Full opinion text
ENTRY ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT HAMILTON, District Judge-. This case arises under the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), 20 U.S.C. § 1400 et seq. The central issues are: (a) whether a public school corporation has provided minimally adequate educational sérvices for a child with disabilities, and (b) if the public school corporation failed to do so, whether the public school corporation should be required to pay for expenses of a private school after the child’s parents decided unilaterally to take him out of the public school and enrolled him in a private school. As explained in detail below, the court finds that the public school corporation, defendant Greater Clark County School Corporation, failed to meet its obligation under the IDEA to provide minimally adequate educational services to Lucas Nein. Lucas suffers from a serious case of dyslexia, a learning disorder that makes it difficult for him to learn to read. Tests when he was a first grader indicated that Lucas was a child of generally average intelligence. As a fourth grader, however, and after three years of Greater Clark’s special education services supposedly tailored to address Lucas’s needs, he still could not read. He could not even read signs to know which public restroom he should use. Moreover, tests indicated that his IQ had dropped an astonishing 20 points, from 95 to 75. There is much more evidence, of course, but those points are symptoms of the problem here. Unhappy with Lucas’s lack of progress after three years of special education with Greater Clark, Lucas’s parents placed him in a private school that specializes in teaching children with dyslexia. On the issue of reimbursement, the court finds that Lucas’s parents failed to notify Greater Clark that they intended to place Lucas in the private school at public expense. Under the 1997 amendments to the IDEA, the court may consider their failure to provide that notice as a factor in limiting reimbursement to which they might otherwise be entitled. See 20 U.S.C. § 1412(a)(10)(C)(iii). The court therefore exercises its discretion under that provision to award Lucas’s parents one half of the cost of expenses for the private school summer program and the 1998-99 school year, plus the full cost of one year qf compensatory education at private school, plus half of the family’s reasonable cost of transportation to the school for. those two years. Background Plaintiffs Wesley and Denise Nein are the parents of Lucas Nein, who is now twelve years old. From kindergarten through fourth grade, Lucas attended Parkwood Elementary School, a facility owned and operated by defendant Greater' Clark County School Corporation. During his first grade year, an educational evaluation revealed that Lucas had a severe learning disability. Lucas was therefore eligible to receive special education services under the IDEA as a student with a learning disability. The IDEA is designed to “assess, and ensure the effectiveness of, efforts to educate children with disabilities.” 20 U.S.C. § 1400(d)(4). Under the IDEA, the federal ■ government awards grants of federal funds to state governments to help provide special education services. 20 U.S.C. § 1411(a). As a condition of receiving federal grant money, states must ensure that their public schools provide children with disabilities “ ‘a free appropriate public education [FAPE] that emphasizes special education and related services designed to meet their unique needs and prepare them for employment and independent living.’ ” Morton Community Unit School Dist. No. 709 v. J.M., 152 F.3d 583, 584 (7th Cir.1998), quoting 20 U.S.C. § 1400(d)(1)(A). However, the IDEA does not specifically define an “appropriate public education” or explain how one is to measure whether a student has received one. The IDEA also requires public school districts to design an individualized education program (IEP) for each child receiving special education services. 20 U.S.C. § 1414(d)(1)(A). An IEP must contain statements regarding the student’s present educational level, the student’s measurable annual goals, the special education services to be provided, the extent to which the student will participate in the classroom with non-disabled students, and a timetable for providing the identified education services. School districts are required to review and revise a student’s IEP periodically to meet changing educational needs. Pursuant to the IDEA, Greater Clark developed an IEP for Lucas each year for his second through fifth grade years and provided him with special education services each year. Lucas’s parents, however, became increasingly unhappy with his lack of progress and believed that Greater Clark had failed to provide him with a free appropriate public education. In April 1998, when Lucas was in fourth grade, and according to certain procedural safeguards under the IDEA, the Neins requested a due process hearing to address Lucas’s educational needs. After hearing three days of testimony, the initial hearing officer found that Greater Clark had failed to provide Lucas with a free appropriate public education. The initial hearing officer ordered Greater Clark to pay the Neins for two years of compensatory education, which would be provided at The de Paul School (a private school in Louisville, Kentucky, where the Neins had enrolled Lucas) unless Greater Clark was able to show it could provide teachers with appropriate training to successfully teach dyslexic students. Greater Clark appealed this decision to the Indiana Board of Special Education Appeals (“the Board of Appeals”). By a 2-1 vote, the Board of Appeals reversed the initial hearing officer’s decision. The Neins then petitioned this court for judicial review of the Board of Appeals’ decision. Both sides have moved for summary judgment. Standard of Review Judicial review under the IDEA is something of a hybrid of more familiar forms of judicial decision-making, somewhere between trial de novo and “substantial evidence” review of a closed administrative record. See Heather S. v. State of Wisconsin, 125 F.3d 1045, 1052 (7th Cir.1997); D.F. v. Western School Corp., 921 F.Supp. 559, 564 (S.D.Ind.1996). The IDEA provides that a district court “shall receive the records of the administrative proceedings, shall hear additional evidence at the request of a party, and basing its decision on the preponderance of the evidence, shall grant such relief as the court determines is appropriate.” 