Mary A. Castillo Sandy Martin has a...
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Mary A. Castillo
Sandy Martin has a simple goal for her 7-year-old son, Alex.
Alex is one of 30 special education students who board a bus every
morning to a school outside the Laguna Beach School District.
Although Martin is pleased that her son’s needs are met at a
school in San Juan Capistrano, she hopes that her own home district
will expand its special day class program for fourth- and
fifth-graders with Down syndrome so that her son can attend school in
Laguna. The district offers classes at El Morro Elementary for first-
through third-graders, as well as classes at Thurston Middle School
and the high school for children with less severe needs.
“Ideally, a child should go to a local school,” Martin said. “Each
time they move around, they might lose friends and you don’t want to
move these little people around too much.”
The district budgets about $3.3 million annually to develop and
monitor the progress of comprehensive, individualized education
programs for each special education student; to pay the salaries of
special day class teachers, psychologists and speech therapists; to
provide “in-district” services such as speech and language programs,
adapted physical education, the Resource Specialist Program and the
special day classes at Top of the World, El Morro, Thurston Middle
and Laguna Beach High schools; and to send students in programs
outside the district, Laguna Beach School District Supt. Theresa Daem
said.
The necessity of placing students like Alex outside the district
is not unique to Laguna, and the decision is determined by student
population as well as economics, Daem and Mary Wuertz, director of
special education and students services, said.
“It should be noted that almost every school district, despite
their size, coordinates with another district or nonpublic school to
meet some students’ needs outside district boundaries,” Wuertz said.
“The vast majority of students are served in our district.”
Two hundred eighty-four students receive some level of special
education services; 253 attend schools in the district; and 31
students have needs that cannot be meet in district programs and are
placed within the South Orange County Special Education Local
Planning Area, an umbrella organization through which state funding
is dispersed between the district and the Saddleback Valley Unified
School District.
“We’re too little to have all of the programs,” Daem said of the
Laguna district. “Parents can get frustrated with us because they
would like to see more services. We are very frustrated because we
would love to do all things for all kids.”
The district sends out 23 special education students to programs
in the local planning area, seven in nonpublic day schools outside
the local planning area and two in a residential treatment center.
The district took a big step forward this year when it started a
special day class at El Morro for first- through third-graders. Eight
students are enrolled, said Christine Wagner, special education
teacher.
“The disabilities range from autism, health needs, learning
disabilities and speech delays,” she said. “We have a little bit of
everything in here.”
The special day class is an environment for students who not only
need extra attention, but must move at a slower pace than they could
in a regular classroom, Wagner said.
“We work on the goals of their [individualized education plans]
and have lots of hands-on activities and provide very individualized
attention,” she said.
Some of her students spend part of their day in her class for
science, social studies, music or art class.
Although pleased with the success of the program, Wuertz
maintained that discussions are underway to expand it to include
preschoolers and upper-elementary students.
“We need a sufficient number of children for a class,” she said.
“Children need the opportunity for interaction.”
Economics aside, the first challenge parents face is how to get
their children into the special education system.
“There’s a joke among us parents,” said Dennis Piszkiewicz, who
serves with Martin on the Community Advisory Committee for the South
Orange County Special Education Local Planning Area. “These kids
don’t come from the factory with an operator’s manual.”
Piszkiewicz’s 13-year-old son, whom he declined to name, was
diagnosed with autism at age 3.
“We went through a number of district schools, primarily
Capistrano Unified School District,” Piszkiewicz recalled. “In the
second grade, it finally became clear to everybody -- us, the
schools, the district -- that his needs were not being served by the
program he was in.”
Children younger than 3 are taken to the Regional Center of Orange
County, where they are tested and placed in an appropriate therapy
program, Piszkiewicz said. Once the child reaches age 5, parents need
to bring him or her to the district, where the special education team
members evaluate and then create an individualized educational plan.
“Team members meet together to determine what the present levels
of the child are, the goals and objectives and what kind of services
we need to provide,” Wuertz said.
Team members include Wuertz, psychologists and therapists.
Educational plans can be as simple as adding a few modifications to a
student’s regular curriculum or an intensive program that includes a
full-range of services, she said.
“We’re here to meet every child’s needs,” Wuertz said.
Although Piszkiewicz’s son’s needs can only be met at an intensive
speech and language development center in Buena Park, he hasn’t given
up his dream.
“I hope my son will attend and receive a diploma from Laguna Beach
High School,” he said. “I think with work and time, he’ll be capable
of it.”
* MARY A. CASTILLO is a news assistant for the Coastline Pilot.
She covers education, public safety and City Hall. She can be reached
at [email protected]. Dennis Piszkiewicz is a Reel Critics
columnist for the Coastline Pilot.
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