Learning Center

Tips and Strategies On Managing the IEP Process - $99 for COPAA Members and $199 for COPAA Registered Guests

The Tips and Strategies on Managing the IEP Process Learning Path includes eight webinars listed below: 

* Special Education Eligibility Decision-Making for Students with Specific Learning Disabilities (2024 conference)
* What is Specially Designed Instruction? (2024 conference)
* It's 10 p.m. Do You Know Where Your Children's Present Levels of Performance Are? Strategies for Organized, Effective IEP Advocacy (2024 conference)
* Legal Empowerment in Practice: A strategy for Fostering Clients' Engagement, Self-efficacy, and Advocacy skills, in IEP Meetings and Beyond (2024 conference)
* Tips I Wish I Knew Before I Became An Advocate (2024 conference)
* IEP Tips & Strategies For Parents To Use Before, During & After IEP Meetings (2024 conference)
* I'm in the IEP Meeting, Now What? (2024 conference)
* Consent: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly (2024 conference)

Dr. Brandi Tanner

Licensed Psychologist

Your IEP Source

Dr. Brandi Tanner is a Licensed Psychologist in the state of Georgia, Nationally Certified School Psychologist (NCSP), and former special educator with two decades years of experience in her fields. After attending hundreds of IEP, 504, and Student Support Team (SST) meetings and witnessing the stress faced by overwhelmed parents, she founded Your IEP Source as a way to demystify the complexities of the IEP process and empower parent-advocates.

Dr. Tanner received degrees in elementary and special education from West Virginia University and was awarded her Ph.D. in School Psychology from the University of South Florida. She worked in the public school setting for several years, giving her insider knowledge of special education rules and procedures. With experience as an educator and psychologist, Dr. Tanner is highly qualified to provide interpretation of psychoeducation evaluations and as well as information on appropriate educational interventions and services. Along with Your IEP Source, Dr. Brandi runs a private psychology practice specializing in psychological evaluations for children and adolescent

Ashley Meier Barlow, Esq.

Owner, Attorney

Meier & Barlow Law Firm

Ashley Barlow’s passion for special education advocacy stems from her experiences as a general education teacher and from advocating for a more inclusive educational placement for her son, Jack, who has Down syndrome. She has attended and presented at many national conferences for special education attorneys and advocates, including the Institute of Special Education (faculty in 2020, 2021). She also holds a certificate of Training in Advocacy and is on the State Advisory Board for Exceptional Children in Kentucky.


Ashley owns a law firm, Meier & Barlow Law Firm, that focuses on special education and special needs estate planning, as well as an on-line business, Ashley Barlow Co., which was established to empower IEP team members via a podcast, on-line courses, many other resources. Prior to practicing law, Ashley was a teacher in Jefferson County and Cincinnati Public school systems and a professor at her alma mater, Miami University. Ashley attended Salmon P. Chase College of Law.

When not working, Ashley is normally at the pool with her husband and two sons or grabbing a coffee in her 1975 Volkswagen bus.

Melissa K. Waugh, JD, MPH

Attorney

Belkowitz Law, PLLC

Melissa K. Waugh (she/her/hers) is a skilled attorney in practice for over twenty years. She has practiced special education law for the last thirteen years. Melissa represents parents at IEP meetings, in mediation, with state and federal complaints, in due process hearings, and in federal and state litigation. Her representation includes matters arising under the IDEA, the ADA, Section 504, and Title IX. Melissa graduated cum laude from the University of North Texas with a Bachelor of Applied Arts and Sciences degree with a focus in biology, chemistry, and physics. Melissa received her Juris Doctor degree, cum laude, from the University of Houston Law Center in 2000. While attending law school, Melissa served on the Houston Journal of International Law as Articles Editor, the Student Bar Association as 1st Vice President & Section Representative, the Honor Court as a Justice, the Health Law Organization, and the Public Interest Law Organization. She also won first place in the Tom Newhouse Mediation Competition. Melissa also holds a Master of Public Health degree from the University of Texas-Health Science Center. Melissa and her husband, Lt. Col. Bryan "Marty" Waugh (Ret.), are the parents of two amazing children who happen to have special needs. After adopting their children from foster care in 2010 and being exposed for the first time to special education and IEPs, Melissa quickly realized how complicated this area of the law is and the dire need for more attorneys representing the interests of parents of children with disabilities in our schools. Melissa started her own law firm to assist families of children with disabilities and has served as a Guardian ad Litem for children in court. She joined Belkowitz Law, PLLC in 2018. Melissa regularly presents to parent and professional groups and has served as faculty for COPAA, the Institute for Special Education Advocacy at William & Mary Law School, VPLC Annual Statewide Legal Aid Conference, the University of Richmond School of Law Special Education Symposium, and the National Business Institute. She is a long-time member of COPAA, and a member of the Special Education Advisory Committee (“SEAC”) for Loudoun County Public Schools. Melissa is licensed to practice law in Virginia, Maryland, and Washington, D.C.