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(B). The parties have filed with this court the record from the administrative proceedings. Neither party has asked the court to consider additional evidence. Without any additional evidence, a motion for summary judgment is “simply the procedural vehicle for asking the judge to decide the case on the basis of the administrative record.” Heather S., 125 F.3d at 1052, quoting Hunger v. Leininger, 15 F.3d 664, 669 (7th Cir.1994). Unlike the decision on a usual motion for summary judgment, however, “the district court’s decision is based on the preponderance of the evidence.” Patricia P. v. Board of Education of Oak Park, 203 F.3d 462, 466 (7th Cir.2000). The statute’s general language is not, however, “an invitation to the courts to substitute their own notions of sound educational policy for those of the school authorities which they review.” Board of Education v. Rowley, 458 U.S. 176, 206, 102 S.Ct. 3034, 73 L.Ed.2d 690 (1982). In deciding cases under the IDEA, a court must give “due weight” to the determinations of the administrative hearing officers and may not substitute its “own notions of sound educational policy for those of the school authorities.” Heather S., 125 F.3d at 1052-53 (citations omitted). However, “due weight” does not mean abdication of all judicial function. See Patricia P., 203 F.3d at 466 (district court must “independently determine whether the requirements of the Act have been satisfied”), quoting Board of Education of Murphysboro v. Illinois Board of Education, 41 F.8d 1162, 1166 (7th Cir.1994); Morton Community Unit School Dist. No. 709 v. J.M., 152 F.3d at 588) (“we do defer, though of course not abjectly, to the view of hearing officers as to what services a disabled child is entitled to under the IDEA”). The court is permitted to “take an independent and critical look at the evidence” and the administrative decision, but must always keep in mind that educational policy decisions and choices between competing educational theories and methods are generally best left to school authorities who have considered the facts carefully and have made a reasonable decision in light of those facts. See D.F. v. Western School Corp., 921 F.Supp. at 565; accord, Adams v. State of Oregon, 195 F.3d 1141, 1145, 1150 (9th Cir.1999) (deferring to hearing officer’s “thorough findings of fact” regarding the adequacy of a child’s educational plan and noting that “the amount of deference bestowed upon the hearing officer is increased where her findings are ‘thorough and complete’ ”), quoting Union School District v. Smith, 15 F.3d 1519, 1524 (9th Cir.1994); Walczak v. Florida Union Free School District, 142 F.3d 119, 127-29 (2d Cir.1998) (explaining that deference to administrative decisions is “particularly appropriate” when “the state hearing officers’ review has been thorough and careful;” hearing officer had carefully reviewed evidence at the hearing, and on appeal the state review officer had “meticulously reviewed the evidence developed in the administrative hearing”). When decisions of the initial hearing officer and the state’s reviewing authority conflict, as in this case, federal courts must defer to the final decision of the state authorities, in this case the Board of Appeals. Board of Education of La-Grange School District v. Illinois State Board of Education, 184 F.3d 912, 915 (7th Cir.1999), citing Heather S., 125 F.3d at 1052. Because the Neins are challenging the outcome of the state administrative decision, they bear the burden of persuasion. See Heather S., 125 F.3d at 1052, citing Board of Education of Community Consol. School Dist. 21 v. Illinois State Board of Education, 938 F.2d 712, 716 (7th Cir.1991). Facts from the Administrative Record I. First Grade (1991-95 School Year) In 1994, Lucas was enrolled in the first grade at Parkwood Elementary School. His teacher was Deanna Maupin. R. 404. Ms. Maupin testified at the due process hearing that when Lucas started the first grade, he “demonstrated skills that were below where the other children were. It was a struggle from the very beginning of school.” R. 405. In Ms. Maupin’s opinion, the grade level at which Lucas was functioning when he entered the first grade was “probably the middle of kindergarten.” R. 409. Lucas received special assistance during the year, including adaptations in language arts and mathematics (oral spelling tests and extra time to complete assignments), tutoring assistance three times a week, peer tutors twice a week, and a peer prompter daily. R. 1144. After conferring with Lucas’s mother, Ms. Maupin decided to send Lucas for a special education referral. R. 406-07. On November 23,1994, Ms. Maupin completed a formal request for such a referral, stating that an educational evaluation was needed to “rule out learning disabilities, mental retardation and ADHD.” R. 1114. On March 7, 1995, and May 1, 1995, an educational evaluation of Lucas was conducted by Dr. Anne M. Claypool, Greater Clark’s school psychologist, and Janet Lackey, an educational diagnostician. R. 1161-67. On the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children — III, a measure of general intellectual ability, Lucas’s full scale score was 95. R. 1163. This score fell in the average range. 'When questioned about this score at the due process hearing, Dr. Claypool explained that the score indicated Lucas had “the gray matter to be able to process appropriately” and to learn. R. 454. The evaluation also revealed that Lucas’s visual-motor integrative abilities and his math achievement were average. R. 1164. However, his overall performance on the Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement — Revised, which assessed his skills in the areas of letter-word identification, word attack, and comprehension, “suggested skills significantly below the average range based on age level comparisons.” Id. In summary, the evaluators noted: “At this time, Lucas demonstrates characteristics of individuals who have a learning disability. A significant discrepancy between ability and achievement is evident in the area of reading.” Id. Also in March 1995, Lucas took the IS-TEP test, an achievement test given to all Indiana students at various times during their academic careers. R. 1072. A note from his special education teacher indicated that his test scores were ultimately “invalidated” because Lucas “cried through the 1st day of testing. He was a non-reader & totally frustrated by tests.” R. 1072, 721. A case conference between Mrs. Nein and school personnel was held on May 24, 1995, to discuss Lucas’s testing results and to develop an IEP for Lucas. R. 1170-86. The IEP for the 1995-96 school year contained the goals of increasing Lucas’s reading, written language, and spelling skills, and provided that Lucas receive two hours of specialized assistance per day in reading and language arts. R. 1172. It also provided for a number of classroom adaptations for Lucas, including oral reading of tests, reducing the number of test items, creating a modified grading scale, providing extra time to complete assignments, and small group instruction. R. 1177. After receiving a proper Notice of Parent Rights, Mrs. Nein consented to Lucas’s IEP for the 1995-96 school year. R. 1178-86. II. Second Grade (1995-96 School Year) During Lucas’s second grade year, Ms. Hoeppner provided the special education assistance identified in his IEP. Ms. Ho-eppner has a Bachelor’s Degree in Elementary Education and a Master’s Degree in Special Education with Severe Disabilities. R. 646. She also has endorsements in Learning Disabilities, Mild Disabilities, and Emotional Disabilities. Id. She has not had any training specifically addressing how to work with dyslexic children. R. 723. It was Ms. Hoeppner’s responsibility to develop a curriculum and/or methodology to implement the goals stated in Lucas’s IEP. R. 726. Ms. Hoeppner began using the Milestones Program in working with Lucas on his reading skills. R. 660. The Milestones Program is a reading series based on a limited vocabulary. It is designed for use with students who have learning disabilities. It begins at the pre-primer level and continues through the fourth grade level. Id. The reading series is accompanied by flash cards, a workbook, and a spelling series. R. 662. The first story introduces three words, and each story adds three or four more words, with the series building on these