Jerardi authored an internal memo in which she
described Zachary's program under IDEA as a "sensitive case with regards
to school program and/or Lovaas."
127. Based on other testimony in the record supporting the proposition
that the HCDE rejects meaningful consideration of the Lovaas style ABA
intervention at least in large part because of its perceived cost, the
court finds that Ms. Jerardi was flagging Zachary Deal's education program
as sensitive because of its probable cost and adverse impact on the HCDE
policy of rejecting any and all requests for Lovaas style ABA for young
autistic children.
128. At the May 11, 1998 IEP meeting, the Deals outlined the impressive
results Zachary had achieved with the Lovaas style ABA methodology and
asked the HCDE to fund a continuation of the program over the summer. E.57;
E.58, pp. 15, 29.
129. HCDE personnel informed the Deals that "the powers that be" were
not implementing ABA programs. E. 58, p. 36.
130. Ms. Jerardi, an HCDE representative and IEP team member in the
May 11, 1998 IEP team meeting told the Deals that she wished people would
pay their taxes so that HCDE could provide ABA for Zachary. E. 58, p. 79.
131. Jane Dixon told the Deals that the cost of the ABA program is important
and that cost was a factor in denying it. E. 150 at p. 21.
132. There was no regular education teacher of Zachary's at the October
15, 1998 IEP team meeting even though it was clear that whether or not
it would be appropriate for Zachary to participate in the regular education
setting would be a subject of the meeting.
133. Zachary Deal progressed in his ability to function and socialize
with other children while at the Primrose School. Tr. 902-925.
134. Zachary Deal was academically one of the better students in Ms.
Reyes preschool class at Primrose School Tr. 908.
135. Anna Davenport, a licensed speech and language pathologist, provides
speech therapy to autistic students whose deficits are being addressed
by either Lovaas style ABA or TEACCH methodologies. Tr. 1027.
136. Anna Davenport finds that the autistic children who have been
receiving Lovaas style ABA intervention have better attention and compliance
skills and that they learn better and faster than those receiving the TEACCH
program. Tr. 1028.
137. Anna Davenport also has provided speech and language services
to autistic children being served with the HCDE program and has found them
to have slower progress than those receiving the Lovaas style ABA methodology.
Tr. 1030.
138. The regular education teacher who attended the August 25, 1999,
meeting left before the 1999-2000 goals and objectives were developed and
before the issue of placement was decided. Exs. 253, 256, 259, 260, 265.
139. Zachary responds well to computerized speech augmentation devices.
Tr. 1091.
140. Zachary also learns to communicate from other children who are
in his environment. Tr. 1129-30.
141. A CARD trained tutor/aide, April Brewer, accompanied Zachary while
he was at Primrose School. Tr. 1139-44.
142. The aide/tutor who accompanied him at Primrose School also provided
Zachary with some of his home based Lovaas style ABA. Tr. 1144.
143. Tamilla Burt, one of Zachary's ABA tutors, had previously worked
at a facility serving
autistic children in Missouri. While at that facility, she noted that
the children receiving Lovaas style ABA services were able to grasp material
much more quickly that those who were not receiving those services Tr.
3383-84
144 Over the course of Zachary's program with home based ABA and attending
school with typically developing peers at Primrose School, Zachary became
less prompt dependent. Tr. 1148.
145. Zachary also fit in well socially with his peers at Primrose School,
tried to imitate their behaviors, and, as of April, 2000, some of the children
at Primrose School worked to get Zachary to speak. Tr. 1152, 1158-60.
146. As of April, 2000 Ms. Brewer found that Zachary was "learning
to learn" at a faster rate. Tr. 1257.
147. Zachary acquired new skills in proportion to the number of Lovaas
style ABA hours he received. Tr. 3079.
148. Numerous HCDE witnesses accepted the accuracy of the data maintained
by the parents and acknowledged that the Deals never refused a request
by HCDE for information about Zachary or his program. See, e.g., e. 108,
p. 41 and E-103, p.26. The Court finds these data to be accurate.
149. HCDE personnel believe that, if the purported results of the initial
Lovaas study could be proven and replicated, that Lovaas style ABA would
be the appropriate methodology for preschool autistic children. See e.g.,
Dixon at Tr. 2379, 2385.
150. Ms. Jane Dixon, a supervisor of special education for HCDE, has,
as part of her job, a duty to identify better methodologies for teaching
autistic children. Tr. 2524.
151. Ms. Dixon acknowledged that the initial results of the Wisconsin
Early Autism Project were surprisingly good. Tr. 252 1-23.
152. Despite the excellent reported results from the Wisconsin Project,
Ms. Dixon has made no effort whatsoever to contact personnel administering
that program. Tr. 2525.
153. If an autistic child has a chance of becoming indistinguishable,
it would be inappropriate to set a lesser goal for that child. Dixon at
Tr. 2555.
154. As of June, 2000, Sandra Jerardi was making
educational decisions and recommendations for autistic children even though
she had not read the report of the Wisconsin Early Autism Project which
had been made public in 1999 and had been a subject of this hearing for
many months. Tr. 2602.
155. Twenty years ago there was no strategy available which educators
thought would allow autistic children to function in the normal range or
become indistinguishable from typically developed peers. Dixon at Tr. 2713
156. Jane Dixon believes that the parents' proposed goal to make Zachary
independent in society with as normal a life as possible is unrealistic.
Tr. 2716.
157. HCDE has a policy of not considering Lovaas style ABA for autistic
children. Tr. 2941 and Tr. 2958-59 wherein Sandra Jerardi admits to being
impressed by Zachary's present levels of performance yet steadfastly refuses
to give any credit to Zachary's intensive Lovaas style ABA program for
these achievements. See, also, Tr. 2966, wherein Ms. Jerardi refuses to
concede that any progress is attributable to the ABA program even when
the progress was obtained over the course of a summer in which the school
system provided no services.
158. In October, 1998, HCDE denied the parents' request for an assistive
technology evaluation aimed at determining whether or not Zachary would
benefit from an augmentative speech device. Tr. 2980-81.
159. At the May 24, 1999 IEP meeting, Ms. Wiessen, a HCDE speech and
language pathologist, acknowledged that Zachary had emerging skills in
speech and language. Tr. 3819. Nonetheless, Ms. Wiessen agreed with the
decision to deny Zachary speech therapy during the summer of 1999. Id.
160. There was no regular education teacher in attendance at the August
20, 1999 IEP Team meeting. Tr. 3821.
161. In March of 2000, Zachary was doing very well with the ABA and
classroom exposure he was receiving at that time. Tr. 889.
162. In March of 2000, Zachary had begun to make sounds on a regular
basis and attempt to verbalize. Tr. 958.
163. In June of 2000, Zachary's IQ had increased by 26 points over
his previous test score. E. 487.
164. The rate at which Zachary has been able to acquire new skills
has improved greatly between 1997 and 2000. Tr. 4211-14.
165. The complexity of the skills being acquired has also increased.
Tr. 4225.
166. In August of 2000, an IEP was developed providing services for
Zachary at Westview Elementary School. Exs. 501 505.
167. On May 17, 2000 an assessment team convened by HCDE recommended
certain assessments/evaluations for Zachary Deal. Exs. 494, 510.
168. On August 11,2000 an IEP team developed an extensive IEP for Zachary
which called for him, among other things, to attend school at Westview
Elementary School and to be assigned to a regular education class. Exs.
501 and 502.
169. While the Deals agreed with the placement at Westview, they continued
to maintain that in order for Zachary to receive a FAPE, the school system
would have to offer Zachary a Lovaas style ABA program. Ex. 504.
170. Zachary attended Westview Elementary School in the morning on
a part-time basis during the 2000-0 1 school year and participated in a
home based Lovaas style ABA program and parent provided speech therapy
in the afternoons.
171. Between when Zachary first began ABA in 1997 and the end of 2000,
Zachary averaged 24-26 hours per week of Lovaas style ABA interventions.
172. Zachary seems to do best at around 30 hours of ABA per week. Tr.
4227.
173. Zachary's greatest gains occurred during periods when he received
no services from HCDE. Tr. 3877; Ex. 487. In fact it occurred over a summer
when he attended neither the private Primrose School nor a HCDE facility.
Tr. 4636.
174. HCDE refused the Deal's offer to help train HCDE personnel on
Zachary's ABA program and protocols. Tr. 4193.
175. As a result of HCDE's refusal to cooperate with the Deal's in
learning how to interact with Zachary, the aid assigned to Zachary's class
was less prepared than he could have been. Tr. 420 1-03.
176. As of September 7, 2000, Zachary had become much more
vocal and often was attempting
to speak. Tr. 3794.
177. The CARD program, while based on Lovaas style ABA, is not supervised
by Dr. Lovaas nor is it a Lovaas replication site.
178. Judy Bailey, the Associate Director of Professional Support Services
with the TEAM Evaluation Center, believes it would be extraordinary if
the Lovaas results are found to apply to a randomly selected population
of autistic preschool children. Tr. 4964.
179. Sandra Jerardi reported that five of the thirty five autistic
children with whom she had used the HCDE program became what she termed
"indistinguishable, Tr. 5253-55.
180. Irise Chapman, Director of Exceptional Education for HCDE, testified
that, if the results reported by Lovaas are valid, a FAPE for autistic
children should include such a component. Tr. 6454-55.
181. Given the state of knowledge today about autism and its treatment,
a well constituted IEP team must have someone on it who is knowledgeable
about Lovaas style ABA and who has an open mind about whether or not to
recommend ABA for autistic preschool children. Schwartz at Tr. 6902.
182. Dr. Ilene Schwartz, the HCDE expert on interventions for autistic
children, testified and the court finds that, given the state of the evidence
today, an intensive ABA program should be a component of Zachary's educational
program. Tr. 6902-04.
183. Zachary enjoys and benefits educationally from his placement in
the regular education classroom at Westview Elementary. Observation of
the court.
184. Zachary benefits from the related service of speech therapy as
provided by the HCDE at Westview Elementary. Observation of the court.
185. Zachary interacts well with his classmates at Westview at recess
and in the classroom. Observation of the court.
186. Zachary benefits from his privately funded speech therapy with
Anna Davenport. Observation of the court.
187. Zachary is more engaged in learning during his Lovaas style ABA
drills than in any other activity observed by the court. Observation of
the court.
188. Zachary was more motivated to speak and demonstrated more ability
to speak
during his Lovaas style ABA session than he did in either of the two
formal speech therapy sessions. Personal observation of the court.
189. Zachary's preferred learning style is one-on-one Lovaas style
ABA. Personal observation of the court supported by several witnesses during
the trial.
190. Intensive one-on-one ABA "needs to be a component of a program
[for autistic children]." Schwartz at Tr. 6908.
191. Dr. Ilene Schwartz, the HCDE expert on interventions for autistic
children, believes that eighteen hours a week of intensive discreet trial
ABA interventions should be a minimum level for a program for an autistic
child similar to Zachary Deal. Tr. At 6923-24.
Back to Summary
III. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
Congress intended for the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
("IDEA") (20 U.S.C.A. 1400 et seq.) to guaranty children with disabilities
a free appropriate public education ("FAPE"). Renner v. Board of Educ.,
185 F.3d 635, 644 (6th Cir. 1999). In determining whether or not a public
school system has offered a disabled child FAPE, a court must first determine
whether the school system has complied with the procedures mandated by
the IDEA. See, Board of Educ. V Rowley, 458 U.S. 176,206, 102 S.Ct.
3034, 73 L.Ed.3d 690 (1982). In return for accepting federal monies, the
IDEA requires states to identify, locate, and evaluate all disabled children
residing in the state who are in need of special education and related
services. 20 U.S.C.A. § 1412(2)(C).
School districts receiving federal funding under IDEA must establish
an individualized educational plan ("IEP") for each child with a disability.
20 U.S.C.A. § 1414(a)(5). Congress further defined an IEP as a written
statement developed by a professional qualified to deliver the specially
designed instruction, the child's teacher, and the parents of the child.
See, 20 U.S.C.A. 1401 § 1401 (a)(20).
Placement decisions must be based on the IEP which must contain a statement
of measurable annual goals, including benchmarks or short term objectives.
20 U.S.C.A. § 1400. A legally sufficient IEP must also describe the
educational and other services to be provided, and criteria for evaluating
the child's progress. Id.; see also, Knable ex rel. Knable v. Bexley
City School Dist., 238 F.3d 755, 763 (6th Cir. 2001).
The Rowley Court stressed that Congress had emphasized that
full participation by concerned parties in the IEP process would, in most
cases, ensure that much if' not all of what Congress wanted in the way
of substantive content would make its way into an IEP. Rowley, 458
U.S. at 206. Congress did not, however, define "appropriate education"
and instead, left it to the courts and the hearing officers to give content
to the requirements of an appropriate education. Id. at 458 U.S. 187. The
Rowley Court acknowledged the difficulty (if not impossibility)
of defining an "appropriate" education for all learning disabled children.
For all such children it set a standard requiring all IEPs to provide at
least "educational benefit." Rowley at 458 U.S. 20 1-202.
It did, however, define what constituted a FAPE for children capable
of functioning academically within the regular education classroom and
able to perform on grade level:
[T]he IEP and, therefore the personalized instruction, should be formulated
in accordance with the requirements of the Act and, if the child is
being
educated in the regular classrooms of the public education system,
should be
reasonably calculated to enable the child to achieve passing marks
and
advance from grade to grade.
Rowley at 458 U.S. 203-204.
The implementing regulations for IDEA lend further support to the proposition
that minimal educational benefit for a child who is capable of much more
does not meet IDEA's requirement of a FAPE:
Specially designed instruction means adapting, as appropriate to the
needs of an eligible child... the content, methodology, or delivery of
instruction- -
(i) To address the unique needs of the child that result from the child's
disability;
(ii) To ensure access of the child to the general curriculum, so that
he or she can meet the educational standards within the jurisdiction of
the public agency that apply to all children.... 34 C.F.R. Sec. 300.26(b)(3).
Although technical violations will not automatically invalidate an IEP,
this circuit requires administrative law judges and hearing officers to
strictly review an IEP for procedural compliance. Dong v. Board of Educ.,
197 F.3rd 793, 800 (6th Cir. 1999); see also, Doe v. Defendant I,
898 F.2d 1186, 1190-91 (6th Cir. 1990) and Burilovich v. Board of Educ.
Of Lincoln, 208 F.3d 560, 567 (6th Cir. 2000). Having assured itself
that the process met the requirements of IDEA, a reviewing court or hearing
officer must then determine whether the IEP developed by the school system
in accordance with the mandated procedures is reasonably calculated to
enable the child to receive educational benefits. Id. At 206-207. There
is no violation of IDEA if the school system has satisfied both requirements.
Rowley 458 U.S. at 206-207.
Courts are not permitted to substitute their own notions of sound educational
policy for those of the school officials. Thomas v. Cincinnati Bd. Of
Educ., 918 F.2d 618, 624 (6th Cir. 1990). Instead, courts are to give
deference to state and local agencies in choosing the educational methodology
most suitable to the child's needs. Rowley at 458 U.S. 207. Courts
should only intervene where a preponderance of the evidence weighs against
the local education agency's decision. Id. at 206.
Finally, the instant case involves, in part, the parents' request for
reimbursement for private placement, and for provision of related services
at their own expense. In order for parents to unilaterally alter their
child's placement or program and then be entitled to relief under the IDEA,
they must establish that the public placement or services offered by the
school district violated IDEA and that the private placement or service
was proper under the act. Florence Co. School Dist. Four v. Carter,
510 U.S. 7, 114 S.Ct. 361, 366, 126 F.Ed.2d 284 (1993); Wise v. Ohio
Dept. Of Educ., 80 F.3rd 177, 184 (6th Cir. 1996).
The court will first address the procedural violations alleged by the
Deals and then take up the substantive allegations.
Back to Summary
A. PROCEDURAL VIOLATIONS
Under the first prong of Rowley, the Court must first determine
whether the HCDE complied with the procedural requirements of the IDEA.
The procedural requirements are particularly important because the development
and implementation of the IEP are the cornerstones of the IDEA. Honig
v. Doe, 484 U.S. 305, 311, 108 S.Ct. 592, 597-97, 98 F.Ed.2d 686 (1988).
The strict procedural requirements help assure the quality of the resulting
IEP.
Under the Act, the IEP must contain a specific statement of the child's
current performance levels, the child's short-term and long-term goals,
the educational and other services to be provided, and criteria for evaluating
the child's progress. 20 U.S.C. § 140 1(a)(20). These are requirements
by which the adequacy of the IEP is to be judged. Cleveland Heights-
University Heights City School District v. Boss, 144 F.3d 391 (6th
Cir. 1998). Minor technical violations which do not affect the adequacy
of the IEP may be excused. Id.
