[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 45, Volume 4]

[Revised as of October 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 45CFR1308.6]



[Page 163-165]

 

                        TITLE 45--PUBLIC WELFARE

 

CHAPTER XIII--OFFICE OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT SERVICES, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH 

                           AND HUMAN SERVICES

 

PART 1308_HEAD START PROGRAM PERFORMANCE STANDARDS ON SERVICES FOR 

CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES--Table of Contents

 

             Subpart D_Health Services Performance Standards

 

Sec. 1308.6  Assessment of children.





    (a) The disabilities coordinator must be involved with other program 

staff throughout the full process of assessment of children, which has 

three steps:

    (1) All children enrolled in Head Start are screened as the first 

step in the assessment process;

    (2) Staff also carry out on-going developmental assessment for all 

enrolled children throughout the year to determine progress and to plan 

program activities;

    (3) Only those children who need further specialized assessment to 

determine whether they have a disability and may require special 

education and related services proceed to the next step, evaluation. The 

disabilities coordinator has primary responsibility for this third step, 

evaluation, only.

    (b) Screening, the first step in the assessment process, consists of 

standardized health screening and developmental screening which includes 

speech, hearing and vision. It is a brief process, which can be 

repeated, and is never used to determine that a child has a disability. 

It only indicates that a child may need further evaluation to determine 

whether the child has a disability. Rescreening must be provided as 

needed.

    (1) Grantees must provide for developmental, hearing and vision 

screenings of all Early Head Start and Head Start children within 45 

days of the child's entry into the program. This does not preclude 

starting screening in the spring, before program services begin in the 

fall.

    (2) Grantees must make concerted efforts to reach and include the 

most in need and hardest to reach in the screening effort, providing 

assistance but urging parents to complete screening before the start of 

the program year.



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    (3) Developmental screening is a brief check to identify children 

who need further evaluation to determine whether they may have 

disabilities. It provides information in three major developmental 

areas: visual/motor, language and cognition, and gross motor/body 

awareness for use along with observation data, parent reports and home 

visit information. When appropriate standardized developmental screening 

instruments exist, they must be used. The disabilities coordinator must 

coordinate with the health coordinator and staff who have the 

responsibility for implementing health screening and with the education 

staff who have the responsibility for implementing developmental 

screening.

    (c) Staff must inform parents of the types and purposes of the 

screening well in advance of the screening, the results of these 

screenings and the purposes and results of any subsequent evaluations.

    (d) Developmental assessment, the second step, is the collection of 

information on each child's functioning in these areas: gross and fine 

motor skills, perceptual discrimination, cognition, attention skills, 

self-help, social and receptive skills and expressive language. The 

disabilities coordinator must coordinate with the education coordinator 

in the on-going assessment of each Head Start child's functioning in all 

developmental areas by including this developmental information in later 

diagnostic and program planning activities for children with 

disabilities.

    (e) The disabilities coordinator must arrange for further, formal, 

evaluation of a child who has been identified as possibly having a 

disability, the third step. (1) The disabilities coordinator must refer 

a child to the LEA for evaluation as soon as the need is evident, 

starting as early as the child's third birthday.

    (2) If the LEA does not evaluate the child, Head Start is 

responsible for arranging or providing for an evaluation, using its own 

resources and accessing others. In this case, the evaluation must meet 

the following requirements:

    (i) Testing and evaluation procedures must be selected and 

administered so as not to be racially or culturally discriminatory, 

administered in the child's native language or mode of communication, 

unless it clearly is not feasible to do so.

    (ii) Testing and evaluation procedures must be administered by 

trained (State certified or licensed) personnel.

    (iii) No single procedure may be the sole criterion for determining 

an appropriate educational program for a child.

    (iv) The evaluation must be made by a multidisciplinary team or 

group of persons including at least one teacher or specialist with 

knowledge in the area of suspected disability.

    (v) Evaluators must use only assessment materials which have been 

validated for the specific purpose for which they are used.

    (vi) Tests used with children with impaired sensory, manual or 

communication skills must be administered so that they reflect the 

children's aptitudes and achievement levels and not just the 

disabilities.

    (vii) Tests and materials must assess all areas related to the 

suspected disability.

    (viii) In the case of a child whose primary disability appears to be 

a speech or language impairment, the team must assure that enough tests 

are used to determine that the impairment is not a symptom of another 

disability and a speech or language pathologist should be involved in 

the evaluation.

    (3) Parental consent in writing must be obtained before a child can 

have an initial evaluation to determine whether the child has a 

disability.

    (4) Confidentiality must be maintained in accordance with grantee 

and State requirements. Parents must be given the opportunity to review 

their child's records in a timely manner and they must be notified and 

give permission if additional evaluations are proposed. Grantees must 

explain the purpose and results of the evaluation and make concerted 

efforts to help the parents understand them.

    (5) The multidisciplinary team provides the results of the 

evaluation, and its professional opinion that the child does or does not 

need special education and related services, to the disabilities 

coordinator. If it is their professional opinion that a child has a 

disability,



[[Page 165]]



the team is to state which of the eligibility criteria applies and 

provide recommendations for programming, along with their findings. Only 

children whom the evaluation team determines need special education and 

related services may be counted as children with disabilities.



[58 FR 5501, Jan. 21, 1993, as amended at 61 FR 57227, Nov. 5, 1996]