Just how much benefit must a student receive through special education to meet the goals of the key federal law?
Four decades after the passage of what was to become the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, the U.S. Supreme Court plans to take up that question in Endrew F. v. Douglas County School District.
Experts in special education law say the court鈥檚 decision could mean as much to educators as the landmark case Rowley v. Hendrick Hudson Central School District, which in 1982 defined the central question of special education law: What is a 鈥渇ree, appropriate public education?鈥
Endrew F. 鈥減otentially will be as important as Rowley to shape what we do in special education for years to come,鈥 said Antonis Katsiyannis, the president of the Council for Exceptional Children and a professor at Clemson University with a focus on special education law. "[It鈥檚] very exciting to have the Supreme Court addressing the meaning of [free, appropriate education] again.鈥
鈥楳eaningful鈥 vs. 鈥楽ome鈥
In Rowley, the Supreme Court said that the IDEA requires instruction that is 鈥渞easonably calculated to enable the child to receive educational benefit.鈥 The court intentionally declined to say just how much benefit would be adequate. "[C]ourts must be careful to avoid imposing their view of preferable educational methods upon the states,鈥 Chief Justice William Rehnquist wrote for the six-justice majority.
But lower courts have grappled with that question and come up with different terms. Should the educational benefit to students be 鈥渕eaningful鈥? Are schools required to offer just 鈥渟ome鈥 benefit? Or can the standard be met if educational benefits are little more than trivial?
That鈥檚 the question that the newer case is intended to answer.
Endrew, called 鈥淒rew鈥 in court briefs, is now a 17-year-old student with autism living in suburban Denver. In 2010, his parents pulled him out of the 66,000-student Douglas County district because they said he wasn鈥檛 making any meaningful educational progress in public school. The parents argued that the district should be required to pay for Drew鈥檚 private school tuition.
An administrative-law judge, a federal district judge, and the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals all decided against the parents. The appeals-court ruling in August 2015 said that Drew was gaining 鈥渟ome鈥 educational benefit from his individualized education program. Referring to an earlier case in the same circuit, the court also said the IDEA requires that special education only offer a more than 鈥渄e minimis,鈥 or trivial, benefit.
While the parents lost at the lower-court levels, they gained a powerful supporter when they appealed to the Supreme Court鈥攖he federal government.
鈥淣o parent or educator in America would say that a child has received an 鈥榓ppropriate鈥 or a 鈥榮pecially suitable鈥 or 鈥榩roper鈥 education 鈥榠n the circumstances鈥 when all the child has received are benefits that are barely more than trivial,鈥 wrote the U.S. solicitor general鈥檚 office, urging the Supreme Court to take the case. 鈥淭hat is particularly true when a child is capable of achieving much more.鈥
The 10th Circuit Court is among several that have said educational benefits under special education need be only more than trivial, the solicitor general鈥檚 brief said. Other circuits, however, have stated that educational benefits must be 鈥渕eaningful,鈥 a more robust standard. That is a disagreement that only the U.S. Supreme Court can resolve, the solicitor general鈥檚 brief says.
Setting a Standard
Paula Hans, a spokeswoman for the Douglas County district, said in a statement that 鈥渋t would be inappropriate to discuss the specifics of the case while it is still being litigated, but the court鈥檚 decision is not a decision on the merits, and we look forward to addressing the issues before the court.鈥
Ronald Wenkart, the general counsel for the Orange County education department in California, explored those differing circuit-court standards in a 2009 article for West鈥檚 Education Law Reporter. Some circuits have at times used both 鈥渕eaningful educational benefit鈥 and 鈥渟ome educational benefit,鈥 his paper says, leaving even the judges in those circuits questioning the ambiguity.
The impact of the high court鈥檚 decision could rest on how broadly the justices decide to interpret the question, Wenkart said in an interview.
鈥淭hey could set a standard and explain what the standard is,鈥 Wenkart said, a move that he believes would lead to more harmonious meetings between parents and school officials. Conflicts over educational progress currently arise all the time, he said.
鈥淭his actually might be better for the courts to decide. Congress could add to the law, but that鈥檚 probably going to be a huge political fight. I don鈥檛 know if Congress could actually agree,鈥 Wenkart said.
Having the Conversation
Kathleen Sullivan, the chief counsel for the Colorado Association of School Boards, agrees that the case is significant, because there are only a 鈥渉andful of Supreme Court cases interpreting the law.鈥 However, Sullivan said she doesn鈥檛 see the conflict among the circuits that the parents have alleged.
鈥淪chool districts across the country really talk about providing a free, appropriate public education to students with disabilities and do not talk about there being a higher or lower standard in certain jurisdictions,鈥 she said.
She also noted that Congress has amended the special education law several times since Rowley was decided in 1982. 鈥淚f Congress wanted to tell the Supreme Court that it was wrong in Rowley, Congress knows how to do so, and it hasn鈥檛,鈥 she said.
Jack D. Robinson, the lawyer representing the parents, said he has two objectives in the suit: first, to convince the high court that the IDEA requires more than trivial educational progress; and second, 鈥渢o articulate a coherent standard to the Supreme Court for them to adopt and flesh out and for the nation to apply.鈥
鈥淲hat are we investing these millions and millions of dollars on? Are we serving the purpose of the IDEA by requiring some meaningful benefit in light of the child鈥檚 potential?鈥 Robinson asked. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important, regardless of the outcome, to have this conversation.鈥