Interscholastic
Competition Eligibility For Students with Disabilities
Department Contacts: Carol Greta (515-281-8661) or Thomas Mayes
(515-242-5614).
This document is to aid in applying the interscholastic
competition eligibility rule for students with disabilities who have
individualized education programs. That
rule, found at Iowa Administrative Code 281-36.15(2)”d”, follows.
A student with a disability who
has an individualized education program shall not be denied eligibility on the
basis of scholarship if the student is making adequate progress, as determined
by school officials, towards the goals and objectives on the student’s
individualized education program.
Q
1: Hasn’t this rule been recently amended?
A 1: This rule’s recent
amendment was technical in nature and did not change its meaning.
Q
2: What happens if a competitor with a
disability is not eligible under this rule?
A 2: The competitor may
practice, but may not participate in competition or dress for competition. A local district may provide, however, that
ineligible competitors are not permitted to practice.
Q
3: May a school set higher requirements for
students with disabilities, such as by holding students with disabilities to
the “pass all” rule applicable to students without disabilities?
A 3: No. So long as the student is making adequate
progress toward goals, on the student’s IEP, as determined by school officials,
the student “shall not be denied eligibility” based on scholarship. What constitutes adequate progress will vary
based on the facts of each competitor’s case.
(See, e.g., Question & Answer 7).
Q
4: Who determines “adequate progress” for an
interscholastic competitor with an IEP?
A 4: “School officials”
make that determination, not the competitor’s IEP team or parents.
Q
5: What happens after school officials determine
what progress a competitor with disabilities is required to achieve to be
eligible for competition?
A 5: Those officials must
immediately communicate what “adequate progress” constitutes to the competitor
and the competitor’s parents, teachers, and others who assign grades to or
monitor the progress of the competitor.
Q
6: Are competitors with IEPs required to attain
their goals to be eligible?
A 6: The rule requires
adequate progress toward goals, not goal attainment. In some cases, a competitor may make adequate
progress toward a goal without necessarily attaining it. In other cases, goal attainment might be the
only outcome that would constitute “adequate progress.” Whether goal attainment constitutes the
required “adequate progress” depends on the facts of each case.
Q
7: What if a competitor with an IEP fails a
class for which there are no express IEP goals and no specially designed
instruction?
A 7: Examine the relationship
between the IEP goals and the failed course.
If there is a close relationship between the IEP goal(s) and the failed
course, and the competitor made adequate progress on the IEP’s goal(s), then
the competitor is eligible. If there is
a close relationship and the competitor did not make adequate progress toward
an IEP goal, then the competitor is not eligible. If there is little or no relationship between
an IEP goal and the course failed, the competitor is not eligible.
Q
8: What if a competitor with an IEP passes all
classes yet does not make “adequate progress” on IEP goals?
A 8: In this extremely
unlikely event, the competitor is eligible.
Q
9: What if an ineligible competitor’s IEP
provides for “participation” in interscholastic activities?
A 9: An ineligible
competitor may participate (e.g., practicing, serving as team manager)
without competing. An IEP team has no
authority to provide that a student with an IEP, who otherwise would be
academically ineligible for competition, must be allowed to compete in
interscholastic competition.
Q
10: What if a competitor is being currently
evaluated for special education?
A
10:
Until the evaluation is complete, the competitor must meet requirements
applicable to students without IEPs.
Once the evaluation is complete and an IEP is developed, apply this rule
to determine the competitor’s eligibility.
Q
11: Does rule 36.15(2)”d” apply to students with
only Section 504 accommodation plans?
A
11:
No.