What Virginia Principals Should Know and Be Able to Do to Minimize Special Education Disputes Between Parents and Schools. A Delphi Study

Today's schools face a mounting number of court cases resulting from conflicts between parents of children with special needs and educators tasked with meeting those needs (Osborne, 2009). Principals have the enormous responsibility to ensure appropriate services to educate students with disab...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Moody, Pamela Neil
Other Authors: Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/47728
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-477282020-09-29T05:37:23Z What Virginia Principals Should Know and Be Able to Do to Minimize Special Education Disputes Between Parents and Schools. A Delphi Study Moody, Pamela Neil Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Glenn, William Joseph Mallory, Walter D. Robinson, Dolores Cash, Carol S. due process FAPE IDEA mediation procedural safeguards Today's schools face a mounting number of court cases resulting from conflicts between parents of children with special needs and educators tasked with meeting those needs (Osborne, 2009). Principals have the enormous responsibility to ensure appropriate services to educate students with disabilities and, as special education leaders, require a skill set that includes knowledge of current laws, litigation, student learning needs, and how to support parents' decision making rights and responsibilities. A gap is evident between what principals know about special education leadership and case law and what principals are doing in the field. The purpose of this study was to identify effective actions and behaviors that support Virginia principals' leadership in special education decision making. More specifically, the study examined what can be done to minimize special education disputes between parents and schools and identify principals' skill sets to minimize special education disputes. Two concurrent Delphi studies were conducted with 16 member panels; stakeholders with familial responsibilities to children with disabilities and professional experts with responsibility to special education compliance participated. A final round exchanged findings between the panels. The study identified a list of best practices for Virginia school principals to support special education leadership and decision making. Ed. D. 2014-04-28T08:00:57Z 2014-04-28T08:00:57Z 2014-04-27 Dissertation vt_gsexam:2829 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/47728 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic due process
FAPE
IDEA
mediation
procedural safeguards
spellingShingle due process
FAPE
IDEA
mediation
procedural safeguards
Moody, Pamela Neil
What Virginia Principals Should Know and Be Able to Do to Minimize Special Education Disputes Between Parents and Schools. A Delphi Study
description Today's schools face a mounting number of court cases resulting from conflicts between parents of children with special needs and educators tasked with meeting those needs (Osborne, 2009). Principals have the enormous responsibility to ensure appropriate services to educate students with disabilities and, as special education leaders, require a skill set that includes knowledge of current laws, litigation, student learning needs, and how to support parents' decision making rights and responsibilities. A gap is evident between what principals know about special education leadership and case law and what principals are doing in the field. The purpose of this study was to identify effective actions and behaviors that support Virginia principals' leadership in special education decision making. More specifically, the study examined what can be done to minimize special education disputes between parents and schools and identify principals' skill sets to minimize special education disputes. Two concurrent Delphi studies were conducted with 16 member panels; stakeholders with familial responsibilities to children with disabilities and professional experts with responsibility to special education compliance participated. A final round exchanged findings between the panels. The study identified a list of best practices for Virginia school principals to support special education leadership and decision making. === Ed. D.
author2 Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
author_facet Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Moody, Pamela Neil
author Moody, Pamela Neil
author_sort Moody, Pamela Neil
title What Virginia Principals Should Know and Be Able to Do to Minimize Special Education Disputes Between Parents and Schools. A Delphi Study
title_short What Virginia Principals Should Know and Be Able to Do to Minimize Special Education Disputes Between Parents and Schools. A Delphi Study
title_full What Virginia Principals Should Know and Be Able to Do to Minimize Special Education Disputes Between Parents and Schools. A Delphi Study
title_fullStr What Virginia Principals Should Know and Be Able to Do to Minimize Special Education Disputes Between Parents and Schools. A Delphi Study
title_full_unstemmed What Virginia Principals Should Know and Be Able to Do to Minimize Special Education Disputes Between Parents and Schools. A Delphi Study
title_sort what virginia principals should know and be able to do to minimize special education disputes between parents and schools. a delphi study
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/47728
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