If the HCDE violated the IDEA's procedural requirements and if those
procedural violations caused substantive harm to Zachary Deal, there has
been a denial of a FAPE. See, Metro. Bd. Of Pub. Educ. V Guest,
193 F.3d 457,464-65 (6th Cir. 1999); Daugherty v. Hamilton County Schools,
21 F.Supp.2d 765, 772 (E.D.Tenn. 1998). Assuming the court finds a denial
of a FAPE, the court may grant such relief as the court determines is appropriate.
20 U.S.C.A. § 1415(e)(2).
The record in this case establishes significant procedural violations
of the IEP process as required by the IDEA. Even if the Court were to view
the testimony and the evidence in the light most favorable to HCDE, the
record clearly establishes that HCDE, in large part because of cost considerations,
embraced an unofficial policy of refusing to consider Lovaas style ABA
for children who presented with autism as their disabling condition.
The HCDE M-Team personnel consistently went into IEP meetings, where
they were legally bound to assess Zachary's disabilities and individual
needs before selecting a methodology, with a predetermination to deny Zachary's
request for a Lovaas style ABA program. In so doing, the HCDE personnel
on the M-Team had "pre-selected" the extant HCDE program regardless of
Zachary's demonstrated individual needs. This bias on the part of the HCDE
stemmed in large part from concerns about the perceived cost of Lovaas
style ABA.
The result was a kind of "virtual" IEP team meeting where the two parties
talked past one another rather than cooperating to Zachary's benefit. The
court notes that Mr. and Mrs. Deal did request data from HCDE on the HCDE
methodology at the meeting where they were first denied the ABA services
for Zachary. The court finds that even had the HCDE produced the data on
its success rate with autistic children it would have not changed the outcome.
The data produced for the hearing indicate that approximately 14% of autistic
children receiving only the HCDE program went on to become "indistinguishable"
from the children in regular education classrooms. This does not compare
favorably to the 47% rate reported by Dr. Lovaas and apparently being achieved
at the replication sites.
The failure of the HCDE to have regular education teachers attend the
IEP team meetings is also a troubling procedural violation. The absence
of a regular education teacher provides strong evidence that the decision
to place Zachary in a special education classroom for the 1999-2000 school
year had been made before the IEP team convened.
Zachary's parents had every right to expect and were entitled to a
full and fair assessment of Zachary's needs and then an unbiased decision
making process within the IEP format to address Zachary's individual needs.
This did not happen in this case and the procedural violations themselves
amount to a denial of FAPE.
Back to Summary
II. SUBSTANTIVE VIOLATIONS
Science and innovation have warred with orthodoxy at least since Galileo
was forced to recant in the shadow of the rack. In defending its less expensive
and more orthodox choice of services for Zachary, the HCDE cites to the
oft quoted Doe v. Bd of Educ. of Tullahoma City Schools where the Sixth
Circuit held that schools have complied with the IDEA's requirements if
they offer the educational equivalent of a serviceable Chevrolet to a handicapped
student rather than a Cadillac.3 9 F.3d 455, 459 (6th Cir. 1993).
The IDEA may not mandate a Cadillac for Zachary Deal. It does, however,
require the HCDE to make sure whichever vehicle they propose, is fully
gassed and capable of arriving at an appropriate destination.
footnote
3 Zachary Deal's situation is
clearly distinguishable from the facts in Doe. John Doe had been a regular
student with a full range IQ score of 130. Testing revealed an auditory
processing disorder and the parents agreed to allow the school system to
develop an IEP for their son after the fall semester had begun and their
son had selected his courses. Rather than giving the school the opportunity
to develop an appropriate IEP, the parents unilaterally placed him in a
private school during the summer recess. The Deals, in contrast to John
Doe's parents, fully cooperated with the school system in trying to develop
an appropriate IEP. |
The appropriateness of the destination for a particular disabled child
is dependent to a large extent on the child's abilities and potential.
In reversing a District Court finding that a school system had provided
FAPE by providing more than a "trivial" benefit, the Third Circuit noted:
The [special] education must be tailored to the unique needs of the
disabled student through an [IEP]. IDEA leaves to the courts the task of
interpreting "free appropriate education." The Supreme Court began this
task in Board of Education v. Rowley, holding that while an IEP
need not maximize the potential of a disabled student, it must provide
"meaningful" access to education and confer "some educational benefit"
upon the child for whom it is designed.... In determining quantum of educational
benefit necessary to satisfy IDEA, the [Supreme] Court explicitly rejected
a bright line rule. Noting that children of different abilities are capable
of greatly different achievements, the Court instead adopted an approach
that requires a court to consider the potential of the particular disabled
student. [The Third Circuit has] rejected the notion that the provision
of any educational benefit satisfies IDEA, holding that IDEA "clearly imposed
a higher standard." IDEA calls for more than a trivial educational benefit
and requires a satisfactory IEP to provide significant learning and confer
"meaningful benefit." We also reject the notion that what was "appropriate"
could be reduced to a single standard, holding that benefit "must be gauged
in relation to the child's potential." When students display considerable
intellectual potential IDEA requires "a great deal more than negligible
[benefit].
Ridgewood Board of Educ. v. NE., 172 F.3D
238 (3'~ Cir. 1999) (other citations omitted).
Back to Summary
A. The school system did not offer
a "methodology." The HCDE did not offer to provide Zachary Deal with
a proven or even describable methodology for educating autistic children
because they had no such methodology to offer. In pre-hearing discovery
and in the first days of the hearing, the HCDE termed their methodology
the "eclectic" methodology or approach. During the course of the hearing,
however, the HCDE witnesses distanced themselves from this label when it
became clear that it was indefinable and virtually meaningless as a descriptor
for an organized methodology.
The evidence showed that the HCDE actually cobbled together various
components from other methodologies, primarily TEACCH4. They
did so intuitively based on the experience and preferences of individual
IEP team members. When forced to produce historical data to demonstrate
the efficacy of these past choices, the HCDE could only claim a best outcome
success rate one third that of the reported best outcome children in the
Lovaas study group.
