How to Read an IEP: Montana

Understanding Extended School Year & Transition Services and Planning

Montana IEP Guide: Transition Services and Plan

What are transition services and plans?

This is the part of the IEP where the team discusses the student’s plan for transitioning from high school into higher education or employment. Generally, this section is either blank or missing entirely from IEPs for younger students but, beginning at age 16, it is a required part of students’ IEPs and will appear in all high school students’ IEPs. In this section, the team has to list what the student’s goals are for after high school, how they will get there, and any transition specific services they need. It also often includes the courses a student will take throughout high school, with a list of the courses they expect to take each year and how many credits they need for graduation.

Where in the IEP are transition services and plans found?

Varies widely! You might not even see it in younger students’ IEPs. It is always labeled transition but can be literally anywhere in an IEP.

How does transition planning vary across states and districts?

So much! The placement can vary and how the questions are phrased– and whether it appears on younger students’ IEPs at all. All districts will have both evidence of transition assessments and goals for older students, but the phrasing of them can vary a lot!

What does the IDEA law say about transition planning?

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act says the IEPs need to include goals for life after high school and supports to help students get there for students who turn 15 or older during the course of their IEP. 

What IDEA says in 34 C.F.R. § 300.320(b)

(b) Transition services. Beginning not later than the first IEP to be in effect when the child turns 16, or younger if determined appropriate by the IEP Team, and updated annually, thereafter, the IEP must include—
(1) Appropriate measurable postsecondary goals based upon age appropriate transition assessments related to training, education, employment, and, where appropriate, independent living skills; and
(2) The transition services (including courses of study) needed to assist the child in reaching those goals.

This IEP comes from the Montana Office of Public Instruction. See the guidance here 

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Transition Services

Student’s Desired Post-School Activities
(In the areas of postsecondary education, vocational education, integrated employment (including supported employment), continuing and adult education, adult services, independent living or community participation):
🗹
Ned would like to go to MSU and get his degree in computer science or engineering.


Results of Age-Appropriate Transition Assessments

Training:
Sept 2020 Practice ASVAB – Ned scored 80% or above on Arithmetic Reasoning, Mechanical Comprehension, Math Knowledge, Assembling Objects. Electronics and Auto & Shop. He scored 60% on Word Knowledge. This shows he has strengths towards engineering and computer science.

Education:
From Ned’s CBA 9/2/20 – Ned could graduate for high school with distinction because of his talents in Math and science. Ned is an honors student when it comes to these areas earning high A’s. Ned has a more difficult time with reading and written expression. He tends to get in the lower C’s sometimes a D in English class. He does get better grade in his other classes because he is so determined. Ned is very intelligent and uses it to his advantage.

Employment:
Humanmetrics Personality Test (Sept 20) Ned is an INTJ (Introvert, iNtuitive, Thinking, Judging). The career fields that were suggested for this type of personality are social sciences, management and technical sciences such as computer science and engineering. This means Ned’s interests align with the type of personality that came back for him with this assessment.

Where appropriate, Independent Living Skills:
NA


Transition Services

Student’s Desired Post-School Activities
(In the areas of postsecondary education, vocational education, integrated employment (including supported employment), continuing and adult education, adult services, independent living or community participation):
🗹
Sunny want to work in a bakery or coffee shop. She also want live with her best friend Martha in an apartment.


Results of Age-Appropriate Transition Assessments

Training:
According to the Secondary Transition Assessment Visual Helper when Sunny filled out in August 2020 on the job sample application section of the assessment she was able to complete her information for name without assistance and was able to complete job preferences with assistance. However, she did not now how to complete education and work experience, these are skills she will need to acquire.

Education:
According to Sunny last CBA from teachers dated 5/18/20, she is able to read and understand text at the second and third grade level with 87% accuracy. She can identify coins and currency and is able to make change with 53% accuracy. She is receiving passing grades in all her classes. She comes to class on time and prepared. She is a joy to have in class with her bubbly personality. Staff and students are drawn to her compassion and warmth.

Employment:
According to the Student Employee Evaluation that is completed by Sunny’s GFPS staff, on August 2019 and May 2020, Sunny delivers newspapers to classrooms where there are subscriptions. When classes are in session, Sunny goes in quietly and places the paper in it’s designated slot. When the teacher is alone in the classroom and not busy, Sunny often exchanges pleasantries with the teacher. In reviewing the evaluations from August to May, you can see that Sunny has become more sure of her surroundings and confident in her abilities.