words. Id. Ms. Hoeppner and Lucas made flash cards, did the accompanying workbook, and read together in this reading program. R. 663. Ms. Hoeppner also made a reading folder for home workbook pages and his reading book, and she asked that Mrs. Nein read with Lucas for fifteen minutes each night. R. 663-64. After completing a book in the Milestones series, Lucas was tested to see whether he had learned the words in the book and had mastered the skills taught in the book. R. 665. By the end of second grade, Lucas had completed the pre-primer level books and was reading at the primer level. R. 668. Ms. Hoeppner opined at the due process hearing that the Milestones primer level was about “mid first grade” level. Id. III. Third Grade (1996-97 School Year) A case conference was held on March 14, 1996, to develop an IEP for Lucas for his third grade year. R. 1240. Mrs. Nein participated in this conference, acknowledged receiving notice of her parental rights, and approved of Lucas’s third grade IEP. R. 1243, 1249-56. Lucas’s IEP again provided for two hours of special education assistance each day in his regular classroom. R. 1241. In addition to the continued goals of increasing Lucas’s reading, written language, and spelling skills, the third grade IEP contained the goal of increasing Lucas’s math skills. R. 1246. It also provided for the continued use of classroom adaptations, including shorter assignments, small group instruction, the oral reading of quizzes and tests, and use of a modified grading scale. R. 1247. In September 1996, Lucas again took the ISTEP achievement test. The test was read to him. R. 1072. Ms. Hoeppner testified that Lucas continued in the Milestones reading program during the third grade because he “was having a lot of success” and “was building on the vocabulary that he had already learned.” R. 676. By the end of his third grade year, Lucas had again completed another series in the Milestones Program. Ms. Hoeppner testified that Lucas had made “approximately a half a year’s progress” and that he was reading at the “early second grade” level at the end of his third grade year. R. 680. IV. Fourth Grade (1997-98 School Year) A case conference was held on March 16, 1997, to develop an IEP for Lucas for his fourth grade year. R. 1298. Mrs. Nein participated in this case conference, acknowledged receiving notice of her parental rights, and approved Lucas’s fourth grade IEP. R. 1302, 1297. This IEP increased Lucas’ time in special education to full time, providing him with two and a half hours of special education support per day. R. 1300-01. The four goals from the previous year were continued, with an increased focus on reading comprehension and introduction of the Target Spelling Series. R. 686, 1304-05. The IEP also provided for a number of teaching adaptations and curriculum modifications, such as allowing Lucas more time to complete tasks, shortening his assignments, allowing tests and quizzes to be read orally or taped for him, and creating a modified grading scale. R. 1306. Lucas was also assigned a peer “buddy” to work with him in the regular classroom when he was not receiving direct special education services. R. 700. The Neins were frustrated by Lucas’s lack of progress, especially in redding, and on January 10, 1998, the Neins obtained independent academic and diagnostic testing for Lucas at The de Paul School in Louisville, Kentucky. R. 1418. The de Paul School specializes in working with students who suffer from dyslexia. R. 838. The new testing indicated that Lucas’s oral reading skills were below second grade level, that his arithmetic skills were at third grade level, and that his spelling abilities were at first grade level. R. 1418. On January 26, 1998, the Neins requested that a case conference be convened to address their concerns that Lucas was falling further and further behind his peers in certain subjects. R. 1318. This was the.first case conference meeting to be attended by Mr. Nein. At the conference, Mr. Nein said he was concerned because “Lucas can’t read and is not progressing fast enough.” R. 1330. He also reported that he had taken Lucas to be evaluated by The de Paul School and that the evaluation had revealed Lucas’s intellectual functioning was well below average and below expected levels of academic performance. R. 1331, 1345. The Neins requested that Lucas undergo another psycho-educational evaluation, including a social/emotional evaluation to determine his frustration level and anxiety, and an evaluation for attention deficit concerns. R. 1319. Additionally, the Neins requested that recommendations be made regarding specific strategies to be implemented to assist Lucas, particularly in the area of reading. Lucas was due to be tested in March 1998 pursuant to state guidelines for triennial evaluations. The conference attendees agreed to have Lucas re-evaluated. R. 1332. Lucas was evaluated on February 9 and 19, 1998, by Dr. Anne Claypool, Greater Clark’s school psychologist, and by Phyllis Manners, an educational diagnostician. R. 1344. On the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children' — III, Lucas achieved a full scale score of 75, which fell within the below average range. R. 1345. This score was also 20 points lower than his 1995 score of 95 on the same test. At the due process hearing, Dr. Claypool commented on this score discrepancy and explained that the lower score “sends up a flag to me like what is going on with this kid.” R. 534. However, she also testified that she “just let this piece go as he wasn’t on top of his game that day when he was doing testing.” R. 505. There is no indication that she had the test repeated or determined that the score was invalid. Other tests indicated that Lucas had “significant anxiety but an overall positive self-concept,” and that he did not have “significant attentional difficulties.” R. 1346. Lucas’s achievement on tests evaluating his reading skills and comprehension “fell significantly below the average range based on age level comparisons.” Id. His achievement on tests evaluating his written expression abilities and his mathematical reasoning and calculation abilities “fell in the below average to significantly below average range based on age level comparisons.” R. 1347, 1348. The examiners also noted that Lucas’s significant anxiety might have been related to his learning difficulties and that his distractibility during the testing might have resulted in “conservative” estimates of his abilities. R. 1349. After Lucas’s evaluation, a case conference was held on April 6, 1998, to discuss the evaluation results and to develop an IEP for his expected fifth grade year (1998-99) at Parkwood Elementary. R. at 1393. Both Mr. and Mrs. Nein attended the conference. Id. This IEP contained annual goals to increase Lucas’s reading skills, written language skills, and math skills “by six months,” but it did not provide for the use of any specific techniques designed to address his dyslexia. R. 1396. The IEP again provided for Lucas to receive special education services for two and a half hours a day. R. 1397. After receiving a copy of the school’s Notice of Procedural Safeguards (Parental Rights), Mrs. Nein signed the IEP. R. 1399. At the end of Lucas’s fourth grade year, he had completed another level of books in the Milestones program. Ms. Hoeppner testified at the due process hearing that Lucas was reading at the “late second grade level.” R. 694. The IEP developed for