The Case About AmyTemple University Press, 2010 M06 30 - 344 páginas The Rowley family's struggle began when Amy entered kindergarten and culminated five years later in a pivotal decision by the U.S. Supreme Court. In effect, the Court majority concluded that the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act did not mandate equal opportunity for children with disabilities in classes with typical children; a disappointing decision for disability advocates. The Supreme Court decided that schools were required only to provide enough help for children with disabilities to pass from grade to grade. The Court reversed the lower courts' rulings, which had granted Amy an interpreter, setting a precedent that could affect the quality of education for all individuals with disabilities. From the time Amy entered kindergarten in Peekskill, New York, her parents battled with school officials to get a sign language interpreter in the classroom. Nancy and Clifford Rowley, also deaf, struggled with officials for their own right to a communications process in which they could fully participate. Stuck in limbo was a bright, inquisitive child, forced to rely on partial lipreading of rapid classroom instruction and interaction, and sound amplifiers that were often broken and always cumbersome. R.C. Smith chronicles the Rowley family's dealings with school boards, lawyers, teachers, expert consultants, advocates, and supporters, and their staunch determination to get through the exhaustive process of presenting the case time after time to school adjudicative bodies and finally the federal courts. The author also documents his own "coming to awareness" about how the "able" see the "disabled." In the series Health, Society, and Policy, edited by Sheryl Ruzek and Irving Kenneth Zola. |
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... received another $ 5,000 in grants from the Mary Riddle Duke Foundation in Durham , North Car- olina . These grants provided psychological and economic boosts during a difficult period in the project . My deep gratitude for this ...
... receiving an " appropriate " education under terms of the Education for All Handicapped Children Act . Rowleys appeal to the New York State Commissioner of Education . XV Legal Chronology April 1979 State commissioner of education ...
... receiving an appropriate education from the Hen- drick Hudson Central School District , December 1979 Judge rules ... receiving an appropriate education without the sign language interpreter . Majority decision holds that chil- dren with ...
... received an equal opportunity through her education . Based on the language of the dissents , then , Amy was getting either much less or much more out of her educational opportunity than Congress had required . And Congress either had ...
... receiving federal money . Lobbied zealously , Congress had passed the Rehabilitation Act and fol- lowed it two years later with the Education for All Handicapped Children Act . But while President Gerald Ford reluctantly signed the ...
Contenido
1 | |
11 | |
40 | |
4 Vindication by Trial | 63 |
5 A Case about Amy | 92 |
6 A Voice in the Classroom | 114 |
7 Full Potential in the Court | 126 |
8 Maybe It Wouldnt Happen Today | 168 |
11 Amy in Oz | 220 |
12 Equal Opportunity Writ Large | 229 |
13 Is It Really Money? | 240 |
14 Amy Remembering | 260 |
15 Not Quite Human | 269 |
16 Struggling and Succeeding | 282 |
17 If Heaven Isnt Accessible God Is in Trouble | 292 |
18 To Be Who We Are | 302 |