Where appropriate, Independent Living Skills:
Sunny’s parent filled out the GFPS Life Skills Inventory Aug 2020. Sunny is about to perform most of her own personal hygiene activities on her own. She does like to have her mom fix her hair. Sunny can unload the dishwasher, put her clothes away and help her mom with dusting and sweeping. She is also learning to cook more at home.

🗹 Results of age-appropriate transition assessments attached

What do I look for in the IEP to know if it is good?

These are pretty all over the place! Generally, you want to see that there was an age appropriate transition assessment where the student was asked about what they want to do after high school. You should also see measurable transition goals. These are often something like the ones in the Arizona sample IEP; “1. Kyra will meet with Vocational Rehabilitation Services before she graduates to develop a career and independent living plan. 2. Kyra will apply to rent an apartment so that she may live independently. 3. Kyra will enroll in Mohave Community College to get her basic requirements for an AA degree.” You should see that there is both a current assessment and meaningful goals related to that assessment. 

Teachers, the only thing to look for here is the student’s goal. It gives you a sense of what the student is planning after high school– which can tell you what the student is into and whether college is in the picture or not.

When and how should I get help?

It depends on who you are. If you are a parent, you have the right to show the IEP to anyone you want to get their thoughts on it– and the right to bring someone who has “knowledge or special expertise regarding the child” to the IEP meeting. To learn more about parents’ rights in IEP, visit our page on the rights hidden inside district procedural safeguards.

If you are a teacher at the school and are worried about the quality of the IEP goals, feel out the case manager. If you hit resistance, try meeting with a service provider at the school an administrator, or a special education teacher that you are more comfortable with– but try the case manager first to get a sense of what is going on.

Here is what IDEA says in 34 C.F.R. § 300.321(a)(6) about bringing people to meetings:

‘‘(vi) at the discretion of the parent or the agency,
other individuals who have knowledge or special expertise regarding the child, including related services personnel as appropriate; and
What are the disclaimers?

This website is not a lawyer or an educational advocate. Nothing on this site is, nor is intended to be, legal advice. The information here is for informational purposes only. 

If you are worried about your student or child’s IEP, please reach out to a real, live human.

Many law schools have free educational law clinics for special education. Many larger districts employ ombudsmen to bridge the gap between parents and schools. Many regions and states have parent centers that can help parents connect to other parents and find resources in their community. All of those are free, as is talking through the paperwork with a friend. Educational advocates are often paid professionals with special expertise who can also help. While we are happy to address general questions about the IDEA law or IEP process, please note that any communication via email is for informational purposes only and cannot be treated as legal advice. You can email questions to rose@spedhelper.org.

Montana IEP Guide: Extended School Year

What is extended school year (ESY)?

ESY is summer school for students with disabilities. Typically, programs will run on a half day schedule for one month over the summer– something like nine to noon, Monday to Thursday.

Qualifying for ESY is a team decision but the criteria should be whether the student will regress over summer without IEP services. 

In general, the only students who qualify for this are students with more significant needs for whom a break without school can cause significant regression. This might be a child with Autism who without the routine of school over the summer will have a lot of challenges managing in the fall or a child with really, really significant learning challenges who will regress over the summer. Only a small fraction of students typically get ESY– although any parent can request it and see what happens.

ESY is taught by whoever the district can find and generally consists of activities like making ants on a log and recess with a lot of supported communication from a speech pathologist. So don’t expect it to be like a hard hitting summer school– it’s a routine of going to school made as fun as the staff can pull off. 

Where in the IEP is ESY?

Sometimes there is an ESY box on the special factors page. If not, it can literally be anywhere in the IEP. To be annoying, most districts don’t spell out ESY and the page never states that it is extended school year. If you think your child needs it, hunt for it. If not, ignore it.

How does ESY vary across districts and states?