Lucas’s fifth grade year noted that although Lucas had “a 6 month progress in reading” during his fourth grade year, he had difficulty “generalizing” the words from his Milestones reading program to other “locations” or reading materials. R. 1404. On April 24, 1998, and pursuant to IDEA procedures, the Neins requested a due process hearing to address Lucas’s educational placement. R. 1423. Attorney Jerry L. Colglazier was appointed as the initial hearing officer. R. 1422. After a May 12, 1998, pre-hearing conference, the initial hearing officer ordered Greater Clark to pay for another diagnostic evaluation and a psychological assessment. The psychological assessment was conducted by Dr. Jan Eglen on May 28, 1998. R. 1426. Dr. Eglen found that Lucas’s test scores indicated “possible mixed learning and/or other developmental disabilities,” that he demonstrated some attention deficits, that he needed “appropriate boundary setting” and to learn self-discipline, and that he needed to participate in group or peer activities to enhance teamwork and sharing. R. 1431-32. Dr. Eglen also recommended that Lucas be further evaluated by a reading specialist, that he have comprehensive hearing and visual examinations, and that he be examined by a pediatric neurologist. When questioned at the due process hearing about his examination of Lucas, Dr. Eglen testified that he wondered if Lucas lacked the “fundamental tools of being able to learn.” R. 991. He opined that Lucas “may not be teachable” and that he “might be doing the very best of which he’s capable of doing.” R. 991-92. Dr. Eglen also testified, however, that these opinions were “conjectural” because he did not think he had enough evidence to reach firm conclusions R. 1003-04. The Neins enrolled Lucas in The de Paul School summer program for six weeks during the summer of 1998. The de Paul School Headmaster testified at the due process hearing that the school was “designed from the beginning to work with students with a specific learning disability, which we refer to as dyslexia.” R. 838. He explained that the school offers “programs for students who are capable, who show average to above-average intellect, but due to processing difficulty show variability in academic performance, who show specific needs in terms of organizational skills, attentiveness, ability to organize space and time.” Id. Students are grouped according to achievement level, and students “do a wide variety of activities that are very multi-sensory, hands-on.” R. 845, 841. During his time at The de Paul School, Lucas received four periods of language arts a day (phonics, oral reading, writing skills, and grammar skills), two periods of math, and one period of social skills. R. 841-42. Lucas completed a series of tests at the beginning of The de Paul School summer program and again at the end of the program. R. 1440. A comparison of the test results indicated that Lucas made some “overall gains” in four out of five subject areas. The de Paul School recommended that Lucas be enrolled in its program for the 1998-99 school year, R. 1440, and the Neins decided to enroll Lucas for that year. On August 31, 1998, the diagnostic evaluation ordered by the initial hearing officer was performed by staff members at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in Cleveland, Ohio. R. 1442. The results of Lucas’s evaluation were compiled by Karen E. Da-kin, an education diagnostician at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation. Ms. Dakin, an expert on dyslexia, reported that “Lucas is a child of average ability who is severely learning disabled and meets the criteria for language processing and articulation disorders, as well.” R. 1450. Ms. Dakin also reported that “Lucas is achieving similar to a typical child at the middle of first grade in his basic reading skills, achieving moderately below potential and close to two standard deviations below his overall ability.” Id. His reading comprehension was slightly higher (beginning of second grade), while his math calculation and problem solving achievement was in the third grade range. His written language skills were considered his weakest academic area (middle of first grade), and spelling was a significant handicap. To address Lucas’s disabilities, Ms. Dakin recommended “direct teaching using multi-sensory, structured, sequential techniques” that “directly teach the sound-symbol relationship and the blending of individual phonemes into syllables.” Id. She also recommended specific teaching techniques for use with Lucas. R. 1451-54. After receiving these evaluations from the Cleveland Clinic, Greater Clark convened another case conference on October 27, 1998. R. 1464. Mr. and Mrs. Nein both attended this conference. The results of the examinations performed by Dr. Claypool, Dr. Eglen, and Karin Dakin were all discussed, along with Lucas’s academic performance in The de Paul School summer program and his academic performance during his fourth grade year at Parkwood Elementary. R. 1466-82. The IEP designed for the 1998-99 school year proposed to increase the amount of time Lucas received special education services and included several goals for improving Lucas academic performance by either six or nine months. R. 1484-93. The proposed IEP did not provide for a direct teaching reading program using an individualized, integrated, multi-sensory teaching method. At the conclusion of the case conference, the Neins were not satisfied with the proposed IEP. They therefore decided to go forward with the due process hearing scheduled for the following month. V. The Initial Hearing Officer’s Decision The due process hearing in this matter was held on November 23-25, 1998, and the initial hearing officer issued his decision on January 11, 1999. Prior to the hearing, the parties had identified four specific issues for trial. The following are the initial hearing officer’s conclusions of law regarding each issue: 1. Has the LEA [local education agency] failed to 'provide the student with a free appropriate public education in the least restrictive environment wherein he failed to receive educational benefit? Yes. Although the Student did receive educational gains in some areas, and made reported progress of six months per year in the Milestones reading program, the progress was not transferable to other academic or non-academic areas wherein student could read, and the student for all intents and purposes was a non reader during the his [sic] first four grades within the LEA educational environment. The ability to read is a fundamental ingredient in a free appropriate education that can be diminished only by a finding that the disabled child is clearly incapable of achieving reading skills transferable to life settings. The failure to use an approach that will provide Student with the tools to become an independent reader is alone an important reason why the LEA did not provide an appropriate education. 