If their intuition and experience were telling them that their choices
for autistic children were as good as or better than the Lovaas style ABA,
they were misleading themselves.
Surprisingly, neither these data comparisons, the reported favorable
results from the Lovaas replication sites, nor Dr. Schwartz's testimony
that all educational methodologies for autistic children should include
one-on-one discreet trial training, moved the HCDE in its opposition to
intensive one-on-one discreet trial training. This steadfast resistance
to one-one-one ABA in the face of the mounting favorable evidence for Lovaas
style ABA provided further evidence that the HCDE's insistence on rejecting
Lovaas style ABA for Zachary is based primarily on its perceived cost.
footnote
4 There are other methodologies
available besides Lovaas style ABA and TEACCH. The HCDE's expert, Dr. Ilene
Schwartz testified about her own program, DATA, which also employs one-on-one
discreet trial training and stresses data collection and analysis for all
its components. The HCDE personnel, such as Ann Kennedy and Sandra Jerardi,
who should be exploring improved and proven methodologies for educating
autistic children demonstrated an appalling lack of interest in the more
innovative and undoubtedly more expensive programs. |
The record, as developed by both the parents' and the school system's
witnesses, showed the most widespread methodology, TEACCH, is gradually
losing ground in the special education community more effective methodologies,
such as Dr. Schwartz's program, which employ one-on-one ABA as a chief
component. There was no evidence whatsoever produced to indicate that intensive
one-on-one discreet trial training was somehow less effective than more
orthodox methodologies. The HCDE also failed to produce convincing evidence
that their methodology for young children with autism was equal to or better
than a program based primarily on an intensive ABA intervention. The preponderance
of the evidence weighed heavily in favor of Lovaas style ABA as the appropriate
methodology for educating Zachary Deal.
Back to Summary
B. The home based Lovaas style ABA program
is a recognized methodology. The Deals learned of the Lovaas style
ABA program on their own. The court finds this significant because, given
its demonstrated effectiveness and the widespread knowledge within the
HCDE of its spreading use with autistic children, it is difficult to explain
how a school system, which claims to have been open to any methodology
which would address Zachary's unique needs, would dismiss this approach
outright without even discussing its perceived advantages and disadvantages
with the Deals. Given the state of knowledge about methodologies appropriate
for educating autistic children, the HCDE school system representatives
should have at least informed the parents about the Lovaas style of ABA
and explained why they would recommend against it.
Having learned of the Lovaas style ABA methodology on their own and
having funded the initial months of Zachary's program, the Deals were convinced
by Zachary's progress that this was the appropriate methodology for Zachary.
When the Deals met with HCDE to develop Zachary's 1999-2000 IEP, the school
system was confronted with the parents' reports of Zachary's remarkable
progress utilizing the Lovaas style ABA with Zachary as well as Dr. Speraw'
s letter of October, 1997 recommending an ABA approach for him. It was
during this meeting that the HCDE's representative told the Deals that
there were things she wished she could recommend for Zachary but then she
would have to give them to everybody.
HCDE's refusal to consider Lovaas style ABA for Zachary for the 1999-2000
school year is even more inexplicable. Zachary's parents had fought to
have 600 goals included in Zachary's IEP for the previous school year,
1998-99. The HCDE had suggested 78 goals and the parties eventually agreed
to include 137 of goals on the 1998-99 IEP. When the parties sat down to
develop the IEP for 1999-2000, they knew that the primary teaching methodology
for Zachary had been a home based intensive Lovaas style ABA program and
that Zachary had accomplished 99 of the 137 goals on his previous IEP and
an additional 130 of the goals HCDE had rejected for his 1998-99 program.
The HCDE had its program in mind when it suggested 78 goals for 1998-99.
Zachary had actually accomplished 229 of the 600 goals his parents had
set for him and had clearly succeeded beyond HCDE's expectations for him
by accessing CARD's Lovaas style ABA program. There is no case law which
stands for the proposition that the term "appropriate" as it pertains to
FAPE sanctions a program which would actually retard a special needs child's
education or development.
The court finds that an appropriate educational methodology for Zachary
Deal must include an intensive Lovaas style ABA component. The evidence
at trial, however, did not demonstrate that a 40 hour per week ABA program
is required in order for Zachary to succeed. In fact, the testimony indicated
that Zachary does best on a 30 hour per week program.
Back to Summary
C. Extended school year services
are needed. The amount of regression suffered by a child during the
summer months, considered together with the time required to recoup lost
skills when school resumes in the fall, is an important consideration in
assessing an individual disabled child's need for a structured educational
program in the summer months. Johnson v. Independent' School Dist. No.
4 of Bixby, 921 F.2d 1022 (10th Cir. 1990). Demonstrated regression,
however, is not the only criterion. The school officials must also consider
predictive data based on the opinion of professionals in consultation with
the child's parents. Id. at p. 1028.
The IDEA's implementing regulations specifically state that:
A public agency may not use a parent's refusal to consent to one service
or activity.., to deny the parent or child any other service, benefit,
or activity of the public agency....
34 C.F.R. Sec. 300.505(3)(e).
The HCDE apparently believed Zachary might suffer regression when they
approved extended school year ("ESY") services for him in 1998. There is
no evidence in the record whatsoever to indicate that this threat of regression
has abated. Why then has the HCDE steadfastly denied ESY services to Zachary
since the summer of 1999?
The HCDE personnel testified that the denial was because there was
no program to extend. In denying ESY related speech therapy services for
the summer of 1999, Ms. Dixon noted that any lack of progress on Zachary's
part was due to his not having accessed the full HCDE program. His classroom
teacher, Ms. Wiessen, tried to justify the denial on the basis that she
could not document regression and the fact that he was making progress
accessing HCDE services on a part-time basis.
