Karen kicks off a multi-part series on must-know guidance letters from the U.S. Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP). Today’s focus: the Dec 20, 2013 letter about twice-exceptional (2e) students and how states may—and may not—determine Specific Learning Disability (SLD) eligibility under IDEA.
What you’ll learn:
- Why high cognition does not disqualify a student from IDEA eligibility.
- The two-part test for IDEA eligibility (impairment + need for special education/related services).
- The 2004 IDEA reauthorization changes that matter (ESY, transition, removal of severe discrepancy requirement).
- What states must permit (RTI/response to scientific, research-based interventions) and what they must not require(a severe discrepancy).
- “Cut scores” and why one test or single metric cannot be the sole criterion.
- The nine academic areas (incl. dyslexia/reading domains) used when considering SLD.
- How to use the letter in meetings (and get it into deliberations) when schools say “the numbers are the numbers.”
- Why district “policies” can’t narrow federal rights—and how to ask for the actual board policy.
Quote to remember: “We don’t educate to please the adults in the room—we educate to meet the needs of the child.”
👉 Join ongoing trainings in The Academy
https://www.skool.com/special-education-academy/about
✨ When we get it right for the child, we get it right for everybody. ✨
👩⚖️ Hosted by Karen Mayer Cunningham, Advocate & Special Education Boss®
Each week, Karen shares real stories, legal insights, and no-nonsense strategies to help you navigate special education with clarity and confidence.
👉 Subscribe & never miss an episode — new episodes drop every week!
🎓 Join The Academy: Weekly live trainings + 250+ hours of advocacy tools & expert resources
🔗 Learn more at The Academy
📬 Have a question? Email us at advocate@specialeducationacademy.com
📱 Follow Karen on:
- TikTok & Instagram: @specialeducationboss
- YouTube: Special Education Academy
🧠 Want to level up your advocacy game?
Check out the Advocate's Bookshelf — a curated collection of must-have tools, guides, and legal references every special education advocate should own. From federal code to diagnostic manuals, these are the essentials that help you advocate with clarity and confidence.
📚 Browse now: https://amzn.to/3RiQPLl
(As an Amazon Associate, Karen may earn a small commission if you make a purchase — at no extra cost to you.)
...