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A
student shall be determined eligible and classified "eligible
for special education and related services" when it is
determined that the student has one or more of the disabilities
defined in 1 through 14 below; the disability adversely affects
the student's educational performance and the student is in need
of special education and related services. Classification shall
be based on all assessments conducted including assessment by
child study team members and assessment by other specialists as
specified below.
1.
"Auditorily
impaired" corresponds to "auditorily handicapped" and
further corresponds to the Federal eligibility categories of
deafness or hearing impairment. "Auditorily impaired" means an
inability to hear within normal limits due to physical
impairment or dysfunction of auditory mechanisms characterized
by (c) i or ii below. An audiological evaluation by a specialist
qualified in the field of audiology and a speech and language
evaluation by a certified speech-language specialist are
required.
i. "Deafness"--The auditory impairment is so severe that the
student is impaired in processing linguistic information through
hearing, with or without amplification and the student's
educational performance is adversely affected.
ii. "Hearing impairment"--An impairment in hearing, whether
permanent or fluctuating which adversely affects the student's
educational performance.
2.
"Autistic"
means a pervasive developmental disability which significantly
impacts verbal and nonverbal communication and social
interaction that adversely affects a student's educational
performance. Onset is generally evident before age three. Other
characteristics often associated with autism are engagement in
repetitive activities and stereotyped movements, resistance to
environmental change or change in daily routine, unusual
responses to sensory experiences and lack of responsiveness to
others. The term does not apply if the student's adverse
educational performance is due to emotional disturbance as
defined in (c) 5 below. A child who manifests the
characteristics of autism after age three may be classified as
autistic if the criteria in this paragraph are met. An
assessment by a certified speech-language specialist and an
assessment by a physician trained in neurodevelopmental
assessment are required.
3.
"Cognitively
impaired" corresponds to "mentally retarded" and
means a disability that is characterized by significantly below
average general cognitive functioning existing concurrently with
deficits in adaptive behavior; manifested during the
developmental period that adversely affects a student's
educational performance and is characterized by one of the
following:
i. "Mild cognitive impairment" corresponds to "educable" and
means a level of cognitive development and adaptive behavior in
home, school and community settings that are mildly below age
expectations with respect to all of the following:
(1) The quality and rate of learning;
(2) The use of symbols for the interpretation of information and
the solution of problems; (3) Performance on an individually
administered test of intelligence that falls within a range of
two to three standard deviations below the mean.
ii. "Moderate cognitive impairment" corresponds to "trainable"
and means a level of cognitive development and adaptive behavior
that is moderately below age expectations with respect to the
following:
(1) The ability to use symbols in the solution of problems of
low complexity;
(2) The ability to function socially without direct and close
supervision in home, school and community settings; and
(3) Performance on an individually administered test of
intelligence that falls three standard deviations or more below
the mean.
iii. "Severe cognitive impairment" corresponds to "eligible for
day training" and means a level of functioning severely below
age expectations whereby in a consistent basis the student is
incapable of giving evidence of understanding and responding in
a positive manner to simple directions expressed in the child's
primary mode of communication and cannot in some manner express
basic wants and needs.
4.
"Communication
impaired" corresponds to "communication handicapped"
and means a language disorder in the areas of morphology,
syntax, semantics and/or pragmatics/discourse which adversely
affects a student's educational performance and is not due
primarily to an auditory impairment. The problem shall be
demonstrated through functional assessment of language in other
than a testing situation and performance below 1.5 standard
deviations, or the 10th percentile on at least two standardized
language tests, where such tests are appropriate one of which
shall be a comprehensive test of both receptive and expressive
language. When the area of suspected disability is language,
assessment by a certified speech-language specialist and
assessment to establish the educational impact are required. The
speech-language specialist shall be considered a child study
team member.
i. When it is determined that the student meets the eligibility
criteria according to the definition in (c)4 above, but requires
instruction by a speech-language specialist only, the student
shall be classified as eligible for speech-language services.
ii. When the area of suspected disability is a disorder of
articulation, voice or fluency, the student shall be evaluated
according to N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.4(g) and, if eligible, classified
as eligible for speech-language services according to N.J.A.C.
6A:14-3.6(a).
5.
"Emotionally
disturbed" means a condition exhibiting one or more
of the following characteristics over a long period of time and
to a marked degree that adversely affects a student's
educational performance due to:
i. An inability to learn that 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 behaviors 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.
6.
"Multiply
disabled" corresponds to "multiply handicapped" and
“multiple disabilities,” and means the presence of two or more
disabling conditions, the combination of which causes such
severe educational needs that they cannot be accommodated in a
program designed solely to address one of the impairments.