Amy Bonn, Esq.

COPAA Consulting Attorney

COPAA

Amy Bonn Esq. is a Nebraska attorney providing legal representation to families of children with disabilities in special education matters. Amy is a summa cum laude graduate of Creighton University School of Law, where she was a member of the board of editors of the Creighton Law Review. She is licensed to practice in state and federal courts in Nebraska. 

Amy is also a proud parent of children with developmental disabilities. She completed a ten-month traineeship in disability advocacy and leadership at the University Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities at the Munroe-Meyer Institute, University of Nebraska Medical Center, where her research focus was on parental advocacy in special education.

Luz Santana

Co-Founder and Co-Director of Democracy Building Programs

Right Question Intstitute

Luz Santana, is RQI’s co-founder and co-director of democracy-building programs. Luz helped develop the concept of Microdemocracy — the idea that low-income people can begin to participate in their ordinary encounters with public and publicly funded institutions. She is the co-author of Make Just One Change, published by Harvard Education Press in 2011, and Partnering with Parents. Luz has a B.A and M.A. from the Springfield College School of Human Services, and she was chosen as a Community Fellow at M.I.T. Luz is dedicated to finding the simplest ways to make it possible for all people to learn how to think and act more effectively on their own behalf. Her work is informed not only by her personal experience as a former welfare recipient, but also by lessons from people all over the country and beyond with whom RQI has worked for the past twenty years. In the course of her work, Santana has traveled the country as a presenter, facilitator, and keynote speaker — in English and Spanish. Within the past year she has spoken at the ASCD Empower Conference, the Los Angeles Unified School District’s 2018 Parent Summit, the Spring CUE 2018 National Conference, and Columbia University, among other engagements.

Naomi Campbell, Esq.

Director, Legal Empowerment Program

Right Question Institute

Naomi Campbell, Esq. is the director of the Legal Empowerment Program at the Right Question Institute (RQI). She supports legal professionals working in low-income communities, who use RQI's methods to help their clients feel greater self-efficacy and independence, partner more effectively with service providers, and advocate for themselves, in the legal system and beyond. 

Prior to joining RQI, Naomi was a legal fellow with Centro de los Derechos del Migrante (CDM) in Mexico City, where she supported migrant workers in defending their rights as they moved between their home communities in Mexico and their places of work in the United States. She has also represented asylum-seekers and was a teaching assistant for cross-disciplinary negotiation and dispute resolution courses. She earned her J.D. cum laude from Harvard Law School and is a member of the New York Bar.



Kevin Reira

Program Coordinator, Legal Empowerment Program

The Right Question Institute

Kevin Riera is the program coordinator for RQI’s Legal Empowerment Program. He supports the Legal Empowerment Program through outreach and by helping bring RQI’s methods and strategies to various members of the legal community. Kevin graduated from Stanford University with a bachelor’s degree, with honors, in anthropology. His honors thesis focused on linguistic anthropology — pursuing a better understanding of the lived experiences of Ecuadorian migrants in Minneapolis in relation to race and ethnicity. During his undergraduate career, Kevin was involved in a variety of organizations, including the Student Immigrant Empowerment Project. He has also spent time in Ecuador and Colombia for teaching fellowships, where he gained an appreciation for teaching and education. Prior to joining RQI, he worked as a research associate at Thomson Reuters, where he handled due diligence and document retrieval requests for numerous firms and businesses.