2. If yes, does the denial of a free appropriate public education to the Student require extended school year services or compensatory educational services? YES, compensatory education is appropriate for the student. The parent’s [sic] concept of extended school year is misplaced, however, compensatory education is appropriate where student has been denied a FAPE. 3. Are the parents entitled to reimbursement for the expenses incurred for the 1998 summer program and/or the current placement at the de Paul school? YES. 4. What is the proper placement and related services and accommodations required to provide the student with a free appropriate public education in the least restrictive environment for the 1998-1999 school year? THE de Paul SCHOOL. As the LEA has failed to provide a FAPE, the IHO finds and concludes that the unilateral placement and services provided by the de Paul School to teach a learning disabled child with the specific learning disability of dyslexia is appropriate. R. 226-27. In light of these findings, the initial hearing officer ordered Greater Clark to reimburse the Neins for the cost of expenses incurred for Lucas’s placement at The de Paul School summer program and for the 1998-99 school year, and to pay for two years of compensatory education at The de Paul School. R. 228. The initial hearing officer also ordered Greater Clark to reimburse the Neins for the reasonable cost of transporting Lucas to The de Paul School. VI. The Board of Appeals’Decision Greater Clark appealed the initial hearing officer’s decision to the state’s Board of Appeals. In its Petition for Review, Greater Clark made numerous objections to the initial hearing officer’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. In summary, Greater Clark objected to the initial hearing officer’s conclusion that it did not provide Lucas with a free appropriate public education and asserted that it was not required to provide Lucas with a free appropriate public education designed to maximize his potential. R. 11. Greater Clark also maintained that the initial hearing officer incorrectly evaluated Lucas’s educational progress. R. 12. Finally, Greater Clark argued that, because it had provided Lucas with an appropriate public education, it should not be required to reimburse the Neins for any educational expenses. R. 13. The three member Board of Appeals held a hearing without oral argument on April 27, 1999, and issued an opinion the following day. R. 1-18, 150-207. The Board of Appeals upheld some of the initial hearing officer’s findings and conclusions and struck others based on Greater Clark’s arguments. In summary, the Board of Appeals concluded, by a 2-1 vote, that Greater Clark had provided a free appropriate public education to Lucas, that Lucas was not entitled to compensatory education, and that the Neins were not entitled to any financial reimbursement from Greater Clark. R. 18. The Neins then petitioned this court for judicial review of the Board of Appeals’ decision. Discussion I. Free Appropriate Public Education The IDEA provides “elaborate and highly specific procedural safeguards,” but only “general and somewhat imprecise substantive admonitions.” Board of Education v. Rowley, 458 U.S. 176, 205, 102 S.Ct. 3034, 73 L.Ed.2d 690 (1982). Unlike plaintiffs in many IDEA cases, the Neins do not challenge the procedures Greater Clark used to decide upon educational programs for Lucas. They contend instead that Greater Clark failed to meet the substantive standards of the Act, which require a “basic floor of opportunity” for disabled children in the form of “access to specialized instruction and related services which are individually designed to provide educational benefit to the handicapped child.” Id. at 201, 102 S.Ct. 3034. The central substantive issue here is whether Greater Clark provided Lucas with a free appropriate public education under the IDEA. The Neins contend that during Lucas’s four years at Parkwood Elementary, Greater Clark faded to provide him with the minimum required educational benefit under the IDEA and that, despite this failure, Greater Clark again proposed to use the same teaching methods if Lucas had stayed there for fifth grade. The Neins rely primarily on Lucas’s scores on academic achievement and intelligence tests. When Greater Clark first evaluated Lucas in March and May 1995, when he was in first grade, his full scale score of 95 on the WISC-III test was in the average range and indicated that Lucas had the ability or potential to learn. R. 454. Lucas’s reading cluster score of 68 and his written language cluster score of 84 on the Woodcock-Johnson Achievement Test, however, indicated that Lucas fell significantly short of his potential in reading and short of his potential in writing. The Neins compare those results to the evaluation three years later when Lucas was tested by Karen Dakin at the Cleveland Clinic in August 1998. On the Woodcock-Johnson Achievement Test, Lucas had a written language cluster score of 51 and a basic reading skills cluster score of 66. R. 1448. Lucas had a reading subtest score of 61, a spelling subtest score of 69, and an arithmetic subtest of 85. R. 1449. At the due process hearing, Ms. Dakin explained that these scores are “standard scores” that basically compare a child’s scores to those of his age-group peers. R. 579. These standard scores also permit comparison of Lucas’s achievement in certain educational areas to his IQ, or his academic potential. R. 578. Ms. Dakin also testified that Lucas’s August 1998 writing, reading, and math scores had all dropped when compared with his 1995 scores. R. 579. The Neins contend this evidence demonstrates that Lucas did not make adequate or minimal educational progress from 1995 to 1998 under Greater Clark’s programs. In response, Greater Clark contends that Lucas recéived at least some educational benefit at Parkwood Elementary and that under the IDEA, he is entitled only to an appropriate education, not the very best possible education. Greater Clark focuses on the fact that Lucas progressed in the Milestones reading program at the rate of about half a year per year of school. It argues that such progress is not trivial or insignificant but is “undisputed evidence of significant educational benefit.” Def. Br. at 30. Greater Clark also points to Lucas’s grade level promotion each year and his good academic grades. Greater Clark also contends that Lucas’s standardized test scores are not an appropriate or accurate measurement of his academic progress because the standardized tests do not reliably measure the progress of children with learning disabilities. Greater Clark relies on the testimony of its school psychologist, Dr. Claypool, who explained how standardized tests are “not particularly sensitive to individual growth,” R. 541, and the testimony of the headmaster at The de Paul School, who explained that “students with learning disabilities tend to do less well on achievement testing, especially formal achievement testing than others would.” R. 848. The substantive disagreement between the parties, and between the initial hearing officer and the Board of Appeals, revolves around two related questions: (1) what level of educational benefit is necessary to satisfy the requirements of the IDEA; and (2) what is the proper measure of educational benefit? When the Supreme Court addressed the first question in 1982, it held that an IEP is valid under what is now the IDEA if it is “reasonably calculated to enable the child to receive educational benefits.” Board of Education v. Rowley, 458 U.S. at 207, 102 S.Ct. 3034. The Court also held that a state satisfied the requirement of providing a free appropriate public education “by providing personalized instruction with sufficient support services to permit the child to benefit educationally from that instruction.” Id. at 203, 102 S.Ct. 3034. In Rowley, the Supreme Court carefully declined to “establish any one test for determining the adequacy of educational benefits conferred upon all children covered by the Act,” id. at 202, 102 S.Ct. 3034, but the outer bounds of the law’s substantive requirements are deceptively easy to articulate. The Supreme Court explicitly rejected in Rowley any suggestion that the IDEA requires public schools to. furnish every service “necessary to maximize each handicapped child’s potential.” Id. at 199, 102 S.Ct. 3034 (emphasis added). However, federal courts have also recognized that a school does not satisfy the IDEA by offering “mere token gestures,” Daniel R.R. v. State Board of Education, 874 F.2d 1036, 1048 (5th Cir.1989), or a “trifle,” J.S.K. v. Hendry County School Board, 941 F.2d 1563, 1573 (11th Cir.1991). Similarly, in Ridgewood Board of Education v. N.E., the Third Circuit reversed a district court decision in favor of a school based on the theory that the IEP for a dyslexic student had been sufficient because it provided “more than a trivial educational benefit.” 