section 504: the 1973 rehabilitation act

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Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act WA School Counselors’ Association Conference March 3, 2012

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Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act. WA School Counselors’ Association Conference March 3, 2012. Equal Opportunity. Nothing is more unequal than the equal treatment of unequal people... Author Unknown. Section 504 states. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Section 504:The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

WA School Counselors’ Association ConferenceMarch 3, 2012

Page 2: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Equal Opportunity

Nothing is more unequal than the equal treatment of unequal people...

Author Unknown

Page 3: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Section 504 states...

No otherwise qualified individual with a disability...Shall, solely by reason of his or her handicap, be excluded from the participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.

THIS IS THE LAW!!!

Page 4: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Discrimination

Discrimination is the exclusion from participation in, the denial of benefits of, any program or activity receiving or benefiting from federal financial assistance. Students may not be denied participation in or be denied benefit from services that are afforded non-disabled students.

Page 5: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Equal Education Opportunities

An appropriate education is a program designed to meet the individual educational needs of individuals with disabilities as adequately as the needs of non-disabled students are met

Free Appropriate Public Education!!!

Page 6: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Who are the “pure” Section 504 Students?

IDEA

Section 504 Students

Page 7: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Not IDEA Eligible?

Section 504 eligibility is not a consolation prize for students who do not qualify for special education.

Perry Zirkel, Lehigh University

Page 8: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Handicapped Persons

(1) “Handicapped persons” means any person who (i) has a physical or mental impairment which substantially limits one or more major life activities,

(ii) has a record of such an impairment, or

(iii) is regarded as having such an impairment.

OCR: Staff Memo, 1992, 19 IDELR 894

Page 9: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Major Life Activities are critical to eligibility

The major life activity piece is often the wild card in the 504-eligibility process.

MLA is probably the most misunderstood part of the eligibility rubric. These are basic functions that make us human.

Page 10: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Focus of Determining Eligibility

The basic elements that constitute a major life activity,

AND

Whether a substantial limitation is related to such an activity.

Page 11: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

What about LEARNING?

Learning is the primary emphasis in schools, BUT...

A student does not need to be substantially limited in the major life activity of learning to be eligible under Section 504:

EXAMPLE: Physical or mental impairments may substantially limit major life activities other than learning that interfere with a student’s ability to access and benefit from the school’s programs and activities. This type of impairment would trigger 504 eligibility.

Page 12: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Making Eligibility calls

Ask yourself-

Does the disability prevent the student from getting what everyone else gets?

If not, then there’s no Section 504 eligibility.

Page 13: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Substantial Limitation

Significantly restricted as to the condition, manner, or duration under which an individual can perform a particular major life activity as compared to the condition, manner, or duration under which the average person in the general population can perform the same major life activity.

29 CFR 1630.2(J)(2)

Page 14: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Determining Substantial limitations

Does an impairment substantially impact a student’s learning?

Measuring learning success is a difficult task. What does it mean to “succeed” in regular education? (not entirely clear)

Guideline: Students with learning disabilities who pass from grade to grade while functioning further and further below norms for their age are NOT succeeding in regular ed.

Page 15: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

No single formula or scale to measure substantial limitation

The determination of substantial limitation must be made on a case-by-case basis with respect to each individual student.

Page 16: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Substantial Limitation

Changes as of January 2009:

• Lower Standard: reduce the depth of analysis related to the severity of the impairment limitation. Focus on discrimination (access to services)

• Are activities limited in Condition, Duration or Manner?

Page 17: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Substantial Limitation Changes:

An impairment that substantially limits one major life activity need not limit other major life activities in order to be considered a disability.

Example: The ADA Amendment rejects the assumption that an individual who has performed well academically cannot be substantially limited in activities such as learning, reading, writing, thinking or speaking.

Page 18: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Substantial Limitations

Episodic or in Remission?

• This is a disability if it would substantially limit a major life activity when active.