The expert and fact witness testimony in this case was unequivocally
consistent: Zachary Deal would have regressed without summer services.
The threat of regression did not change between the summer of 1998 and
the summer of 1999. What changed was the relationship between the parents
and the HCDE once the dispute began over Zachary's need for Lovaas style
ABA, The school system had no quibble with related speech therapy during
the summer of 1998 when Zachary's parents were paying for his ABA program.
The problems arose when the Deals asked the HCDE to fund not only related
services during the summer of 1999 and 2000, but, when they demanded that
the school system also fund a Lovaas style ABA program for him.
Summer services, like services during the regular school year, are
intended to address the child's needs. The concept is even labeled "extended
school year" not "extended school program." A summer IEP, like any other
IEP, should address the individual and unique needs of the eligible child.
The HCDE is in error when it maintains that the purpose of ESY is to continue
an existing IEP and that, if there is no agreed upon IEP, there is nothing
to continue. The purpose of ESY, like the rest of the IDEA and its implementing
regulations, is to educate disabled children. The need for and design of
an ESY program begins with an assessment of the child's needs, not the
level of cooperation between the school system and the child's parents.
Back to Summary
III. REIMBURSEMENT
The IDEA's grant of equitable authority empowers an administrative
law judge or hearing officer to order school authorities to reimburse parents
for their expenditures on private special education for a child if the
administrative law judge or hearing officer determines that such placement,
rather than a proposed IEP, is proper under the Act. School Comm. of
Burlington v. Department of Ed Of Mass., 471 U.S. 359, 369, 102 S.Ct.
1996,2002,85 F.Ed.2d 385 (1985). Congress intended that disabled children's
needs would be met either in public or private institutions through cooperation
between the parents and school officials within the IEP process. Florence
County School Dist. Four v. Carter, 510 U.S. 7, 12, 114 S.Ct. 361,
364, 126 F.Ed.2d 284 (1993). In cases where cooperation fails, however:
[P]arents who disagree with the proposed IEP are faced with a choice:
go along with the IEP to the detriment of their child if it turns out to
be inappropriate or pay for what they consider to be the appropriate placement.
For parents willing and able to make the latter choice, it would be an
empty victory to have a court tell them several years later that they were
right but these expenditures could not in a proper case be reimbursed by
the school officials. Because such a result would be contrary to IDEA's
guarantee of a "free appropriate public education" we [hold] that Congress
meant to include retroactive reimbursement to parents as an available remedy
in a proper case.
Florence County School Dist. Four v. Carter, at 510 U.S. 12, quoting,
School Comm. of Burlington v. Department of Ed Of Mass., supra.
Parents who make this choice do so, however, at their own financial
risk. Id. at 471 U.S. at 374. The Deals took a considerable financial risk
when they embarked upon Zachary's home based ABA program. Early on in their
dispute with the HCDE they asked for outcome data to support the program
HCDE was offering Zachary. None were produced until this hearing and the
ones that were produced offer little comfort to a parent of a child who
falls on the autism spectrum where Zachary falls. Experts on both sides
testified that selecting the wrong methodology for an autistic child can
mean the difference between an independent adult life and a lifetime of
dependency and support.
The Deals made a correct and legally defensible choice when, in the
thee of the school systems unbending intransigence, they opted to continue
the successful ABA program Zachary had been receiving. The Deal's are entitled
to reimbursement for some, but not all, of their expenses in providing
direct and related educational services for their son. The court will address
reimbursement issue by issue within this order.
Back to Summary
IV. THE SPECIFIC
ALLEGED VIOLATIONS
The court has already addressed the major issues in the case and the
facts and law surrounding each issue. Some of the many violations alleged
by the Deals were either disposed of by interlocutory orders of the court
or by agreement of the parties during the hearing. We now turn to the specific
alleged violations remaining for adjudication.
COUNT 1. The county failed to timely and properly evaluate Zachary
's individual needs requiring the Deals to obtain the evaluations at their
own expense.
The record supports a finding that any alleged delays in evaluating
Zachary for occupational services were excusable given the information
supplied to the school system by the Deals and Zachary's levels of performance
in that area. Exs. 16, 17, 21. In addition, the Deals had already obtained
a private occupational therapy evaluation which did not recommend any one
on one occupational therapy. Ex. 298. Furthermore, the Deals
and the HCDE worked together to accomplish a series of evaluations, some
of which were delayed because of difficulty obtaining a neurological evaluation.
Finally, there is little evidence of any significant adverse impact on
Zachary from these alleged delays. The court therefore DENIES the parents'
request for reimbursement for evaluations.
2. Even though it was Zachary 's proven learning style, the county
refused to consider any one-on-one ABA therapy. The court has already addressed
this issue at length.
Zachary's parents presented detailed evidence documenting the fact
that Zachary had already made remarkable progress in the CARD program when
they first asked the HCDE to consider it for
Zachary's summer 1999 program. The court FINDS that on a procedural
basis the HCDE's refusal to even consider Lovaas style ABA for Zachary
during this and subsequent IEP meetings denied Zachary Deal a FAPE. The
court also FINDS that even had the HCDE given full and fair consideration
to Zachary's proven learning style, denying Zachary Lovaas style ABA at
the point in which it was requested would have been a substantive denial
of FAPE. Accordingly, the court FINDS that a free appropriate public education
for Zachary Deal should have included at least 30 hours of intensive Lovaas
style ABA and must include at least the same level of ABA instruction until
such time as there is demonstrable evidence, including present levels of
performance and expert opinion by proponents of the Lovaas approach, that
the intensity level should be reduced or eliminated. The court ORDERS
the HCDE to reimburse Zachary's parents for the weekly costs of his home
based ABA program up to and including thirty hours of service for each
week he received such services after May 11, 1998. This requirement remains
in effect until such time as the HCDE has convened a properly constituted
IEP team, which shall include at least one expert in and advocate for Lovaas
style ABA, and produced an IEP for Zachary Deal which shall include at
least 30 hours of Lovaas style ABA for Zachary per week to be provided
either at home or in a suitable, non-distracting environment in his assigned
school.