172 F.3d 238, 247 (3d Cir.1999). The Third Circuit explained that the IDEA “calls for more than a trivial educational benefit,” so that an IEP must be reasonably calculated to confer “meaningful benefit.” Id., quoting Polk v. Central Susquehanna Intermediate Unit 16, 853 F.2d 171, 182, 184 (3d Cir.1988). A recent amendment to the IDEA also offers some insight regarding what level of educational benefit is necessary to satisfy the requirements of the IDEA.. Congress amended the Purposes section of the IDEA in 1997 to state that the IDEA seeks “to ensure that all children with disabilities have available to them a free appropriate public education that emphasizes special education and related services designed to meet their qnique needs and prepare them for employment and independent living.” 20 U.S.C. § 1400(d)(1)(A) (1998). The stated purpose of preparing a child for employment and independent living supports the Third Circuit’s view in Ridgewood that an IEP must be reasonably calculated to provide a child with a meaningful educational benefit. Additionally, Congress’ statement that an IEP should be designed to meet a child’s “unique” needs reinforces the Supreme Court’s holding in Rowley that special education services must be “personalized.” See 458 U.S. at 203,102 S.Ct. 3034. If an IEP must be designed to take into account a child’s individual educational needs, it logically follows that the child’s capacity to learn should also be considered in evaluating the IEP. Thus, when gauging substantive compliance with the IDEA, the educational benefit provided to the child “must be gauged in relation to the child’s potential,” so that when a student displays “considerable intellectual potential,” the IDEA requires “a great deal more than a negligible [benefit].” Ridgewood Board of Education, 172 F.3d at 247, quoting Polk, 853 F.2d at 185, 182. Similarly, evidence that a child has made some “minimal improvement” does not necessarily show the school has satisfied the Rowley standard. Hall v. Vance County Board of Education, 774 F.2d 629, 636 (4th Cir.1985). The Fourth Circuit’s decision in Hall offers a useful road map for this case because it also dealt with a dyslexic student for whom, like Lucas Nein, there was a wide gap between overall ability and intelligence and his ability to decipher written symbols. The court stated plainly that it was not adopting a requirement of maximizing potential, and instead considered the evidence of the child’s educational progress in light of evidence of his capabilities: Rowley recognized that no single substantive standard can describe how much educational benefit is sufficient to satisfy the Act. Instead, the Supreme Court left that matter to the courts for case-by-case determination. In approaching this question, the district court adopted the Rowley court’s strategy. It considered James’ capabilities and intellectual progress and what the school had provided him. Cf. Rowley, 458 U.S. at 202-03, 102 S.Ct. 3034. Defendants contend, however, that James’ academic progress, as measured by his grade promotions and test scores, evinces educational benefit and requires under Rowley that the district court’s ruling be overturned. We disagree. Although the Rowley Court considered Amy Rowley’s promotions in determining that she had been afforded a FAPE, the Court limited its analysis to that one case and recognized that promotions were a fallible measure of educational benefit. Id. at 202, 203 n. 25, 102 S.Ct. 3034. The district court did not err in discounting James’ promotions in light of the school’s policy of social promotion and James’ test scores and independent evaluations. Nor was the district court compelled by a showing of minimal improvement on some test results to rule that the school had given James a FAPE. Rowley recognized that a FAPE must be tailored to the individual child’s capabilities and that while one might demand only minimal results in the case of the most severely handicapped children, such results would be insufficient in the case of other children. Clearly, Congress did not intend that a school system could discharge its duty under the EAHCA [predecessor to the IDEA] by providing a program that produces some minimal academic advancement, no matter how trivial. We do not believe that the district court committed error in determining from the tests taken as a whole and the independent evaluations pronouncing James “functionally illiterate” and “untestable” that the Vance County schools had failed to provide James with a FAPE before January 1982. 774 F.2d at 635-36; accord, Ridgewood Board of Education, 172 F.3d at 247-48 (noting that Rowley rejects “a bright-line rule on the amount of benefit required of an appropriate IEP in favor of an approach requiring a student-by-student analysis that carefully considers the student’s individual abilities;” reversal required because district court “may not have given adequate consideration to [the child’s] intellectual potential” in reaching its decision). Following the approach of the Fourth Circuit in Hall and the Third Circuit in Ridgewood, the issue here is whether, in light of Lucas’ abilities and disabilities, Greater Clark offered him an IEP reasonably calculated to provide meaningful educational benefit. The court is painfully aware that “meaningful educational benefit” is not an exact standard. See Rowley, 458 U.S. at 201-02, 102 S.Ct. 3034 (declining to adopt a single standard for all children, all disabilities, and all cases). In applying that broad standard of meaningful educational benefit, the court must give due deference to the Board of Appeals’ conclusions, and the court must be careful to avoid merely taking sides in a reasonable debate over educational policy, theory, or method. The court must also take care to remember that IEPs are not guaranteed to succeed. A child’s failure to succeed or progress does not necessarily prove the school has failed to provide an appropriate public education, for there may be other explanations for the lack of meaningful success or progress. Also, of course, some children will always be below the mean, and if some children’s test scores are improving relative to others’ in the same age group, then some children’s scores will reflect drops in percentiles. Nevertheless, merely trivial or minimal progress is not sufficient, at least when there is reason to expect that a child should be able to make meaningful educational progress with appropriate and necessary services. In its brief, Greater