ADE 1 Practice Test

Session length

1 / 20

What is due process in the context of special education?

Procedures to challenge decisions about identification, evaluation, IEP, placement

Due process in special education means the formal safeguards and procedures required to ensure fair decision-making about a child’s identification, evaluation, IEP, and placement. It ensures parents and students have a voice, timely notices, informed consent for evaluations, access to records, and the opportunity to participate in meetings. When disagreements arise, there are structured avenues like mediation and due process hearings to resolve them, rather than relying on informal conversations or votes. The aim is to protect the child’s rights and ensure decisions are made with transparency and fairness, through a recognized process rather than no process at all.

A simple informal meeting

Public vote on IEP

No process required

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