Multiple disabilities includes cognitively impaired-blindness,
cognitively impaired-orthopedic impairment, etc. The existence
of two disabling conditions alone shall not serve as a basis for
a classification of multiply disabled. Eligibility for
speech-language services as defined in this section shall not be
one of the disabling conditions for classification based on the
definition of "multiply disabled." Multiply disabled does not
include deaf-blindness.
7.
"Deaf/blindness"
means concomitant hearing and visual impairments, the
combination of which causes such severe communication and other
developmental and educational problems that they cannot be
accommodated in special education programs solely for students
with deafness or students with blindness.
8.
"Orthopedically
impaired" corresponds to "orthopedically handicapped"
and means a disability characterized by a severe orthopedic
impairment that adversely affects a student's educational
performance. The term includes malformation, malfunction or loss
of bones, muscle or tissue. A medical assessment documenting the
orthopedic condition is required.
9.
"Other
health impaired" corresponds to "chronically ill" and
means a disability characterized by having limited strength,
vitality or alertness, including a heightened alertness with
respect to the educational environment, due to chronic or acute
health problems, such as attention deficit disorder or attention
deficit hyperactivity disorder, a heart condition, tuberculosis,
rheumatic fever, nephritis, asthma, sickle cell anemia,
hemophilia, epilepsy, lead poisoning, leukemia, diabetes or any
other medical condition, such as Tourette Syndrome, that
adversely affects a student's educational performance. A medical
assessment documenting the health problem is required.
10.
"Preschool
child with a disability" corresponds to preschool
handicapped and means a child between the ages of three and five
experiencing developmental delay, as measured by appropriate
diagnostic instruments and procedures, in one or more of the
areas in (c)10i through v below, and requires special education
and related services. When utilizing a standardized assessment
or criterion-referenced measure to determine eligibility, a
developmental delay shall mean a 33 percent delay in one
developmental area, or a 25 percent delay in two or more
developmental areas.
i. Physical, including gross motor, fine motor and sensory
(vision and hearing);
ii. Cognitive;
iii. Communication;
iv. Social and emotional; and
v. Adaptive.
11.
"Social
maladjustment" means a consistent inability to
conform to the standards for behavior established by the school.
Such behavior is seriously disruptive to the education of the
student or other students and is not due to emotional
disturbance as defined in (c) 5 above.
12.
"Specific
learning disability" corresponds to "perceptually
impaired" and means a disorder in one or more of the basic
psychological processes involved in understanding or using
language, spoken or written, that may manifest itself in an
imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell,
or to do mathematical calculations, including conditions such as
perceptual disabilities, brain injury, minimal brain
dysfunction, dyslexia, and developmental aphasia.
i. A specific learning disability can be determined when a
severe discrepancy is found between the student's current
achievement and intellectual ability in one or more of the
following areas:
(1) Basic reading skills;
(2) Reading comprehension;
(3) Oral expression;
(4) Listening comprehension;
(5) Mathematical calculation;
(6) Mathematical problem solving;
(7) Written expression; and
(8) Reading fluency.
ii. A specific learning disability may also be determined by
utilizing a response to scientifically based interventions
methodology as described in N.J.A.C. 6A:14-3.4(h)6.
iii. The term severe discrepancy does not apply to students who
have learning problems that are primarily the result of visual,
hearing, or motor disabilities, general cognitive deficits,
emotional disturbance or environmental, cultural or economic
disadvantage.
iv. The district shall, if it utilizes the severe discrepancy
methodology, adopt procedures that utilize a statistical formula
and criteria for determining severe discrepancy. Evaluation
shall include assessment of current academic achievement and
intellectual ability.
13.
"Traumatic
brain injury" corresponds to "neurologically
impaired" and means an acquired injury to the brain caused by an
external physical force or insult to the brain, resulting in
total or partial functional disability or psychosocial
impairment, or both. The term applies to open or closed head
injuries resulting in impairments in one or more areas, such as
cognition; language; memory; attention; reasoning; abstract
thinking; judgment; problem-solving; sensory, perceptual and
motor abilities; psychosocial behavior; physical functions;
information processing; and speech.
14.
"Visually
impaired" corresponds to "visually handicapped" and
means an impairment in vision that, even with correction,
adversely affects a student's educational performance. The term
includes both partial sight and blindness. An assessment by a
specialist qualified to determine visual disability is required.
Students with visual impairments shall be reported to the
Commission for the Blind and Visually Impaired.
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