COUNT 3. The goals and objectives proposed by the county are uniformly
vague and are not objectively measurable to be able to ascertain progress.
The goals and objectives proposed by the Deals were watered down to fit
the county's administrative needs, i.e. to fit the existing classrooms
the county has available rather than to fit Zachary's individual needs.
The HCDE witnesses testified that they had been criticized by state
auditors for putting too many goals on an IEP. There is no legal support
for assigning an arbitrary limit to the appropriate number of goals for
Zachary. Because the real issue was between the detailed goals and objectives
that were part of his ABA program and the more general goals traditionally
used by the HCDE, this, issue should resolve itself with the inclusion
of Lovaas style ABA in his IEP's. The county's resistance to goals based
on the number of them is farther evidence, however, of procedural violations
in the IEP process.
COUNT 4. The county failed to offer Zachary a full continuum of
options and what few prepackaged options have been presented are "offered"
by the county on a take it or leave it basis.
This issue is subsumed in and has been addressed in other counts.
COUNT 5. Did the county fail to provide Zachary with meaningful
and appropriate opportunities for inclusion to the maximum extent appropriate.
Congress intended that disabled students be educated in the least restrictive
environment. The IDEA explicitly requires:
To the maximum extent appropriate, children with disabilities, including
children in public and private institutions or other care facilities, are
educated with children who are not disabled, and special classes, separate
schooling, or other removal of children with disabilities from the regular
educational environment occurs only when the nature or severity of the
disability of a child is such that education in regular classes with the
use of supplementary aids and services cannot be achieved satisfactorily.
20 U.S.C.A. §1412(a)(5)(A).
The parents agreed to the placement in the 1997-98 school year and in fact
wanted Lisa Steele as Zachary's teacher. The real contention arose for
the 1998-99 school year when the parents wanted significantly more inclusion
for Zachary with typically developing peers. The HCDE did not discuss
options that would have provided more exposure with typically developing
peers with the Deals and the record indicates a policy of indifference
to this legal requirement. At this point, however, there is no remedy for
Zachary having missed opportunities to interact with typically developing
peers in the 1998-99 school year.
By the time of the August, 1999, IEP meeting, however, there was no
evidence that Zachary could not tolerate and benefit from significant exposure
and interaction with typically developing peers. The fifteen minutes three
times a week of inclusion offered as a starting point by the HCDE for the
1999-2000 school year appeared to be based on a policy of starting at the
low end of the scale and working up. Ex. 265. The stated goal in the IEP
discussion of perhaps reaching an hour a day of inclusion by the end of
the year further supports evidence of a policy of gradualism.
The law clearly requires the school system to educate Zachary with
typically developing peers to the maximum extent possible. The HCDE did
not develop his 1999-2000 IEP with this in mind. It offered, basically,
a year of education in a CDC classroom where every single child was disabled.
The parents unilaterally removed Zachary from the HCDE system and placed
him in a regular education 4-K class at the private Primrose School. The
court reviewed video tapes of Zachary at the Primrose School and, notwithstanding
the quibbles and hyper-criticism of the tapes by HCDE witnesses, found
Zachary to be well integrated into his class and learning to interact with
his regular education classmates. His classmates had obviously accepted
him and everyone seemed to benefit from having Zachary in the classroom.
The benefits of the Primrose School experience were even more apparent
when the court visited Zachary at the HCDE Westview Elementary School at
the conclusion of this hearing. His level of participation and involvement
had continued to increase to the mutual benefit of all the children in
his class.
That said, the parents are not entitled to reimbursement for the costs
of the Primrose School. The Deals removed Zachary without giving the HCDE
the required statutory notice. 20U.S.C.A. § 1412(a)(10)(C)(ii). There
is no way of knowing whether or not the HCDE would have modified the inclusion
component of Zachary's IEP in the face of the Deals' decision to place
him in a private school Having denied the HCDE the opportunity to modify
that part of the IEP, the Deals are not now entitled to reimbursement.
The claim for reimbursement for the cost of the Primrose School is DENIED.
COUNT 6. The county failed to even provide services it expressly
agreed to provide to Zachary and the county used certain service providers
without the appropriate knowledge of expertise in, and experience with
Zachary's educational needs.
The HCDE's performance in evaluating Zachary for and providing
related services in occupational therapy and speech therapy is disappointing.
For the 1997-1998 school year some of the HCDE records have apparently
been lost in a move. However, the testimony at trial and the records that
do exist, indicate that while some speech therapy was provided, it was
neither in the amounts required by the IEP nor was it always the one-on-one
speech therapy the parents had a right to expect. Exs. 29, 35, 37, 51,
Tr. 2217.
The occupational therapy agreed to for the 1998-99 school year
was to have been for one hour every other week. Ex. 105. The record shows
that Zachary received only five thirty-minute sessions between October
15, 1998 and the end of the school year. Exs. 206, 265.
Speech therapy for 1998-99 was to have been one-on-one twice
a week for thirty minutes and group therapy each day. The record at trial
showed that these services did not actually begin until
over four months into the school year. Exs. 289, 454, 453, 150, 181.