• Example: Seizure disorder that is in remission.

Page 19: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Questions for 504 Building teams to use to determine eligibility

What is the nature and severity of the impairment?

What is the duration, or expected duration, of the impairment?

Does the student consistently need extended time to complete assignments?

Does the student consistently need substantial changes made to the curriculum?

Page 20: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Questions for 504 Building teams to use to determine eligibility

Does the student consistently exhibit difficulties with planning and organization?

Has the student shown a consistent downward slope in academic progress?

Has the student shown a consistent pattern of negative behaviors?

Page 21: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Major Life Activities

Previous major life activities:• Caring for oneself

• Performing manual tasks

• Seeing & hearing

• Speaking

• Breathing

• Learning and working

Page 22: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Major Life Activities Changes as of January 2009:

• Eating & Sleeping

• Walking & Standing

• Lifting & Bending

• Reading

• Concentrating

• Thinking & Communicating

Page 23: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Mitigating Measures

New Changes as of January 2009:

• Schools cannot consider the effect of mitigating measures when determining qualification.

• Examples: medication, medical supplies, equipment, prosthetics, hearing aids, mobility devices, assistive technology, etc.

Page 24: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

So, faced with these changes, how should you proceed???

1. Determine if the student has a qualifying impairment. Start there, and then move through the other aspects of the eligibility definition process.

2. Take time to learn more about the types of adaptations a student uses outside of the school environment.

3. Talk to the student and his parents about the types of adaptations he uses and for what reasons.

Page 25: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

The 504 Meeting

Part I: Examine student dataMedical or psychological reportsParent testimonyTeacher feedbackTest scores, attendance reports, grades, behavior reports, etc.

Page 26: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Is a diagnosis of ADD/ADHD enough to trigger 504 eligibility?

In a word, “No”. A medical diagnosis is only one source used in evaluating a student with an impairment or believed to have an impairment which substantially limits a major life activity.

Page 27: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Other sources to consider:

Aptitude and achievement tests Teacher recommendations Physical condition Social and cultural background Adaptive behavior

Page 28: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Common ADD/ADHD Misconceptions Misconception: Staff members may

blame a student’s lack of progress on being lazy.

Misconception: A student must fail all of his classes to receive accommodations.

Misconception: General education interventions supplant the need for accommodations.

Misconception: The student takes medication, so he doesn’t need accommodations.

Page 29: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Discipline

A handicapped student may not be suspended for more than ten days without a determination that misconduct is not caused by the disabilityThe determination is made by the same people making the Section 504 placement decisionDistrict must conduct a re-evaluationMust take into account recent evaluation data that provides an understanding of the student’s current behavior.

OCR: Long-term Suspension or Expulsion, 1988

Page 30: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Manifestation Determination

Is the student accommodation plan appropriate?Is the current placement appropriate?Was the student accommodation plan implemented?Did the disability impair the student’s understanding of the consequences of the behavior?Did the impairment limit the student’s ability to control the behavior?

Page 31: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Discipline

Include parents in the manifestation determination.The 504 team shall modify the current educational placement when the misconduct is directly caused by the disability, if appropriate, an alternative educational placement.The principal may initiate normal disciplinary procedures when the misconduct is not directly caused by the disability.

Page 32: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Substance Abuse

Current drug users are excluded from the definition of handicapped under Section 504 and the ADACurrent drug and alcohol users are subject to the same disciplinary action to the extent applied to non handicapped students for similar conduct.

OCR: Staff Memo, 1991, 17 IDELR 609

Page 33: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

References

Material from this presentation used with permission from

James F. McKethan, Ed.D.

Who’s Eligible for Section 504? A Quick-Reference Guide for Proper Placement, LRP Publications, 2010.

Page 34: Section 504: The 1973 Rehabilitation Act

Questions?

Becky BallbachEverett Public SchoolsDistrict School Counseling Program Specialist(425)[email protected]