Extended school year is part of IDEA. That means that every single district in the United States is required to offer it. Some try to hide it and will never mention it and some will offer it readily– and some have programs so bad it is a waste of your child’s time. But all of them are legally required to have an ESY program. However, there is no rule about what ESY needs to look like, how many days per week it needs to meet, or how many hours per day. ESY has to exist under the law– but everything else from who goes to how long it is to what happens during it (other than the delivery of basic IEP services) can vary widely across districts and states. 

What does the IDEA law say about ESY?

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act says that students with disabilities should be able to receive services beyond the school year if the student needs it as part of their free and appropriate education– and districts can’t put limits on who gets ESY by things like disability category.

What IDEA says in 34 C.F.R. § 300.106: 

300.106 Extended school year services.

(a) General.
(1) Each public agency must ensure that extended school year services are available as necessary to provide FAPE, consistent with paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(2) Extended school year services must be provided only if a child’s IEP Team determines, on an individual basis, in accordance with §§300.320 through 300.324, that the services are necessary for the provision of FAPE to the child.
(3) In implementing the requirements of this section, a public agency may not—
(i) Limit extended school year services to particular categories of disability; or
(ii) Unilaterally limit the type, amount, or duration of those services.
(b) Definition. As used in this section, the term extended school year services means special education and related services that—
(1) Are provided to a child with a disability—
(i) Beyond the normal school year of the public agency;
(ii) In accordance with the child’s IEP; and
(iii) At no cost to the parents of the child; and
(2) Meet the standards of the SEA.

This IEP comes from the Montana Office of Public Instruction. See the full IEP here. 

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EXTENDED SCHOOL YEAR (ESY)

☐ Extended School Year services are not necessary for the student.
☐ Extended School Year services are necessary for the student.
☐ Determination of need for Extended School Year services will be made by: _______________________

Describe in Detail the Extended School Year Services:

What do I look for in the IEP to know if it is good?

If the child qualifies for extended school year, there needs to be a box checked on the IEP and information entered about what goals will be worked on. If you want your child to get something out of ESY, prepare to be organized. ESY teachers are almost never the regular school year case managers and ESY programs are infamously disorganized. You will want a copy of your child’s IEP and, if possible, a binder of stuff for them to work on that you can hand deliver to the ESY teacher. For real. Sometimes it takes all of ESY for the teacher to get access to the IEP. I subbed a month once and never got IEPs. I used to hand deliver all of my students’ IEPs to their ESY teachers along with every piece of work I wanted them to do over the summer– and they prayed they would do at least a fraction of it.

Note that it is up to the team if a student will qualify. The criteria is supposed to be whether a student will regress but a lot of students who regress academically over the summer will not be offered ESY– districts tend to focus on students with significant communication or social needs. If you want your student to have ESY, push for it! But you also need to know that you aren’t getting credit recovery summer school or services with your child’s case manager– you are most likely getting something much more laid back!

When and how should I get help?

It depends on who you are. If you are a parent, you have the right to show the IEP to anyone you want to get their thoughts on it– and the right to bring someone who has “knowledge or special expertise regarding the child” to the IEP meeting. To learn more about parents’ rights in IEP, visit our page on the rights hidden inside district procedural safeguards.

If you are a teacher at the school and are worried about the quality of the IEP goals, feel out the case manager. If you hit resistance, try meeting with a service provider at the school an administrator, or a special education teacher that you are more comfortable with– but try the case manager first to get a sense of what is going on.

Here is what IDEA says in 34 C.F.R. § 300.321(a)(6) about bringing people to meetings:

‘‘(vi) at the discretion of the parent or the agency,
other individuals who have knowledge or special expertise regarding the child, including related services personnel as appropriate; and
What are the disclaimers?

This website is not a lawyer or an educational advocate. Nothing on this site is, nor is intended to be, legal advice. The information here is for informational purposes only. 

If you are worried about your student or child’s IEP, please reach out to a real, live human.

Many law schools have free educational law clinics for special education. Many larger districts employ ombudsmen to bridge the gap between parents and schools. Many regions and states have parent centers that can help parents connect to other parents and find resources in their community. All of those are free, as is talking through the paperwork with a friend. Educational advocates are often paid professionals with special expertise who can also help. While we are happy to address general questions about the IDEA law or IEP process, please note that any communication via email is for informational purposes only and cannot be treated as legal advice. You can email questions to rose@spedhelper.org.

Learn More About Montana IEP Sections