Attention Parents: We Need Your help!
If you have a child who receives special education services, you’ve probably received a copy of a psychological report on your child. If you are like most parents, you had Continue Reading →
Special Education Law and Advocacy
If you have a child who receives special education services, you’ve probably received a copy of a psychological report on your child. If you are like most parents, you had Continue Reading →
Autism Unbound welcomes Wrightslaw to Greensboro, NC on Monday, March 13, 2017. The $50 conference fee includes morning refreshments, a Wrightslaw highlighter pen and the three Wrightslaw books which retail Continue Reading →
In TImothy O. v. Paso Robles (May 2016), Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Reinhardt reverses the District Court decision in a decisive win for the parents. In his opinion, Continue Reading →
The school was writing off my child. They were doing as little as possible to educate her properly. I thought I was going to lose my mind trying to deal Continue Reading →
(Posted on Pete Wright’s Facebook page, January 29, 2017). I think it’s likely that Judge Neil Gorsuch of the Tenth Circuit will be nominated as the next Justice on the Continue Reading →
On January 10, we were happy to announce a new publication in the Wrightslaw Store. A Guide to Helping Your Child at Home: Developing Foundational Skills in Reading and Writing Continue Reading →
This Wrightslaw Special Education Law and Advocacy Conference, a Wrightslaw training program featuring Pete Wright, Esq., is being sponsored by Kirsch-Goodwin & Kirsch, PLLC and Parent Support Arizona. The conference Continue Reading →
A clinical psychologist diagnosed my child with an executive functioning disorder. The school team says he is not eligible for special education. Is this true? The term “executive functioning” describes Continue Reading →
Update: On March 22, 2017, the Supreme Court in Endrew v. Douglas County unanimously rejects the “de minimis” standard for one that “is markedly more demanding than the ‘merely more Continue Reading →
On November 17, 2015 in Q.W. v. Board of Education of Fayette County, Kentucky the Sixth Circuit upheld a District Court decision which concluded that a child with autism lost Continue Reading →
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