Having an ill or
special needs child represents a loss of control.
Having an ill or
special needs child represents a loss of control.
Not exact matches
As the leader in
representing the oral health interests of
children, the vision of the AAPD is optimal health and care for infants,
children, adolescents and persons with
special health care
needs.
Recognizing the educational challenges
represented by
children in poverty, who are not fluent in English or have other
special needs, the Bloomberg administration — even as it relentlessly encouraged the growth of charter schools — built a citywide methodology designed to look past simple comparisons of average school scores on state tests.
Perfect for
SPECIAL NEEDS, especially HEARING IMPAIRED as actions are included for the
children to do together to
represent the word.
This report brings data from the newly - released 2016 National Survey of
Children's Health (NSCH) to the robust policy and research debate over the extent to which differences in aggregate
special education participation rates over racial and ethnic groups
represent differences in underlying
needs for
special education.
Six families with
special -
needs children who would have qualified for the program are seeking to intervene as defendants in the lawsuit,
represented by the Goldwater Institute's Clint Bolick.
Though in theory,
children would be better served if
represented by attorneys rather than their parent, many families already burdened by added costs necessitated by
children with
special needs can't afford an attorney.
The court's registry on private attorneys to
represent children with certain
special needs pursuant to s. 39.01305, F.S
For two years she
represented children with
special needs in juvenile court and school proceedings as part of the Center for Juvenile Law and Policy's Youth Justice Education Clinic.
Prior to joining the firm, Saja was an Associate Attorney at Wyner Law Group, P.C. where she
represented children with
special needs and their families against school districts.
Pete Wright is an attorney who
represents children with
special educational
needs and who successfully
represented Shannon Carter before the United States Supreme Court in Florence County v. Shannon Carter (501 U.S. 7).