ADAMS BY ADAMS v. Hansen

632 F. Supp. 858, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14705
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedOctober 21, 1985
DocketC-85-3089 RFP
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 632 F. Supp. 858 (ADAMS BY ADAMS v. Hansen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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ADAMS BY ADAMS v. Hansen, 632 F. Supp. 858, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14705 (N.D. Cal. 1985).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

PECKHAM, Chief Judge.

BACKGROUND

This action involves a dispute about the appropriate education for Andrew Adams. Andy is a fifth-grade student who resides within the geographical boundaries of the Napa Valley Unified School District (“NVUSD” or “District”). He is nearly twelve years old, and was enrolled in District schools for six years. During that time, he repeated Kindergarten and third grade. He was identified at the end of the second grade as an individual with exceptional needs entitled to special education and related services under federal and state law. Andy is of average intelligence, but has a learning disability, specifically identified as “specific language disability,” but more commonly referred to as dyslexia.

During his two years in the third grade, Andy was enrolled in a regular class, and had an “individualized education program” (“IEP”) that called for daily contact with a resource specialist. From September 1982 through March 1984, he was pulled out of his regular class for up to sixty minutes a day to work with the resource specialist or an aide. In March 1984, pursuant to his mother’s request for more intense services, he began to work with the resource special *861 ist or aide for up to ninety minutes each day.

In Spring 1984, the parties met to discuss Andy’s placement for the 1984-85 school year. In response to Susan Adam’s request that her son be offered a non-public placement, the District suggested that she visit some of the special day classes within the district. The District also agreed to send district personnel to the Charles Armstrong School, a school that Mrs. Adams believed would provide her son with an appropriate education. Plaintiff visited Alta Heights School and later visited El Centro School. District personnel visited the Charles Armstrong School. By June 12, 1984, the parties had not resolved the issue of Andy’s placement.

On June 20, 1985, Susan Adams unilaterally enrolled Andy in the Charles Armstrong School. She did not attend a meeting scheduled with district personnel on that day. On September 18, 1985, Mrs. Adams filed for a due process hearing, and mediation between the parties began.

During the mediation process, the parties reached agreement on all issues within the IEP, except the issue of when the plan would begin — i.e., when Andy would return to the District. A due process hearing was held, and the state hearing officer found that the District’s proposed placement was appropriate. Plaintiffs seek review of that decision pursuant to section 615(e) of the Education of the Handicapped Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e).

FINDINGS OF FACT

The crux of the controversy is whether the District has an appropriate placement for Andy. There are several collateral issues that are important if the District has such a placement. The court will consider those first.

A. Mrs. Adams Unilateral Decision to Place Andy at the Charles Armstrong School

Defendants contend that the Susan Adams was not justified in removing her son from the District and unilaterally placing him in the Charles Armstrong School. They assert that, although Andy was progressing in the Resource Specialist (RS) Program, he was offered a special-day-class (“SDC”) placement in the Spring of 1984. Defendants also assert that the IEP process was prematurely aborted by Susan Adams, depriving them of an opportunity to place Andy in a class where he could get an appropriate education.

Mrs. Adams, on the other hand, contends that the District had only recommended that Andy continue in the RS Program. Since she believed that the RS Program had not been productive for Andy, Mrs. Adams felt that it was necessary for her to place him elsewhere. She states that Andy was not offered an SDC placement until mediation in November 1985. Her testimony is corroborated by that of Ernest Wing, her advocate at the IEP meetings.

Upon a review of the testimony at the due process hearing and at trial, the court finds that the testimony of District witnesses is inconsistent, contradictory, and plagued by lapses in memory. It therefore resolves these disputed factual issues in favor of the more consistent and credible testimony of . Susan Adams and Ernest Wing. Based on this testimony, and on consideration of assessment materials, offered by both sides, the court finds: (1) that Andy did not make sufficient academic progress in the. two years that he was in the RS Program; (2) that in spite of Andy’s lack of progress in the RS program, it was the program recommended by the District on June 12, 1985; and (3) that the District did not recommend an SDC placement until after Andy had been enrolled in the Charles Armstrong School.

1. Ineffectiveness of Resource Specialist Program

The ineffectiveness of the Resource Specialist Program is illustrated by Andy’s lack of progress during the two years that he was in third grade. As measured, by the Woodcock-Johnson battery of tests, Andy’s academic growth over a period of 20 months was only 4 months in total reading, *862 and 8 months in math. When the same test was administered at the beginning of Andy’s second year at the Charles Armstrong School, it indicated that Andy’s growth in reading was more than 2 years for a similar period of time. This dramatic increase in Andy’s academic rate of growth makes it clear that his prior lack of growth was due to the ineffectiveness of the RS Program.

The District offers Stanford Achievement Test (“SAT”) scores as evidence that Andy made tremendous growth during the two years in third grade. Those scores suggest that Andy’s growth in the first year of third grade was more than a year in reading and more than 2 years in both math and listening. His growth in the second year of third grade is shown to be almost 2 years in reading, more than a year in math, and 6 months in listening. The SAT scores show Andy as working above-grade level in all of these areas.

The SAT scores are contradicted by scores from other tests that are more consistent with each other, see Joint Exhibit 34; with the decision to keep Andy in third grade for an extra year; and with Andy’s third-grade teacher’s continued reservations, even after his second year in third grade, about his readiness for fourth grade. Moreover, Andy was measured against average third graders; and the District was unáble to provide testimony that explained the effect of Andy’s age and the extra year in third grade on the validity of the test scores. Plaintiff’s expert witnesses, Arlee Maier and Ernest Wing, both testified that those factors would inflate the SAT scores. District personnel also indicated that other assessments, reflecting below-grade level achievement, were more accurate. See 3 Hearing Transcript 36 [hereinafter HT]; 5 HT 142; id at 180.

2. Placement Recommended by the District

Even during the due process hearing, the District had a great deal of trouble keeping track of what it was and was not offering or recommending for Andy in terms of placement.

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632 F. Supp. 858, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-by-adams-v-hansen-cand-1985.