If special education services aren’t meeting your child’s needs, what can you do? One option might be an out-of-district placement .
With this option, your district would pay for your child to attend an outside school that offers the type of help and setting your child needs. It could be a public school, a private day school, or a residential school where your child would live full time.
This isn’t something you can just choose for your child — unless you’re prepared to pay the tuition yourself. In order for your district to pay, your child’s Individualized Education Program (IEP) team must decide it’s the most appropriate program. That may happen if:
Often, schools and parents will agree that an out-of-district placement is appropriate. But sometimes there’s a dispute. You may find that you have to raise the issue at an IEP meeting yourself, and advocate for your child to get an out-of-district placement.
There are certain things the IEP team should take into account when deciding if your child should be placed out-of-district. These include:
If the school agrees to an out-of-district placement, there are things for you to consider, too. Any school your child is placed in must be able to provide the services and address the goals of the IEP. It’s a good idea to ask your district how it monitors this.
You may also need to think more about your child’s social life. Going out-of-district can leave kids with fewer chances to hang out with siblings and local friends. It can also limit their interactions with kids who don’t have learning and thinking differences.
It’s important to help your child maintain social connections at home. Participating in neighborhood sports leagues and clubs can be a great way to help kids make and keep friends, even if they’re not in school together.