David Beinke

Director Of Community Development & Education at Cirkiel Law

COPAA

David Beinke, former Director of Advocacy with the Cirkiel Law Group from 97-2021, now Advocate Nomad, provides a unique brand of support for children with disabilities and fellow advocates in their educational and community environment in the state of Texas and beyond in his “ Hotel Prius” After serving in the Marines, his career path started when he began working at Denton State School in 1977 in the Texas mental health/intellectual disability system.

David helps families in all areas of IDEA, as well as entitlement and benefits such as State VR, SSA, Medicaid Waiver Program, etc. As a musician, he frequents the various summer musical venues in the Central Texas area as a drummer. He is a long-time COPAA member, co-chair of the COPAA Advocate Committee, TOPAA Board member, and former COPAA Board of Directors sitting member.

Charmaine Thaner

Advocate

Collaborative Special Education Advocacy

Charmaine Thaner has been called a change–maker by parents, teachers, administrators, and students. Her 30+ years of advocacy have changed her son, Dylan’s life, and hundreds of students with disabilities so they may have richer, more inclusive lives. She was a special educator for 15 years, then became a general educator for 15 years, and throughout her teaching career, she was committed to including traditionally marginalized students.

After retiring as a teacher, she was the Education Specialist at PEAK Parent Center and an adjunct special education instructor at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs. Charmaine has presented at national conferences for TASH, CADRE, ARC, and the National Association of Councils on Developmental Disabilities. Charmaine is the author of the #1 Amazon Best Selling book, The Art of Advocacy: A Parent’s Guide to a Collaborative IEP Process. She writes, produces, and hosts the Facebook live show, The Art of Advocacy.

Missy Alexander

Director of Education, Parents' Place Maryland and COPAA Board Member

Parents' Place Maryland and COPAA Board Member

Missy Alexander is the Director of Education at The Parents’ Place of Maryland, has been with the organization since 2002. She is the mother of an adult daughter with an Autism Spectrum Disorder, who was educated in the St. Mary’s County Public Schools for her entire academic career. She is the Co-Chair of the St. Mary’s County Local Management Board, serving as a community member. She is an active member of the Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates (COPAA), serving on its Board of Directors where she was the first advocate to serve as Board Chair. Missy’s approach in working with families is driven by the firm belief that parents are the best advocates for their children, and she provides them with the information, support and encouragement to empower them to do so.

Christa Gabriel

Special Education Advocate

Disability Rights Montana

Christa Gabriel is a dedicated Special Education Advocate with over a decade of experience advocating for youth with disabilities and their families. Currently serving as an Education Advocate at Disability Rights Montana, Christa is committed to empowering students with disabilities across Montana. She has a successful track record of advocacy within IEP meetings, effectively resolving disputes between parents and school districts while ensuring the rights of students with disabilities are both protected and enhanced. Christa is a firm believer in equipping and empowering students and families with the necessary information and tools to navigate immediate conflicts and foster lasting self-advocacy into adulthood and community living.

Tal Goldin, Esq.

Director of Advocacy

Disability Rights Montana

Tal Goldin is a Helena, MT, based civil rights attorney. He is the Supervising Attorney for Education, Employment, and Benefits at Disability Rights Montana, the State’s Protection and Advocacy organization. Tal is the former Director of Advocacy at Montana Legal Services Association (MLSA), where he co-lead a team of over 25 public interest lawyers addressing the civil legal needs of low-income Montanans. Prior to his work at MLSA, Tal was the Supervising Attorney for the Education Unit at Disability Rights Montana. Tal has taught Special Education Law, Policy, and Practice at the University of Montana, Phyllis J. Washington College of Education and Human Sciences, served as an adjunct professor at the University of Montana School of Law, and presented throughout Montana and nationally on the civil rights of students with disabilities. He is a member of COPAA’s Board of Directors, co-chairs COPAA’s membership committee, and serves on the amicus committee. Tal is admitted to practice law before Montana state and federal courts, Washington state courts, and the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. He is a member of the Order of Barristers, the American Association for Justice, and the Montana Trial Lawyers’ Association.