The HCDE again agreed to provide occupational therapy, physical therapy,
and speech therapy for Zachary for the 1999-2000 school year. Exs. 260,
, 265,270. The HCDE then withdrew its agreement to provide the services
because the Deals refused to accept the entire IEP the HCDE offered. The
court has already held that the IEP produced by HCDE for the 1999-2000
school year was both procedurally and substantively defective and denied
Zachary Deal a FAPE. As the IEP denied FAPE, the Deals were under no obligation
to accept it in its entirety. The court FINDS that the HCDE mishandled
its obligation to provide the related services of physical therapy, occupational
therapy, and speech therapy to Zachary Deal. The court ORDERS the HCDE
to reimburse Zachary's parents for any out of pocket costs they have incurred
in providing any such related services for Zachary. This includes services
currently being provided and extends until such time as a properly constituted
IEP team produces an IEP which conforms to this order. The court finds,
however, that the HCDE is not responsible for reimbursing the Deals for
the costs of the following examinations/evaluations: (1) the neurological
evaluation by Dr. Miller, which was in the nature of a medical examination
and not part of the IEP process, (2) the speech and hearing evaluation
of February 4, 1997 which was done before Zachary's third birthday. (3)
The October 2, 1999, occupational therapy evaluation by Karan Wilson, for
which the Deals had never asked for reimbursement. The report by Dr. Mulick
dated June 2, 1999 is in the nature of costs for this hearing and should
be addressed in that forum.
COUNT 7. Are Zachary's parents entitled to reimbursement for the
cost of Zachary's tuition and related expenses for attendance at the Primrose
School in the 1999-2000 school year and for the costs of related services
including ABA therapy from July, 1997 through May 31, 2001?
This issue has already been addressed in findings related to other
counts.
COUNT 8. The county failed to provide ESY services for 1999 and
2000.
This issue has already been addressed by the court.
COUNT 9. Does the IEP of August 11, 2000 offer a free appropriate
public education to Zachary, subject to the addition of assistive technology
goals and objectives, and, if not, is petitioner entitled to reimbursement
for the cost of one-on-one applied behavior analysis services and one-on-one
occupational therapy services that the parents have purchased and continue
to purchase during the 2000-2001 school year?
This count as already been addressed by the court.
COUNT 10. Do petitioner's parents have the right to select or veto
the selection of providers of special education and related services by
HCDE as the public agency responsible for implementation of the petitioner's
IEPs?
The Deals have no right to veto competent providers of services called
for in a properly constituted IEP.
COUNT 11. To what extent must HCDE allow the participation of petitioner
in the public education program offered by HCDE under the circumstances
that his parents are unwilling to accept the entire IEP of August 11, 2000?
This count has already been addressed by the court.
Back to Summary
The court FINDS that ZACHARY DEAL is the prevailing party.
This decision is binding on both parties unless the decision is appealed.
Any party aggrieved by this decision may appeal to the Chancery Court for
Davidson County, Tennessee, or may seek review in the United States District
Court for the district in which the school system is located. Such appeal
or review must be sought within sixty days of entry of a final order in
a non-reimbursement case or three years in cases involving educational
cost and expenses. In appropriate cases the reviewing court may stay this
final order.
IT IS SO ORDERED THIS 20th DAY OF AUGUST, 2001
A. JAMES ANDREWS
Administrative Law Judge
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that a copy of the foregoing FINAL ORDER has been
sent be first class mail this 20th day of August, 2001 to the following:
ATTORNEYS FOR ZACHARY DEAL: Gary S. Mayerson, 250 West 57th Street,
Suite 624, New York, NY 10107 and Theodore R. Kern, 602 South Gay Street,
Suite 800, Knoxville, TN 37902
ATTORNEY FOR HAMILTON COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION: Gary D. Lander,
Chambliss, Bahner & Stophel, P.C., 1000 Tallan Building, Two Union
Square, Chattanooga, TN 37402-2502.
DIVISION OF SPECIAL EDUCATION, Tennessee Department of Education, 8th
Floor, Gateway Plaza, 710 James Robertson Parkway, Nashville, TN 37243-0380.
Back to Summary
Footnotes:
1In the intervening years, the educational community has engaged
in an ongoing battle over the efficacy of the Lovaas style intervention.
Criticism has come from virtually every direction, yet, it remains the
most comprehensive scientific analysis of a methodology for teaching autistic
children to date.
Contemporaneously with this
hearing, the educators conducting the research at the federally funded
replication sites for the Lovaas ABA methodology began to publish preliminary
results. Some of these preliminary data were introduced as exhibits to
this hearing. The preliminary evidence presented at the hearing indicated
that the later tests of the Lovaas methodology were achieving similar results.
2The parents continued to provide Zachary with the home based Lovaas
style ABA program they said they would provide for him regardless of the
outcome of the due process hearing. Both parties waived the 45 day requirement
for a due process decision and both parties agreed that the issues deserved
a full and fair hearing and a complete record upon which to base a decision.
Thus the lengthy hearing had little or no practical effect on Zachary's
education.
3Zachary Deal's situation is clearly distinguishable from the
facts in Doe. John Doe had been a regular student with a full range IQ
score of 130. Testing revealed an auditory processing disorder and the
parents agreed to allow the school system to develop an IEP for their son
after the fall semester had begun and their son had selected his courses.
Rather than giving the school the opportunity to develop an appropriate
IEP, the parents unilaterally placed him in a private school during the
summer recess. The Deals, in contrast to John Doe's parents, fully cooperated
with the school system in trying to develop an appropriate IEP.
4There are other methodologies available besides Lovaas style ABA and
TEACCH. The HCDE's expert, Dr. Ilene Schwartz testified about her own program,
DATA, which also employs one-on-one discreet trial training and stresses
data collection and analysis for all its components. The HCDE personnel,
such as Ann Kennedy and Sandra Jerardi, who should be exploring improved
and proven methodologies for educating autistic children demonstrated an
appalling lack of interest in the more innovative and undoubtedly more
expensive programs.
1
Back to Summary