Springdale School District v. Grace

494 F. Supp. 266, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14584
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedJuly 25, 1980
DocketCiv. 80-5017
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 494 F. Supp. 266 (Springdale School District v. Grace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springdale School District v. Grace, 494 F. Supp. 266, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14584 (W.D. Ark. 1980).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

PAUL X WILLIAMS, District Judge.

In this case, the plaintiff, Springdale School District Number 50 of Washington *267 County, Arkansas, seeks a holding that the appropriate education for Sherry Grace, a handicapped child, is provided at the Arkansas School for the Deaf instead of the Springdale Public School. The defendants, Albert Grace, Joann Grace, individually and as guardian ad litem for Sherry Grace, have counterclaimed seeking an injunction requiring the plaintiff to hire a special teacher qualified to teach Sherry Grace and to institute a summer program to make up the educational deficiencies they contend occurred during the 1979-80 school term while their child attended the Springdale Elementary School.

Subject matter jurisdiction exists under 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2) and (4).

Sherry Grace was born to Albert and Joann Grace on January 19, 1970. The Graces lived in Washington County, Arkansas. During Sherry’s early infancy, she suffered from various ear infections and related problems. When she was two years old, her parents discovered that she was profoundly deaf, having either been born deaf or having lost her hearing before she developed speech. Sherry has a 95% loss of hearing which renders her completely deaf for all intents and purposes.

Sherry received no formal education or training in communication before the age of four. When she was four years old, she was enrolled in the Bates Elementary School in Fayetteville, Arkansas, which had a special program for children with hearing impairment. She lived with her parents in Springdale, Arkansas.

The Bates program for the hearing impaired was designed for children who retain some hearing (hard of hearing children) and not for the profoundly deaf. If a person is merely hard of hearing, he can be orally instructed, although amplification may be necessary. A hard of hearing person may more easily be taught lip reading and other skills which are designed to implement the hearing that exists. A person who is profoundly deaf can only visually receive information. If one is profoundly and prelingually deaf, he lacks the concept of language and must not only receive visual instruction, but also must be taught the most rudimentary matters concerning language. Because Sherry Grace is profoundly and prelingually deaf, the Bates program, geared to hard of hearing children, was inadequate and she made little or no progress after two years at the Bates school. Her language level was that of a child of two years and two months.

Unlike other handicaps, profound prelingual deafness renders the person extremely isolated. Hearing humans rely almost exclusively on oral communication until they learn to read and write, and if untrained in sign language, can convey only the simplest ideas through gestures and signals. A profoundly deaf child who has not learned to read usually learns nothing other than those matters which a normal prelingual child of one or two years would know. A profoundly deaf person can effectively communicate with no one when he leaves the presence of one trained in sign language.

Even though Sherry Grace has an above normal intelligence, by the age of six she had learned very little. Her parents had not taken any training in sign language and the Bates program did not provide the visual teaching method required.

When Sherry was six years old, she and her parents moved to Little Rock, Arkansas, so that Sherry could attend the Arkansas School for the Deaf as a day student. The Deaf School accepts only profoundly deaf students and its programs are designed for those persons who can only receive information visually. The School for the Deaf teaches the total communication system, a method of visual communication encompassing signing, fingerspelling, visual clues, touching and mouthing. There were approximately 285 students attending the Arkansas School for the Deaf. Sherry learned some total communication skills and for the first time in her life could communicate with her teachers and her fellow students. The School also urged parents of their students to learn total communication so that they could communicate with their children. Mrs. Joann Grace attended a few classes and learned some sign language; Mr. Albert Grace did not.

*268 Sherry Grace attended the School for the Deaf for three years while living with her parents in Little Rock. While there, she progressed from having a language level of a two-year, two-month old child to being able to read at the 2.5 grade level. Because she was able to communicate with others and participate in the life of the school, Sherry’s confidence and social ability also developed.

At the end of Sherry’s third school year at the Deaf School, Mr. and Mrs. Grace decided they wanted to move from Little Rock to Springdale, Arkansas. They found Little Rock more expensive and a financial hardship even though they were self-supporting. They also wanted to be near their parents and wanted Sherry to be able to spend more time with her grandparents. When the Graces told the Deaf School of their plans to move to Springdale and to enroll Sherry in the Springdale public school system, Sherry’s teachers tried to explain the necessity of keeping Sherry enrolled in the School for the Deaf, even if it involved her becoming a residential student. The school urged that removing Sherry from the Deaf School would not only hinder Sherry’s academic progress, but also would isolate her from meaningful social encounters.

The Graces moved to Springdale and enrolled Sherry in the fourth grade at the Springdale Elementary School. The school tested Sherry, and after consultation with her parents, formulated an individual educational plan (IEP).

The IEP developed by the Springdale school noted that Sherry should be taught by a certified teacher of the deaf, one who employs total communication and who could teach it to Sherry. The IEP also reflected that Sherry lacked the skills in reading, spelling and arithmetic of the average fourth grader, and her general knowledge was below level. The school’s IEP stated that the Arkansas School for the Deaf in Little Rock was the proper school to meet Sherry’s special needs.

The Graces disputed that Sherry should be sent to the Arkansas School for the Deaf, but otherwise agreed with the school’s assessment of Sherry’s needs. A temporary IEP was developed which governed Sherry’s education at Springdale. Under the temporary IEP, Sherry remained in the class with non-handicapped fourth graders, but would go to the Resource Room for approximately two hours each day to receive special instruction and speech therapy.

Because Mr. and Mrs. Grace disagreed with the original IEP developed by the Springdale school, they sought review. After proper notices and pre-hearing conferences, a due process hearing was held on November 7, 1979. The hearing officer held that the Springdale School District was wrong and that the Arkansas School for the Deaf was not the most appropriate placement for Sherry. The Springdale School District appealed and the appeals officer affirmed, holding that Sherry Grace should be educated within northwest Arkansas so that she could live with her parents.

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Bluebook (online)
494 F. Supp. 266, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springdale-school-district-v-grace-arwd-1980.