Tal lives in Helena, MT with his wife, a licensed clinical social work and Board Certified Behavior Analyst, their two kids, a Saint Bernard, and her unwitting companion, a brown tabby cat. In his spare time, Tal enjoys fly fishing Montana’s many trout streams and exploring its natural beauties.

Michelle Weltman, Esq.

Attorney and Social Worker

Disability Rights Montana

Michelle Weltman is a lawyer and social worker and has been an advocate for education access issues in Montana, Missouri, and Illinois for the better part of ten years. In 2022, she joined Disability Rights Montana, as an attorney on the education team. Michelle has dedicated her career to individuals with the greatest need and least access to legal representation. She has focused her advocacy on education rights, domestic violence, and other civil rights issues. Previous to DRM, she worked at Legal Services of Eastern Missouri and Land of Lincoln Legal Assistance Foundation (SO IL), on matters of special education, residency, discipline, homelessness, and efforts to disrupt the ‘school to prison pipeline.’ She has presented on educational access issues to groups varying from the National Legal Aid and Defender’s (NLADA) Conference, to a state-wide conference of legal aid service providers, to a cohort of homeless mothers staying in a shelter. Michelle taught the how-to’s of IEP meetings to Missouri’s state-wide CASA conference participants offering multiple sessions reaching over 150 people.

Michelle relocated to Missoula, MT, in 2021 and hasn’t looked back. She received her JD and masters in Social Work (MSW) from Washington University in St. Louis, along with a BS in Business Administration, Marketing.

Sara D. Platenburg

Advocate & Educational Consultant

Educational Advocacy and Consulting, LLC

Sara D. Platenburg (she/her/hers) is a Special Education Advocate (non-attorney) assisting families with the special education process, across multiple states. Sara assists families through all aspects of the special education process including eligibility, IEP development, implementation and progress monitoring, state and federal complaints, and in mediation. Sara Platenberg graduated from Illinois State with a Bachelor of Science degree in Criminal Justice Sciences with a focus in Sociology and Juvenile Justice. Sara received her Masters Degree in Education with a focus in Gifted and Talented and Twice Exceptional Populations. She served the public school system in Virginia as a Gifted and Talented Specialist where she focused on Twice Exceptionality and meeting the needs of 2E (twice-exceptional) students while utilizing researched based inclusion strategies. Sara is a mother of three boys, all of which have special needs, including two who also have Type 1 Diabetes. Her years and experience as an educator and experience implementing strategies to meet the needs of students with learning differences, helped support Sara’s journey as a new parent when she began navigating the public school special education system on a personal level. During her first eligibility meeting as a parent, Sara immediately realized the complexities of the special education process for parents and the critical need for advocacy on behalf of parents and students with health and special education needs in the public school system. In 2012, Sara joined Educational Advocacy and Consulting, LLC. Sara presents to parent and professional groups and is an expert witness for special education cases. She is a member of the Council of Parents, Attorneys, and Advocates, the National Association for Gifted Children, and a member of the Special Education Advisory Committee (SEAC) for Loudoun County Public Schools. Educational Advocacy and Consulting and The Dyslexia Center assist families with Advocacy and Consulting, Assessments, and Tutoring across a multitude of states. Sara advocates for students in Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, North Carolina, New York, and Illinois.

Shemica Allen

COPAA Instructor and TA, Special Education Advocate

Personalized Learning Solutions and COPAA

Shemica is an instructor for COPAA's SEAT 1.0, SEAT 2.0, The Business of Special Education Advocacy, and also works as a TA. She is also the founder of a Special Education advocacy business called Personalized Learning Solutions. Shemica began her teaching career in 2000 teaching cardiac education classes in two cardiac rehabilitation programs in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.  She kept advancing her career in the area of Special Education after she received her Principal certification and later gained experience as a Lead Case Manager/Response to Intervention Coordinator at a middle school in Crowley ISD, Special Education Team Lead at a high school in McKinney ISD, and Vocational Adjustment Coordinator in Garland ISD. She also has experience as a Content Mastery Teacher, Homebound Teacher, and In Home Trainer. Shemica has completed the Special Education Advocate Training (SEAT) 2.0 training through the Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates (COPAA) which is a nationally developed and recognized year-long course that will help her better serve current and future clients.  She has attended hundreds of ARD/IEP, 504, and Student Support Team (SST) meetings. Shemica also has extensive training in facilitating Admission, Review, and Dismissal (ARD)/IEP committee meetings which requires effective  communication, problem solving, decision making, and conflict resolution.

