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Posted

My 10 yr. old grandson has dyslexia, and is not reading at grade level. His charter school only teaches reading 3 times a week. He has an IEP. Can he have an accommodation where he would get extra class time in learning to read?

Posted

This is going to depend largely on state law and how that's written. Does law specify how many hours/days for subjects?

If the state doesn't teach it more than your grandson needs, likely the IEP solution will be extra minutes of reading for him outside of class.

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Posted

Emily is correct that it would depend on your state standards, but I doubt there is any requirement for how many days or hours reading must be taught.  The standard will likely be what reading proficiencies are required for each grade, which will in turn dictate how much time school districts spend on reading.

So Emily is also correct that if your grandson is below grade level in reading, this is something more appropriately addressed in the IEP.  Is specific learning disability one of the areas in which he was found eligible?  If so, is he receiving special education minutes in reading?  If not, why not?  Was he not considered far enough behind?  Regardless, I would not want the extra reading time to be an accommodation - he needs specialized instruction.  An accommodation of extra reading time does not ensure the appropriate instruction is being given.

Posted
5 hours ago, Carolyn Rowlett said:

Regardless, I would not want the extra reading time to be an accommodation - he needs specialized instruction.  An accommodation of extra reading time does not ensure the appropriate instruction is being given.

The way you wrote this makes it sound even more ridiculous as an accommodation., so thanks for pointing that out.

Pure basic extra reading time without any real extra help isn't going to do much. Oh, it might help later down the road where it's appropriate to need extra time to read to learn about XYZ subject, but not when we're needing some specific reading instruction. 

Posted

Find out what the school is doing for the remedial reading instruction he should be getting via his IEP.  He needs an Orton Gillingham based remedial program that's more intense than what students in general ed are getting.  Multimodal is what works so the material is presented with reinforcement.  Wilson Reading has a protocol of 40-60 minutes of daily instruction.  Whatever program the school is using, they should also be following the protocol for that program.

Read what the IEP says.  Is the school doing what they said they would do to remediate the disability?  Look at progress reports.  Is he catching up or falling farther behind?  You want to see the gap closing at a rate where he'll be at grade level sooner rather than later.

He could have an IEP but be getting RTI/MTSS for reading if he's not far enough behind to have an IEP level of intervention.

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