Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
The federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act or IDEA as well as New Hampshire state law require school districts to provide education and related services for children with certain types of disabilities who, due to their disability, need specialized instruction and related services to receive an appropriate education. Under these laws, school districts must make a free appropriate public education (FAPE) in the least restrictive environment (LRE) available to eligible children.
Every child who is eligible under the IDEA receives specialized instruction and related services that are outlined in a plan, called an Individualized Education Program (IEP), that is individually designed to meet the unique needs of that student. The IEP is developed by the student’s IEP Team which includes the student’s parents or guardians and can include the student themself. Each IEP is unique to each student.
For additional information and specific legal citations, see the Parent Information Center’s Guide to NH Standards for the Education of Children with Disabilities.
Once an IEP has been developed, the IEP team determines where the IEP can be implemented in order for the student to receive a FAPE in the least restrictive environment or LRE. Often, this will be in the student’s local public school.
However, a student whose IEP team determines that an out-of-district placement into a private or another public school is necessary to enable them to receive a FAPE, retains their rights under the IDEA. In such circumstances, the student’s local public school district or ‘sending district’ remains responsible for providing the student with the supports and services outlined in the student’s IEP.
This is not true for students whose parents choose to remove them from their resident public school and enroll them into a private school or homeschool them. When a student is removed from their public school and ‘parentally-placed’ into another setting, neither the student’s public school nor their private school has an obligation to provide that child with a FAPE or implement their IEP.
School districts do set aside a small amount of federal IDEA funding to provide ‘equitable services’ to some students with disabilities who are parentally placed out of their local public school. However, the school district has discretion to decide what services may be made available and which students will receive those services. This means that a student with disabilities who is parentally placed into a private school, no longer has a legal right to have the education supports and services contained in their IEP provided (see CFR 34 § 300.137 -138).
For more information: