There has been considerable discussion over the past ten years over the appropriate role of testing for psychological processing disorders in the identification of specific learning disabilities. In response to two letters (one from this writer) to OSEP complaining about Maine’s requirements (1) the application of a cognitive cutoff score and (2) the identification of a psychological processing disorder be used to rule out a learning disability.

Their response to this author may be seen in its glorious brevity at: but the more substantive letter, which they had attached to my response, went to a Mr. Hugo, who apparently resides in Maine.

The major problem they found in Maine’s criteria was the same problem that is found in school systems’ who use discrepancy only or RTI only methodologies without considering the whole child and his or her needs after a comprehensive evaluation.

The federal regulations are quite specific in saying that schools must use a variety of assessments and strategies in identifying a child as disabled that they may not use a single assessment or tool in determining that a child has a disability. (Section 300.304 (b).)

As required in

§ 300.304(b), consistent with section

614(b)(2) of the Act, an evaluation must

include a variety of assessment tools

and strategies and cannot rely on any

single procedure as the sole criterion for

determining eligibility for special

education and related services

OSERS and OSEP have been consistent over the years in saying that no single procedure may be used, either.

Consistent with

§ 300.304(b) and section 614(b)(2) of the

Act, the evaluation of a child suspected

of having a disability, including an SLD,

must include a variety of assessment

tools and strategies and cannot rely on

any single procedure as the sole

criterion for determining eligibility for

special education and related services.

This requirement applies to all children

suspected of having a disability,

includi those suspected of having an

SLD. 2006 FR 46646

And again on page 46648 of the 2006 Federal Register they wrote:

As required in

§ 300.304(b), consistent with section

614(b)(2) of the Act, an evaluation must

include a variety of assessment tools

and strategies and cannot rely on any

single procedure as the sole criterion for

determining eligibility for special

education and related services

The key concern I had raised about Maine’s criteria was over the use of a cognitive score cutoff. A similar (albeit simpler) formula in Wisconsin back in the 1990’s had brought the full wrath of OSEP down on the state. Mr. Hugo, however, was apparently concerned about both the cutoff and the processing component. The keyparagraph in the Hugo letter reads:

"Therefore, OSEP construes the LDR[Maine's Multidisciplinary Team Report]as using a single assessment –here, a test of psychological processing or of cognitive functioning as the sole criterion for determining whether a child has an SLD. If this is an accurate interpretation of the LDR, it would be inconsistent with §300.304(b) for Maine to use such a form because it could result in children with SLD not being properly identified"

This may appear to be a provincial issue restricted only to Maine. However, forms drive the process. Schools in other parts of the country (e.g., in New Hampshire) that use forms similar to the LDR used in Maine may be disqualifying otherwise eligible and need students because of seemingly inflexible rules that are not rules at all.

The federal regulations have never prohibited the use of psychological processing assessments in the identification of student needs or as part of process to develop appropriate instructional strategies for a student who had already been identified. The decision as to whether that testing is needed in order to identify a child’s individual instructional needs, whether commonly related to the disability or not, as part of a comprehensive evaluation is however now in most states a matter to be decided by IEP teams on a case by case basis.

Guy