Clark has struck all of these cautionary chords. Courts must defer to the expertise of school officials and should not try to resolve disputed issues of educational policy or practice. The public schools have limited resources. And a child’s disabilities may be so severe as to make it impossible for the child to meet his parents’ (and perhaps a court’s) hopes and expectations. See Def. Br. at 26-31. Taking all of those cautions into account, however, on facts as extreme as these, where a child with a severe learning disability but significant potential made no transferable progress in three years, and where there was no indication the public school was ready and able to change direction, the limits of “due weight” and judicial deference to school authorities have been exceeded. After reviewing the evidence and the administrative findings, it is clear that by the time Lucas was in fourth grade, and perhaps well before then, Greater Clark’s IEP for him was no longer reasonably calculated to confer educational benefit upon him. Seven findings by the initial hearing officer have particular significance here. Greater Clark objected to each of the initial hearing officer’s findings set forth below. After considering the objections, however, the Board of Appeals adopted five of those findings as written by the initial hearing officer, and it adopted the other two with minor changes. See R. 150-207. In addition, these findings are supported by substantial evidence in the record, and there is no meaningful basis for Greater Clark to dispute them, as adopted or modified by the Board of Appeals: • 6. The school psychologist stated the WISC-III [conducted when Lucas was in first grade] revealed there were no significant discrepancies between verbal and performance score [sic] which resulted in average intelligence. The scores indicated the Student had the ability to process, to learn. [Adopted by Board of Appeals without change.] 15. Dr. Eglen stated that student does not have the ability to work at developmental grade level for his age and probably will not get any better. He further opined that he wondered if the student lacks essential basic or fundamental tools of being able to learn. “He may not be teachable.” He further stated that progress in reading and language arts at the rate of six months per year “might be the very best of which he’s capable of doing,” but that was a “hypothetical”, a “conjee-ture”, “I don’t know yet.” [“] don’t think the evidence is here.” [Adopted by Board of Appeals without change.] 20. There was no evidence of probative value in the record that the Student’s progress in the Milestones reading program transferred to other academic or nonacademic areas which required reading to any degree whether it was reading from books, signs, etc. [Adopted by Board of Appeals without change.] 21. LEA personnel appeared to have a reluctance in considering dyslexia in any way other than a learning disability. In addition, the LEA personnel did not demonstrate any expertise or extended training in teaching students defined as dyslexic. [Modified by the Board of Appeals to read: 21. LEA personnel appeared to consider dyslexia within the context of a learning disability. In addition, the LEA personnel did not demonstrate any expertise or extended training in teaching students defined as dyslexic.] 22. Student has received considerable special education services that that [sic] been effective in certain areas, but not very effective in reading, and not demonstrably transferable. [Adopted by Board of Appeals without change.] 23. Karen Dakin further testified as follows: (Student), we’re discussing him now because his reading is still pretty much on a first-grade level. Obviously there’s been some growth. He’s learned some sight words, he’s not a preprimer level, he’s ... at middle of first grade and a first grade level. But he’s been in the program three years and that’s extremely limited growth for a child with average ability. We have to understand that even with a learning disability and interfacing factors like language and attention difficulties, much more growth can be obtained and should be obtained or goals should be changed or programs should be changed. We’ve got to respond when growth has not been good and be creative and try to explore and find another more productive program. He’s obviously made some growth; it’s just extremely limited, and he’s entitled to more growth than that. A structured language program with reading remediation may take up to three years to get the Student to an independent reading situation. The IHO adopts the above summary as findings of fact. [Adopted by Board of Appeals without change.] 29. The uncontroverted testimony of the experts on dyslexia clearly establishes that to benefit educationally Student requires an intensive program of individualized, integrated, multi-sensory sequential training. See Evans v. Board of Education, 930 F.Supp. 83 (S.D.N.Y.1996).[Modified by the Board to read: 29. Testimony of the experts on dyslexia clearly establishes that to benefit educationally Student requires an intensive program of individualized, integrated, multi-sensory sequential training.] See R. 213-23 (internal citations omitted and emphasis added). Thus, the initial hearing officer and the Board of Appeals agreed on the following facts: that despite Dr. Eglen’s “conjecture” to the contrary, Lucas had average intelligence and the ability to process and learn; that the special education services Lucas received at Parkwood Elementary had been effective in some areas but had not been very effective in reading; that Lucas could not read anything outside of the Milestones reading program; that at the end of fourth grade, Lucas’s reading skills were at the middle of first grade level; that an expert in dyslexia believed Lucas had “extremely limited growth” while at Parkwood Elementary and was “entitled to more growth than that;” and finally, that Greater Clark personnel did not demonstrate any expertise or extended training in teaching students defined as dyslexic. Upon review of these facts, it is clear that Greater Clark failed to provide Lucas with a free appropriate public education. Whether Lucas’s educational progress (or lack thereof) at Parkwood Elementary is measured by his scores on academic achievement tests, or by his progress in the Milestones reading program and his promotion each year to the next grade level, the result is the same: after three years of special education services, Lucas could not read anything outside the Milestones reading program. Like the child in Hall v. Vance County Board of Education, who as an eleven-year-old fifth grader could not distinguish between the words “ladies” and “gentlemen” on public restroom doors, 774 F.2d at 630, Lucas also could not read restroom signs as a ten-year-old fourth grader. See R. 880-81. He was still functionally illiterate. Greater Clark relies, however, on Lucas’s progress within the Milestones program at the rate of about half a year per year of school to show the IEP offered Lucas “some” educational benefit. Greater Clark describes this progress as “far from a trivial or insignificant benefit.” Def. Br. at 30. Greater Clark also invokes the Sixth Circuit’s automotive metaphor, saying that it offered the Neins “the educational equivalent of a serviceable Chevrolet,” while they demand “a Cadillac solely for [their] use” at taxpayer expense. See Def. Br. at 24-25, quoting Doe v. Board