[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 25, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 25CFR39.11]

[Page 169-172]
 
                            TITLE 25--INDIANS
 
     CHAPTER I--BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
 
PART 39_THE INDIAN SCHOOL EQUALIZATION PROGRAM--Table of Contents
 
            Subpart B_The Indian School Equalization Formula
 
Sec. 39.11  Definitions.

    Assistance to approved school(s) under this subpart is subject to 
the definitions established in Sec. 39.2 and to the following 
definitions for determining student counts in the various weighted 
areas. As used in the subpart, the term:
    (a) Base or base unit means both the weight or ratio of 1.0 and the 
dollar value annually established for that weight or ratio which 
represents students in grades 4 through 8 in a typical instructional 
program.
    (b) Basic program means the instructional program provided all 
students at any age level exclusive of any supplemental programs which 
are not provided to all students in day or boarding schools.
    (c) Grade or Grade Level, followed in most cases by K or a number, 
means a classroom grouping ordinarily determined by student age and 
successful completion of a criterion number of years of previous 
schoolwork. The use of this term does not preclude ISEP funding of 
programs in which instruction is non-graded or individualized, or which 
otherwise depart from grade-level school structure. For purposes of 
funding under the ISEP, students in such programs shall be counted as in

[[Page 170]]

the grade level to which they would ordinarily be assigned based on 
their chronological age and number of years of schooling completed.
    (d) Grades 1-3 means a weighted program for a student who is present 
during the count week (see Sec. 39.30(b)) in grades 1 through 3 who is 
at least 6 years old by December 31 of the fall of the school year 
during which the count occurs and is a member of an educational program 
approved by the board which is conducted at least six gross hours daily 
during at least 180 days per school year. Gross hours means from the 
start of the school day to the end of the school day including all 
activities.
    (e) Grades 4-8 and grades 9-12 means a weighted program for a 
student who is present during the count week (see Sec. 39.30(b)) in 
either of the programs encompassing grades 4 through 12 who is a member 
of an educational program approved by the school(s) at least six gross 
hours daily during at least 180 days per school year and shall not have 
achieved the age of 21 nor have received a high school diploma or its 
equivalent.
    (f) Kindergarten means a weighted program for a student who is 
present during the count week (see Sec. 39.30(b)) who is at least 5 
years old by December 31 of the fall of the school year during which the 
count occurs and a member of an educational program approved by the 
school(s) conducted at least four gross hours daily during at least 180 
days per school year. Otherwise eligible students who are in a program 
conducted less than four hours daily, but at least two gross hours daily 
are eligible as half-time kindergarten students.
    (g) Intense Bilingual means a weighted program for a student who is 
present during the count week, whose primary language is not English, 
and who is receiving academic instruction daily through oral and/or 
written forms of an Indian or Alaskan Native language, as well as 
specialized instruction in English for non native speakers of English, 
under resources of the ISEP.
    (h) Intensive residential guidance means the weighted program for a 
resident student that needs special residential services due to one or 
more of the problems identified below, and that appropriate 
documentation is in that student's file as follows:
    (1) Presenting problem:
    (i) Court of juvenile authority request for placement resulting from 
a pattern of infractions of the law.
    (ii) Explusion from previous school under due process.
    (iii) Referral by a licensed psychologist, psychiatrist or certified 
psychiatric social worker as an emotionally disturbed student.
    (iv) History of truancy more than 50 days in the last school year or 
a pattern of extreme disruptive behavior.
    (2) Documentation required:
    (i) Written request signed by officer of court or juvenile 
authority;
    (ii) Certification by expelling school;
    (iii) Psychologist, certified psychiatric social worker, or 
psychiatrist report; or
    (iv) Attendance and behavior data from records of prior school, 
court records, or from social agency records and a written documentation 
summarizing such data. For all students placed in intensive residential 
guidance programs, there shall be further documentation of a diagnostic 
workup, a placement decision by a minimum of three staff members, and a 
record of an individualized treatment plan for each student that 
specifies service objectives.
    (i) Exceptional Child Program means weighted programs for students 
who are receiving special education and related services, consistent 
with the identification, evaluation and provisions of a free appropriate 
public education required by part B of the Education of the Handicapped 
Act (20 U.S.C. 1401 et seq.; 45 CFR part 121a 1) and section 504 of the 
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 794; 45 CFR part 84) and who have 
the following diagnosed impairments:
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    1 45 CFR 121a was redesignated as 34 CFR 300 at 45 FR 77368, Nov. 
21, 1980.
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    (1) Deaf means a hearing impairment which is so severe that the 
child is impaired in processing linguistic information through hearing, 
with or without amplification, which adversely affects educational 
performance.

[[Page 171]]

    (2) Hard of hearing means a hearing impairment, whether permanent or 
fluctuating, which adversely affects a child's educational performance 
but which is not included under the definition of deaf in this section.
    (3) Mentally retarded means significantly subaverage general 
intellectual functioning existing concurrently with deficits in adaptive 
behavior and manifested during the developmental period, which adversely 
affects a child's educational performance.
    (4) Severely multi-handicapped means concomitant impairments (such 
as mentally retarded-blind; mentally retarded-deaf) the combination of 
which causes such severe educational problems that they cannot be 
accommodated in regular educational programs or in special education 
programs solely for one of the impairments. The term includes deaf-blind 
children.
    (5) Orthopedically impaired means a severe orthopedic impairment 
which adversely affects a child's educational performance. The term 
includes impairments caused by congenital anomaly (e.g., clubfoot, 
absence of some member, etc.), impairments caused by disease (e.g., 
poliomyelitis, bone tuberculosis, etc.), and impairments from other 
causes (e.g., cerebral palsy, amputations, and fractures or burns which 
cause contractures).
    (6) Other health impaired means limited strength, vitality or 
alertness, due to chronic or acute health problems such as a heart 
condition, tuberculosis, rheumatic fever, nephritis, asthma, hemophelia, 
epilepsy, lead poisoning, leukemia, or diabetes or the existence of a 
physical or mental impairment which substantially limits one or more 
major life activities, but which is not covered in paragraphs (i) (1) 
through (12) of this section.
    (7) Emotionally disturbed means a condition exhibiting one or more 
of the following characteristics over a long period of time and to a 
significant degree, which adversely affects educational performance and 
requires small group instruction, supervision, and group counseling:
    (i) An inability to learn which cannot be explained by intellectual, 
sensory, or health factors;
    (ii) An inability to build or maintain satisfactory interpersonal 
relationships with peers and teachers:
    (iii) Inappropriate types of behavior or feelings under normal 
circumstances;
    (iv) A general pervasive mood of unhappiness or depression; or
    (v) A tendency to develop physical symptoms or fears associated with 
personal or school problems.
    (8) Specific learning disability means a disorder in one or more of 
the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in using 
language, spoken or written, which may manifest itself in an inability 
to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or to do mathematical 
calculations. The term includes such conditions as perceptual handicaps, 
brain injury, minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia, and developmental 
aphasia. The term does not include children who have learning problems 
which are primarily the result of vision, hearing, or motor handicaps, 
or mental retardation, or of environmental, cultural, or economic 
disadvantage.
    (9) Speech impaired means a communication disorder, such as 
stuttering, impaired articulation, or a voice impairment, which 
adversely affects a child's educational performance.
    (10) Visually handicapped means a visual impairment which, even with 
correction, adversely affects a child's educational performance. The 
term includes partially seeing, but not fully blind, children.
    (11) Severely emotionally disturbed means a condition such as 
schizophrenia, autism or the presence of the following characteristics 
over a prolonged period of time and to a marked degree, which seriously 
affects educational performance and requires intensive individual 
therapy (which may be conducted either in or out of the school setting), 
individual instruction, and supervision:
    (i) An inability to learn which cannot be explained by intellectual, 
sensory, or health factors;
    (ii) An inability to build or maintain satisfactory interpersonal 
relationships with peers and teachers:

[[Page 172]]

    (iii) Inappropriate types of behavior or feelings under normal 
circumstances;
    (iv) A general pervasive mood of unhappiness or depression; or
    (v) A tendency to develop physical symptoms or fears associated with 
personal or school problems.
    (12) Severely and profoundly retarded means a degree of mental 
retardation (as defined in paragraph (i)(3) of this section) which 
severely restricts and delays major aspects of intellectual functioning 
so as to require intensive small group instruction and supervision.
    (13) Students requiring home/hospital based instruction means 
students provided a program of instruction in a home or hospital setting 
because in the judgement of a physician a student cannot receive 
instruction in a regular public school facility without endangering the 
health or safety of the student or of other students.
    (14) Multihandicapped means concomitant impairments (such as 
mentally retarded with a minor additional handicap such as speech 
impaired) the combination of which causes educational problems that can 
not be accommodated in regular education programs or in part-time 
special education programs.
    (15) Blind means the possession of a central vision acuity of 20/200 
or less in the better eye with correcting glasses or a peripheral field 
of vision so contracted that its widest diameter is less than 20%.
    (j) Resident means a student officially enrolled in the residential 
care program of a Bureau operated or funded school and actually 
receiving supplemental services provided to all students who are 
provided room and board in a boarding school or a dormitory during those 
weeks when student membership counts are conducted. Such students must 
be members of the instructional program in the same boarding school in 
which they are counted as residents. To be counted as dormitory 
residents, students must be enrolled in and be current members of a 
public school in the community in which they reside.

[44 FR 61864, Oct. 26, 1979, as amended at 67 FR 52830, Aug. 13, 2002]