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Special Education Eligibility Decision-Making for Students with Specific Learning Disabilities
Open to view video.  |  60 minutes
Open to view video.  |  60 minutes In this session, we discuss how special education eligibility determinations for students with Specific Learning Disabilities (SLD) such as dyslexia are made. Differences between school and private evaluations and the differences between medical diagnoses and school eligibility are reviewed. Also discussed are possible reasons that establishing eligibility for services may be difficult and how to increase the likelihood that students are found eligible for services.
Slide Deck of Special Education Eligibility Decision-Making for Students with Specific Learning Disabilities Webinar
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
What is Specially Designed Instruction?
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes This session provides an overview of Specially Designed Instruction - what it is and what it isn't. The presenters explain what future Special Education teachers are being taught about S.D.I. How S.D.I. is documented, how to determine if it has been provided, and what to do if you think it has not are also discussed.
Slide Deck for What is Specially Designed Instruction Webinar
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
Whitepaper For What is Specially Designed Instruction
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
It's 10 p.m. Do You Know Where Your Children's Present Levels of Performance Are? Strategies for Organized, Effective IEP Advocacy
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes Many parents of children with disabilities have experienced late, stressful nights preparing for the next day’s IEP meeting. This session focus on developing an organized, effective strategy for IEP advocacy by starting at square one: gathering data, describing in detail how the child is currently doing in school, and centering the IEP meeting on a discussion of the Present Levels of Academic and Functional Performance section of the child’s IEP.
Slide Deck For It's 10 p.m. Do You Know Where Your Children's Present Levels of Performance Are?
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
Legal Empowerment in Practice: A strategy for Fostering Clients' Engagement, Self-efficacy, and Advocacy skills, in IEP Meetings and Beyond
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes In this hands-on session, participants learn a practical strategy to strengthen clients' agency and self-advocacy skills as they navigate the legal system. The strategy, based on the Right Question Institute's decades of work in family engagement and legal empowerment, can support families and youth as they participate in IEP meetings, advocacy, dispute resolution, and decisions made during their legal representation.
Slide Deck For Legal Empowerment in Practice: A strategy for Fostering Clients' Engagement, Self-efficacy, and Advocacy skills, in IEP Meetings and Beyond
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
Tips I Wish I Knew Before I Became An Advocate
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes Embark on a captivating workshop as two experienced special education advocates, David Beinke and Charmaine Thaner, unveil the secrets they wish they had known when they began their advocacy journey. This session is designed to empower and guide the next generation of advocates in their pursuit of justice and equality for disabled students.
Slide Deck For Tips I Wish I Knew Before I Became An Advocate
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
IEP Tips & Strategies For Parents To Use Before, During & After IEP Meetings
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes Participants learn helpful tips and strategies to utilize as they prepare for IEP meetings, during IEP meetings, and after IEP meetings. Participants also learn ten key mistakes to avoid when it comes to IEP meetings and the special education process. Finally, participants learn effective communication tips to utilize with IEP teams.
Slide Deck For IEP Tips & Strategies For Parents To Use Before, During & After IEP Meeting
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
I'm in the IEP Meeting, Now What?
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes A common issue with IEP meetings is an inclination to sit silently during the meeting and bring up concerns later when the result isn't what you thought was agreed on. But fixing a problem is harder than preventing a problem. This session reviews frequent issues to look out for as you attend your first -or fortieth- IEP meeting.
Slide Deck For I'm In The IEP Meeting, Now What
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
Consent: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes
Open to view video.  |  80 minutes This session examines Consent to Evaluations, Eligibility, and IEPs. It addresses hidden consequences of giving consent, consent options, and a disturbing trend in the law regarding the impact of consent on future claims. The presenters provide a state-by-state comparison of consent and discuss how Partial Consent and Statements of Disagreement can protect a parent’s rights after giving consent.
Slide Deck For Consent, The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly Webinar
Open to download resource.
Open to download resource.
Certificate
No credits available  |  Certificate available
No credits available  |  Certificate available