of Education of Tullahoma City Schools, 9 F.3d 455, 459 (6th Cir.1993). This argument ignores the limits of the evidence, which convinced both the initial hearing officer and the Board of Appeals that even Lucas’s slow progress in the Milestones program had not produced transferable progress to other areas. See Finding 20. The Milestones program is and was not an end in itself: the goal is to help a child with dyslexia become a functioning adult. Because Lucas could not read anything outside the Milestones reading program, his progress in the Milestones program itself is of marginal relevance. Rowley explains the requirements of the IDEA in terms of providing “access” to an education. At the risk of carrying these metaphors too far, for a student like Lucas, the ability to read is truly the key that opens the door to all other aspects of an education. In terms of the automotive metaphor, Greater Clark was providing the Neins a Chevrolet without a transmission — even if the engine might run, no power ever reached the wheels. Because the Milestones program produced no transferable progress in three years, as both the initial hearing officer and the Board of Appeals found, the program was plainly failing to provide even a minimally adequate educational benefit. Greater Clark also relies on Rowley to argue that Lucas’s good grades and promotions from grade to grade show he was making some educational progress. Def. Br. at 29. In Rowley, the Supreme Court indeed considered the child’s grades and promotions as evidence that she was receiving substantial educational benefits. 458 U.S. at 202-03, 102 S.Ct. 3034. However, the child in Rowley was deaf and was able to earn better than average grades in a regular classroom. Id. The Court expressly disclaimed the use Greater Clark tries to make of the point: “We do not hold today that every handicapped child who is advancing from grade to grade in a regular public school system is automatically receiving a ‘free appropriate public education.’ ” 458 U.S. at 203 n. 25, 102 S.Ct. 3034. In this case, Lucas was graded on a modified scale and his tests and quizzes were modified, often being read to him aloud because he was unable to read them. As for his promotion each year to the next grade level, Greater Clark had a policy of not retaining students at a particular grade level. See R. 419. The policy was based on the desire to minimize the negative effect such retention might have on a child’s social skills and self-esteem. R. 220. Thus, in this case, Lucas’s promotions to the next grade level are not evidence of educational benefit from the Greater Clark program. See Hall, 774 F.2d at 636 (“The district court did not err in discounting [the student’s] promotions in light of the school’s policy of social promotion and [his] test scores and independent evaluations.”). Greater Clark also argues that, regardless of the lack of benefit Lucas received from special education services offered to him during his first through fourth grade years, the IEP directly at issue in this matter, the one designed for his fifth grade year at Parkwood Elementary, was reasonably designed for educational gain. Greater Clark does not appear to dispute that this IEP, as originally designed in April 1998, essentially proposed to continue the same special education services Lucas had been receiving for the prior three years. It provided for Ms. Hoeppner to continue working with him, and she again would have been responsible for choosing the methods and curriculum to use in teaching Lucas. It also provided for Lucas to continue in the Milestones reading program, and it contained the same goals of increasing his reading, written language, and math skills by six months. R.. 1896. Because the April 1998 IEP proposed to provide essentially the same services that had failed Lucas during the prior three years, it is clear that the April 1998 IEP was not reasonably designed to provide Lucas with an educational benefit. Greater Clark argues, however, that revisions made to Lucas’s fifth grade IEP at the October 1998 case conference showed the proposed IEP was reasonably designed to provide him with an educational benefit. Greater Clark maintains that the revised IEP implemented all of Ms. Da-kin’s recommendations. See Def. Br. at 38. Ms. Dakin had determined that the “whole language or literature based” teaching method used by Ms. Hoeppner had “not been effective with Lucas” and was unlikely to be effective in the future. R. 1450. She therefore recommended the use of a reading program involving direct teaching and multisensory, structured, sequential techniques. Id. She also recommended that Lucas receive special accommodations in the school setting, such as preferential seating, close monitoring of his behavior, and the breaking down of larger projects into smaller components. R. 1451. Finally, she also testified that her recommendations could be implemented in a public school setting. R. 633. The court assumes it is possible to implement those recommendations in a public school setting. The problem here is that there is no evidence that Greater Clark was planning to do so or was even capable of doing so. Greater Clark contends that Ms. Hoeppner’s testimony before the initial hearing officer “confirms that not only was it possible to implement Ms. Dakin’s recommendations in the public school context, but that she had actually done so.” Def. Br. at 38. The court disagrees. The initial hearing officer questioned Ms. Hoeppner regarding a public school’s ability to implement a teaching program similar to that used by The de Paul School. Ms. Hoeppner testified that it would be possible for a public school to implement such a program. See R. 814-16. The initial hearing officer then asked Ms. Ho-eppner to compare the IEP developed for Lucas’s fifth grade year to the type of teaching program used by The de Paul School. In comparing Greater Clark’s plan to develop Lucas’s reading skills with the program used at The de Paul School, Ms. Hoeppner testified: “As far as the reading, you know, we had goals developed for reading and written expression. As far as the four periods a day [of reading instruction at The de Paul School], the only thing that would need to be changed on what we had written up would be the time frame.” R. 816. The cited testimony also contains a series of questions by the initial hearing officer regarding Greater Clark’s willingness to implement different teaching methodologies. Ms. Hoeppner testified that Greater Clark would be willing to “try something new” anytime “something’s not working.” R. 820. The initial hearing officer then asked: “Well, for instance, if they [a private teaching program] would at least demonstrate that they had a teaching methodology for dyslexia students that accomplished more results, you would not be adverse to adopting that into your system?” Id. Mrs. Hoeppner responded: “Oh, absolutely not.” Id. Although this testimony demonstrates Ms. Hoeppner’s belief that Greater Clark could implement recommended teaching methodologies and would be willing to do so, it does not show that Ms. Hoeppner either had actually implemented Ms. Da-kin’s recommendations or was planning to do so. Ms. Dakin made numerous recommendations, but the recommendation most at issue here was that Greater Clark implement a direct teaching reading program using multisensory, structured, sequential techniques. Ms. Hoeppner did not testify that Lucas’s fifth grade IEP included the