Discipline, FERPA & Legal Protections
IDEA creates a separate legal framework for disciplining students with disabilities — one that intersects directly with the FBA/BIP process. As a diagnostician, you are often the person who has to explain why a manifestation determination matters, what triggers it, and what happens next. This tab also covers FERPA records rights and bullying obligations that arise in behavioral evaluation contexts.
A student with a disability may be removed from their educational placement for up to 10 school days per year without triggering IDEA's special discipline protections — these removals are treated the same as they would be for a non-disabled student. Once removals exceed 10 cumulative school days in a school year, or a single removal is 10+ consecutive days, a "change of placement" occurs and IDEA protections activate: the district must conduct a manifestation determination, continue FAPE, and notify the parents.
FIE application: If a student's disciplinary history shows repeated short removals approaching 10 days, flag this in your evaluation. Cumulative suspensions near the threshold signal that the student's behavioral needs have not been adequately addressed through BIP or services.
When a change of placement is triggered by discipline, the ARD committee must conduct an MDR within 10 school days. The committee answers two questions: (1) Was the conduct caused by, or directly and substantially related to, the student's disability? (2) Was the conduct a direct result of the district's failure to implement the IEP? If yes to either — it's a manifestation. The student returns to their current placement; the district must conduct an FBA and develop or revise a BIP.
Diagnostician role: You are often asked to provide data to support the MDR. Evaluation findings — cognitive profile, behavioral history, ADHD documentation, prior FBA data — directly inform whether the behavior can reasonably be connected to the disability. Documenting the relationship between disability and behavior in your FIE makes the MDR process more defensible.
Regardless of whether a behavior is a manifestation of disability, a student may be placed in an Interim Alternative Educational Setting (IAES) for up to 45 school days if the student: (1) carries or possesses a weapon at school or a school function; (2) knowingly possesses, uses, or sells illegal drugs; or (3) has inflicted serious bodily injury on another person at school. FAPE must continue during IAES placement — educational services may not simply stop.
Key distinction: The 45-day IAES option exists independently of the manifestation determination — even if the behavior is found to be a manifestation of disability, these three circumstances still allow IAES placement. However, FAPE continues and the MDR must still occur.
When a student with a disability is subjected to severe, persistent, and pervasive disability-based harassment or bullying, two legal frameworks are triggered. Under IDEA, a hostile school environment may constitute a denial of FAPE. Under Section 504, disability-based harassment that creates a hostile environment is a civil rights violation. OSERS and OCR Dear Colleague Letters (2000 and 2010) require districts to promptly investigate and respond — failure to respond to known bullying may itself constitute a civil rights violation.
Evaluation connection: When a student is referred for an FBA or behavioral evaluation, consider whether victimization — not just perpetration — is driving the behavioral presentation. A student who appears oppositional or avoidant may be responding to a hostile peer environment. Document bullying history in the FIE when relevant to the behavioral pattern.
The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) governs access to student education records. Parents have the right to inspect and review their child's education records, request amendment of records they believe are inaccurate, and consent to disclosure of records to third parties. Schools may disclose records without consent to school officials with legitimate educational interests, but not to outside parties without parental consent except in narrow circumstances (health emergency, court order, directory information). FIEs, behavioral data, and progress monitoring records are all education records under FERPA.
Practical note: When conducting an FBA that involves interviewing teachers and reviewing records, be clear with all parties about FERPA obligations. FBA data and BIPs are education records accessible to parents. Parents may not be excluded from reviewing the behavioral data you collected, including observation notes and interview summaries included in the FIE.
IDEA requires an FBA and BIP in specific circumstances: (1) when a manifestation determination finds that behavior IS a manifestation — the ARD must conduct an FBA and develop or revise a BIP; (2) when a student is placed in an IAES for special circumstances (weapons, drugs, serious bodily injury) — if no BIP exists, the ARD must develop a functional behavioral assessment plan; (3) when a student's behavior is impeding their learning or that of others — the IEP team must consider positive behavioral interventions, strategies, and supports (not always a full FBA, but consideration is required).
Diagnostician scope: Diagnosticians typically describe behavioral patterns, document function hypotheses, and recommend FBA or BIP development in FIE reports. The actual FBA and BIP are usually conducted by the behavior specialist or behavior team — but your evaluation data is the foundation. A FIE that clearly describes the relationship between disability, behavior, and educational impact makes the FBA more targeted and the BIP more defensible.