D.E. v. Central Dauphin School District

765 F.3d 260, 2014 WL 4211153
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 27, 2014
Docket13-1294
StatusPublished
Cited by289 cases

This text of 765 F.3d 260 (D.E. v. Central Dauphin School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.E. v. Central Dauphin School District, 765 F.3d 260, 2014 WL 4211153 (3d Cir. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

FISHER, Circuit Judge.

D.E., now 23 years of age, was a minor diagnosed with a learning disability and enrolled in school in the Central Dauphin School District (“Central Dauphin”). D.E.’s parents, Maria English and Ronald Sheffy, claimed that while D.E. was enrolled in Central Dauphin he was deprived of a free appropriate public education (“FAPE”), in violation of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act 1 (“IDEA”), and that he was discriminated against based upon his various disabilities, in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act 2 (“ADA”) and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 3 (“RA”). The District Court dismissed D.E.’s IDEA claims, and later granted summary judgment in Central Dauphin’s favor as to the ADA and RA claims. For the reasons set forth below, we will affirm in part and reverse in part.

I.

A.

D.E. attended school in Central Dauphin from kindergarten to the seventh grade. 4 Prior to his entrance into the school district, D.E. was enrolled in preschool at the Capital Area Intermediate Unit (“CAIU”). There, D.E.’s parents completed an early intervention referral form for purposes of a speech/language evaluation. On that form, they indicated that D.E. had “attentional concerns.” After undergoing several evaluations, CAIU determined that D.E. was eligible for early intervention services and placed D.E. in speech and language therapy.

When D.E. began his transition into Central Dauphin in June 1995, his school file indicated that he was entering the school district with an individualized education program (“IEP”) to address his speech and language issues. In spite of that, D.E. was not placed in any specialized courses. Three months later, D.E.’s mother signed a form permitting the school district to evaluate D.E. Seven months after receiving permission, Central Dauphin conducted the evaluation. The only test conducted at that time was for speech and language therapy. The resulting comprehensive evaluation report (“CER”) and subsequent IEP thus contained only speech and language goals. The CER described D.E. as a pleasant, friendly, outgoing child who got along well *265 with other children and appeared to have self confidence. His report card for that school year, however, indicated that he was having considerable difficulty academically. By the end of his kindergarten year, he had not acquired the skills necessary to move on to the first grade and had to repeat his kindergarten year.

Within one month of the start of D.E.’s repeat kindergarten year, in approximately September of 1996, his mother initiated a request for another evaluation. The CER was completed on December 13, 1996, and identified D.E. as having a learning disability and as in need of specially designed instruction. That CER did not include recommendations for learning support services or address the “attentional concerns” raised by D.E.’s parents or any other impairments. D.E. was then placed in a learning support resource room where he received speech and language therapy. His new IEP was completed on December 17, 1996 and contained learning support goals and objectives, as well as recommendations for speech and language services. D.E.’s parents approved of these recommendations. Despite the changes in placement and services, D.E.’s teacher indicated at the end of his repeat year in kindergarten that he was still not performing academically at grade-level.

D.E. started his first-grade year at Central Dauphin in the Fall of 1997. At that time, his IEP was modified to recommend that he be placed in a full-time learning support room, which his parents approved. Following that change, however, D.E.’s behavior became more erratic. His parents, concerned by this change in behavior, obtained both wraparound services and therapeutic support staff (“TSS”) to attend school with him. D.E.’s parents continued to have concerns and, in April 1998, had D.E. evaluated by an external medical provider, Pinnacle Health Services (“Pinnacle”). Pinnacle diagnosed D.E. as having borderline retardation, extreme difficulties with visual and motor skills, and bi-polar disorder. Pinnacle administered the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (“WISC”), which measures a child’s general cognitive abilities, and ultimately recommended that D.E.’s cognitive performance be closely monitored and re-evaluated by Central Dauphin within the next year.

Central Dauphin did not reevaluate D.E. for cognitive ability, as Pinnacle had recommended, but did administer an additional Wechsler Independent Achievement Test (“WIAT”), which provides a comprehensive measure of a student’s basic scholastic skills. That evaluation report included results from the WIAT scale and Pinnacle’s WISC results. During that evaluation, Central Dauphin also determined that D.E. needed emotional support services.

D.E. entered the second grade in 1998 in a full-time learning and emotional support program. During the school year, D.E.’s second grade teacher expressed concern about whether D.E.’s TSS was necessary. The TSS was later discontinued. At some point during his second grade year, D.E. began regressing behaviorally. As a result, D.E.’s mother requested an additional evaluation. The re-evaluation was completed by D.E.’s teacher, who expressed concerns about D.E.’s academic goals and placement. D.E.’s behavioral issues increased and he was eventually diagnosed with depression. Central Dauphin did not provide D.E. with a behavior support program or conduct an additional assessment.

D.E.’s IEP was modified again in third grade to read “seriously emotionally disturbed,” a classification usually associated with mental retardation. As a result, D.E. was placed in a Life Skills Support program, which focused on providing additional support geared towards children with a *266 diagnosis of mental retardation. He was later mistakenly identified as having mental retardation. No adaptive behavior assessment was completed. D.E. remained in the Life Skills Support Program throughout the third and fourth grades. When D.E.’s mother realized D.E. was identified as mentally retarded, she filed a complaint and withdrew D.E. from the program. In response, Central Dauphin apologized to D.E.’s parents, found the designation error, fixed it, and advised D.E.’s mother of the change. Later that year, D.E. was also inaccurately found to be ineligible for other extended school year services.

In 2001, D.E.’s IEP was changed to recommend that he participate in regular education courses for his fifth-grade year, with an emphasis on his specific learning disability. The very next year, however, D.E.’s goals and the specially designed instruction regarding his behavior and social issues were dropped from the IEP without explanation. To further compound that error, D.E. was again found ineligible for extended school year services.

D.E.’s seventh grade IEP goal was to increase his math skills to a fourth-grade level. However, D.E.’s seventh-grade teacher was not trained in any research-based math instruction and she did not maintain any records demonstrating D.E.’s progress on the IEP goal.

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765 F.3d 260, 2014 WL 4211153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-v-central-dauphin-school-district-ca3-2014.