The FAPE Mandate in Early Childhood Special Education:
- Free - Special education provided at public expense, under public supervision, at no cost to the parent
- Appropriate - Special education that meets the standards of the SEA; For preschool children, designed to participate in appropriate activities; Confers meaningful educational benefit in Least Restrictive Environment
- Public - Special education in an appropriate preschool, elementary school, or secondary school in the state
- Education - Special education that is provided in conformity with an individualized education program (IEP)
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act 34 CFR §§ 300.101-113
Child Find and the Special Education Process
Entry into services for preschool-aged children with disabilities occurs through a referral and evaluation process and through transition activities from early intervention services obtained as an infant or toddler.
- Transition from Early Intervention—Children ages birth through two years of age who received Early Intervention Services must have an IEP by three years of age if eligible for special education as a child with a disability. The Office of Special Education (OSEP) published a Question-and-Answer document for technical assistance information. Maine's Office of Special Services and Inclusive Education (OSSIE) oversees Part C Early Intervention for Me. Presentations include introductory information about the transition process and the transition timelines to early childhood special education.
- Referral to Early Childhood Special Education (ECSE)—the intent of Child Find activities is to identify all children who are potentially eligible for special education or early intervention services. SAUs are integral to this process, engaging in outreach activities in their community and notifying parents and providers of health, education, and social services of the availability and process for obtaining support. Notification is an active process of sharing information about the availability of screening, evaluations, and services. SAUs will make available a public method to accept referrals that includes information necessary to notify the SAU of a concern and a location to send the information.
- Eligibility for Early Childhood Special Education— Preschool-aged children with disabilities (ages three through five) suspected of having a delay must be evaluated and, if found eligible, have an Individualized Education Plan developed to meet their needs. Preschool-aged children with disabilities may be found eligible for any of the special education eligibility categories included in the IDEA definitions.
Least Restrictive Environment (LRE)
When offering a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE), IEP teams will ensure that all necessary support and services are delivered in the least restrictive environment. The educational plan that is developed by a team of educators and parents who know the child is designed to ensure access to and participation in public education opportunities if necessary to achieve IEP goals. While a child with a disability may need a service or a program, he or she is entitled to one that meets his or her needs from among a continuum of placement options—from the most restrictive (e.g., home, hospital) to less restrictive settings (e.g., self-contained, separate school) or the least restrictive classroom setting (majority of typically developing peers). As schools identify what is needed for the child to make progress in early learning skills and activities, they will use one of the defined Preschool LRE options to report what the IEP team selected as appropriate.
Access to Public and Private Preschool Programs to Receive a FAPE in the LRE
Each community offers early care and education supports in a variety of ways, they may have many or few public and or private childcare options. As SAUs begin to offer services to preschool-aged children with disabilities, it is important to remember that children must receive their IEP-designed services in the Least Restrictive Environment (LRE) with access to typically developing peers and a high-quality general education setting to obtain the most benefit. SAUs must offer services in locations from among a continuum of placement options reflecting the individual child's needs. The following settings may be options for delivering specially designed instruction and supports needed by the child:
- Public preschool is offered to four- and five-year-old children in many School Administrative Units (SAUs) across the state and is recognized in the Maine State Board of Education Rules. This setting may be used as a general education setting for preschool-aged children with disabilities; however, while many SAUs offer public PreK programs, it is not universal. Those SAUs who offer it must follow Chapter 124 of the Department of Education Rules. The rules reference the amount of time public preschool is to be offered:
- Instructional time for public preschool programs shall be a minimum of 10 hours per week for 35 weeks and shall not include rest time. Public preschool programs shall be scheduled within the 175 school days that the school administrative unit has designated as instructional time, but they do not have to use all days, allowing flexibility as to the number of days per week. Extended public preschool program Day: A school administrative unit is encouraged to schedule public preschool for more than 10 hours per week to improve child outcomes and to reduce the risk of later school failure.
- Private preschool programs, or childcare, offer additional locations in which special education services may be delivered. The minimum expectation is that the childcare setting be licensed by the Child Care Licensing Board under the Department of Health and Human Services.
- Head Start Programs, Title I Preschool Programs, CTE programs, University Lab School programs, programs that receive child care subsidies, and SAU Kindergarten classrooms are all options that may be considered when determining locations for serving preschool-aged children with disabilities.
- More restrictive settings might include options to attend all or part of a day in Special Purpose Preschool Programs, Self-contained classrooms in SAUs, Home settings, hospitals, and state-approved private programs (e.g., Maine Educational Center for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing).
Preventing Suspensions and Expulsions
Efforts to change the frequency of suspensions, expulsions, and disciplinary removals of preschool age children with disabilities have been highlighted by the US Department of Education, the Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP), the Maine Department of Education, Maine Office of Special Services and Inclusive Settings (OSSIE), Head Start, and many other state and local early care and education groups. Strategies to focus on the prevention of suspensions, expulsions and disciplinary removals are encapsulated in Guiding Principles for Creating Safe, Inclusive, Supportive, and Fair School Climates.
Presentation: Challenging Behaviors in Early Childhood Special Education
Achieving Programmatic Results
Access to quality educational settings and participation in early care and education programs for preschool aged children with disabilities is designed to confer educational benefit. The role of the SAU is to ensure programs support the development of preschool aged children with disabilities to demonstrate age expected skills and behaviors. Children in early childhood special education programs are assessed at the beginning and at the end of their programming time to capture this development using the Child Outcomes Summary (COS) process. The Child Outcomes Summary (COS) process is a federally mandated activity designed to gauge effective programming and achievement of children’s age expected development. COS professional development opportunities to build ECSE provider capacity is available on demand. SAUs will conduct the COS process as children enter and exit the program and report outcomes data to the Office of Special Services and Inclusive Education (OSSIE). Once programs are collecting and reporting data, the next step is to evaluate the results, and then identify areas of strength and needs. Evaluating Implementation of Evidence-based Practices Webinar | DaSy Center can support transitioning to a focus of increasing use of evidence-based practices that can result in improved outcomes.