In 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its opinion in Endrew F. v. Douglas County School District, 580 U.S. ___, 137 S.Ct 988, 197 L. Ed. 2d 335 (2017). In a unanimous opinion authored by Chief Justice Roberts, the Supreme Court held that to meet its legal obligation under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), “a school district must offer the special needs student an Individualized Education Plan (IEP) that is reasonably calculated to enable a child to make progress appropriate in light of the child’s circumstances.” Id. at 14-15, 16.

The court emphasized that, in dealing with a special-needs child who is not mainstreamed, “the goals may differ” from those for a child in a regular education curriculum. Id. at 14. Nonetheless, “every child should have a chance to meet challenging objectives.” Id. Moreover, the court held that while a primary standard for a fully included student may involve the child “progressing smoothly through the regular curriculum,” a different circumstance exists when a child is not fully included. Id. In such instances, school officials must look to the disabled child’s unique needs to develop an IEP that is “pursuing academic and functional advancement.” Id. at 11.

Further, in a statement of interpretation dated Dec. 7, 2017, the U.S. Department of Education announced that “(t)he Endrew decision is important because it informs our efforts to improve academic outcomes for children with disabilities.” Accordingly, Endrew arguably raises the legal bar for school districts in meeting their responsibilities for overseeing the preparation of IEP plans for students with autism spectrum disorder.

Under the spirit of Endrew, IEP plans must logically be approached and prepared with a constructive, creative and reasonably expansive mindset in order to meet a student’s needs, with more than “de minimus” progress in mind. In this respect, a post-Endrew IEP plan for a special-needs student may reasonably involve: (a) developing meaningful objectives which (b) are challenging to an individual student, in terms of (c) addressing both academic and functional needs of the student as underscored by the court itself.

For certain, functional advancement means something beyond mere academic advancement. Otherwise, there may have been no need for the court to include the qualifying words “and functional” after the word “academic.” These terms are expansive enough to include countless different potential components of meaningful IEP plans, which are designed to educationally and functionally assist a special-needs child on the path to adulthood.

Because of the inherently broad scope of the term “functional,” as set forth in the context of a remedial Supreme Court decision, parents, school personnel, lawyers and judges may be analyzing and debating the meaning of this term under Endrew for years or decades to come. Applying logic and common sense, however, a reasonable person may reasonably conclude that, as a matter of law and social policy, Endrew expands the lens of focus in a pro-child manner upon not only the child’s academic progress, but also the child’s non-academic, functional progress and the need, when applicable, to improve a child’s social skills to help meet long-term “challenging objectives” of possibly achieving future independence and employability following graduation.

Since an IEP is an individualized education plan, each plan must be uniquely designed and tailored to appropriately fit each child’s needs. While sometimes overlooked in the IEP process, an underlying goal and purpose of any IEP, when possible, is “to prepare students for further education, employment and independent living.” 300 C.F.R. 300.1. Hence, in preparing a child with special needs for the possibility of future employment and independent living, the focus must often logically be as much on a child’s social deficits and challenges as on purely academic ones.

As expressly noted by the Supreme Court in Endrew, autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder generally marked by various behavioral components, including impaired social and communicative skills. Id. at 6. Further, under the DSM-5 for neurodevelopmental disorders, autism spectrum disorder includes deficits in social communication and interaction, and restrictive repetitive behaviors, interests and activities. Social communication deficits are particularly prevalent with children who have what was until relatively recently called “Asperger Syndrome” — or “Asperger’s”— and which is more currently referred to as “ASD- Level 1” or a high functioning level of autism. Some students with ASD-1 may perform exceptionally well in mainstream scholastic settings and may even achieve test scores and grades which far exceed their non-disabled peers. Notwithstanding such academic success, however, the social deficits that often accompany ASD-1 can, in certain instances, seriously obstruct a child’s ability to successfully obtain or maintain a job later in life.

While academics are certainly important in the realm of special education, social skills are often at least as important—if not even more important—for long-term goals such as the child’s future employability and independence. If a student has academic challenges but strong social skills, he or she may possibly have a greater chance of obtaining and maintaining long-term meaningful employment than a student with strong academic performances but very poor social skills. Yet, time and time again, child study teams and other applicable school personnel often move a child with ASD-1 and severe social challenges through the scholastic system without adequate supports to meet the child’s social needs, simply because the student has achieved good grades and performed well on standardized tests designed and used to measure academic progress. In such a situation, a child may fly under the radar of available intervention for years, while receiving little or none of the training in social skills that might be very relevant and beneficial in helping the child on the road to potential independence.

While an advancement from grade to grade may be appropriately ambitious for a child in a regular classroom setting, the Endrew court explicitly cautioned that this concept “should not be interpreted as an inflexible rule.” Id. at 14, note 2. Rather, the court expressly declined to hold that every special-needs child who is advancing from grade to grade is automatically receiving a free and appropriate education. As Endrew noted, an IEP is not a form document, but is “constructed only after careful consideration of the child’s present levels of achievement, disability, and potential for growth.” Id. at 12. Such consideration may then be utilized to create an educational program that is “appropriately ambitious” in light of the circumstances, and which allows the special-needs student to strive for challenging objectives and goals. Id. at 14. The adequacy of an IEP turns on the unique circumstances of the child for whom it was created. Id. at 16.

Accordingly, while Endrew factually focuses upon a student with autism who was placed outside of a mainstreamed, regular education setting, the ambitious spirit of the opinion arguably applies, on an educational basis, to addressing the challenging academic and social needs of students with high-functioning autism who may in fact be placed in mainstreamed classrooms, but who nonetheless may still critically suffer from major social deficits and challenges which need to be appropriately addressed as part of a functional IEP plan. The overlooking or glossing over of such social components of the disorder in educational planning may severely undermine the express purpose of the IDEA in helping prepare such students for future education, employment and independent living if possible.

Programs with an intense focus on the enhancement of social skills may be highly appropriate under Endrew as part of the “challenging objectives” for consideration by parents and school districts in the formulation of an appropriate IEP plan. In the context of developing post-Endrew IEP plans for children with autism and other ASD-related disabilities, there is often a very legitimate need to place social skills on as important a level as academic skills. Historically, there has been an overwhelming focus in the plan on academics, but comparatively less focus on specific plans, exercises and goals relating to the child’s need for developing and/or improving social skills. Further, some IEPs address the issue of social skills in an overgeneralized manner, without any specific, detailed plan, such as how such improvement is designed to take place, or how success will be incrementally measured over time, or who will be doing the measuring and analysis of progress, or the possible need for periodic adjustments of an ongoing program in order to reach certain milestones and goals.

Some academic traditionalists or purists take the position that education in school is supposed to be primarily about academics, and that ancillary concerns such as “socialization” are of secondary importance. Given the purpose of our special education laws and policies, however, such a viewpoint is arguably out of step with the expansive spirit of Endrew itself. In fact, there is an often overlooked, or unknown, federal regulation found at 34 C.F.R. 300.320(a)(4), which supports the concept that, when possible, an IEP is to be designed to help enable the child to not only advance appropriately toward annual goals, and to be involved in and make progress in the general education curriculum, but also to participate in extracurricular and other nonacademic activities, with other children , with and without disabilities. Accordingly, in creating an appropriate IEP plan, the federal regulations to IDEA support consideration and focus on not only the student’s academic needs, but on non-academic and social needs as well.

By intensifying focus on a child’s academic and social needs in creating a functional IEP, educators and parents can jointly strive to improve the quality of services provided to many children with autism in a more expansive manner, consistent with the ambitious spirit of Endrew itself.

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