William A. v. Clarksville-Montgomery Cnty. Sch. Sys.

127 F.4th 656
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 3, 2025
Docket24-5591
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 127 F.4th 656 (William A. v. Clarksville-Montgomery Cnty. Sch. Sys.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William A. v. Clarksville-Montgomery Cnty. Sch. Sys., 127 F.4th 656 (6th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 25a0025p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ WILLIAM A., a student, by and through his parents, │ E.A. and C.A., │ Plaintiff-Appellee, │ > No. 24-5591 │ v. │ │ CLARKSVILLE-MONTGOMERY COUNTY SCHOOL │ SYSTEM, │ Defendant-Appellant. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee at Nashville. No. 3:23-cv-00912—Aleta Arthur Trauger, District Judge.

Decided and Filed: February 3, 2025

Before: SUTTON, Chief Judge; KETHLEDGE and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

_________________

COUNSEL

ON BRIEF: John D. Kitch, Rebecca Wells, Demaree, CORNELIUS & COLLINS, LLP, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellant. Justin S. Gilbert, GILBERT LAW, PLC, Chattanooga, Tennessee, Jessica F. Salonus, THE SALONUS FIRM, PLC, Jackson, Tennessee, for Appellee. _________________

OPINION _________________

KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge. William A. is dyslexic and graduated from high school with a 3.4 grade-point average. Yet even then he could not read. The school now challenges an order that it provide him with compensatory education under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. We affirm the order. No. 24-5591 William A. v. CMCSS Page 2

I.

A.

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) offers federal money to states to help them educate children with disabilities. 20 U.S.C. § 1400. As a condition of accepting this money, states agree to provide disabled children with a “free appropriate public education”—one designed to meet each disabled child’s unique needs. Id. §§ 1401(29), 1412(a)(1). For each child that the IDEA covers, a “team”—including teachers, school administrators, parents, and sometimes the child himself—collaborates to develop an individualized education plan (which the Act calls an “IEP”). Id. § 1414. The IEP tailors educational services to the child’s “unique needs,” and includes goals for the child’s progress and a plan to achieve them. Bd. of Educ. v. Rowley, 458 U.S. 176, 181 (1982); 20 U.S.C. § 1414(d). At least once a year, the team meets to review the plan and make adjustments as needed. 20 U.S.C. § 1414(d). To encourage consensus, the IDEA provides for a “preliminary meeting” of team members and for mediation of disputes. Id. § 1415(f). But if those processes fail, parents may seek a “due-process hearing,” over which an impartial adjudicator from a state or local educational agency presides. Id. After the adjudicator decides, the losing party may seek redress in state or federal court. Id. § 1415(i)(2).

B.

In 2016, William A. enrolled in the Clarksville-Montgomery County School System (which we refer to as “the school”) as a fifth grader. Soon afterward, the school determined he had a learning disability that impaired his skills in reading, writing, and math. To address that disability, the school developed an individualized education plan for William. The plan included language therapy with a speech pathologist, as well as six hours per week of one-on-one instruction in reading, writing, and math. William also received several accommodations, such as additional time to take tests. Each year, the school and William’s parents reviewed his IEP and made adjustments to it; but throughout middle school his educational plan remained largely the same. So did William’s reading skills: in all three years of middle school, as to reading fluency, he tested below the tenth percentile, and he met none of his IEP’s fluency goals. No. 24-5591 William A. v. CMCSS Page 3

When William reached high school, a special-education teacher expressed concern that his IEP was not helping him to make progress. The teacher emailed school administrators and said, “This kid can’t read.” William sometimes performed well in school anyway, earning As on some assessments, along with some Fs. But he made no progress toward his IEP’s fluency goals. His IEP soon began to include additional accommodations, including the use of technology programs that read aloud printed text and helped him to write. Finally, in eleventh grade, a teacher suggested to William’s mother that he might have dyslexia. His mother asked the school to evaluate him, and a school psychologist concluded that William indeed had dyslexia.

During the winter of his eleventh-grade year, William’s parents arranged for him to receive private tutoring from a dyslexia specialist, Dr. Sarah McAfee. Unlike the instruction that William had received in school—which focused on reading fluency—McAfee’s tutoring focused on more basic skills, like alphabetic sequencing and syllable recognition. Under her tutelage, William advanced to the second step of a twelve-step program designed to help dyslexic persons learn to read. That February, McAfee recommended that William continue this program as part of his IEP for the coming year. But the school rejected that idea, proposing instead that William continue with his existing plan. Although William’s parents signed his IEP, they expressed concern (which the school recorded in the IEP) that William was not “receiving all of the supports he needs to be successful.”

In March 2023, while William was still in eleventh grade, his parents filed an administrative complaint under the IDEA. Their main claim was that the school had denied William the “free and appropriate public education” to which the IDEA entitled him. They also raised claims under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), the Rehabilitation Act, and 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

Three months later, an administrative law judge held a due-process hearing. Ten witnesses testified, among them three of William’s teachers, three school administrators, and two special-education experts, including Dr. McAfee. One of William’s expert witnesses—Kathryn Metcalf, a retired special-education administrator whom the ALJ deemed credible—testified that, at the foundation of a student’s ability to read, lie basic skills like decoding and encoding—how letters make sounds, and how sounds make words. And until a student masters these basic skills, No. 24-5591 William A. v. CMCSS Page 4

Metcalf testified, he cannot develop the advanced skills (like fluency) that were the focus of William’s IEPs. The school did not rebut any of that testimony. The ALJ also heard from Dr. McAfee, who testified that—through a program designed to help dyslexic persons learn to read—William had already made progress in developing these basic skills. The ALJ found Dr. McAfee credible also.

In the end, the ALJ reduced his inquiry to two questions: first, whether William could learn to read; and second, whether doing so required something different from what the school had offered William in his IEPs. “The answer to both questions,” the ALJ found, “is a resounding yes.” ALJ Decision, p. 38. The ALJ therefore held, in a 57-page opinion, that the school had violated William’s right to a “free and appropriate public education” under the IDEA. As compensatory education, the ALJ ordered the school to provide William with 888 hours of dyslexia tutoring from a trained reading interventionist. The ALJ also held that the school had violated William’s rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Rehabilitation Act.

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