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An MDR is a special meeting to decide if your child's misconduct was caused by their disability before the school can impose certain serious disciplinary actions.
A Manifestation Determination Review (MDR) is a meeting held when a school considers disciplining a student with a disability in a way that changes their placement, such as suspension over 10 consecutive school days or a pattern of shorter removals totaling more than 10 days in a school year. The school must hold this meeting within 10 school days of any decision to change your child's placement because of a violation of the student code of conduct.
During the MDR, a team including the parents and relevant members of the IEP team reviews all relevant information to determine whether the child's behavior was caused by or had a direct and substantial relationship to their disability, or if it was the direct result of the school's failure to implement the IEP. This meeting ensures fair treatment and upholds the student's rights under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).
MDR helps ensure that students with disabilities are not punished for behaviors that are directly related to their disability. It protects students by requiring schools to consider whether the behavior in question was linked to the student's disability before moving forward with disciplinary actions that would change their placement.
This process both safeguards educational access and encourages appropriate and effective interventions. When a behavior is found to be a manifestation, the school must address the underlying issues through the IEP process rather than simply removing the student from their educational setting.
Watch for the school's compliance with the MDR process. Ensure that the team thoroughly reviews all relevant information, including evaluation and diagnostic results, observations of the child, and the child's IEP or 504 Plan. It's also important to confirm that the school has fully implemented the IEP.
Be aware of the timeline: the MDR must occur within 10 school days of the discipline decision. Make sure all required team members are present, especially those with knowledge of your child's disability and behavior.
During the MDR meeting, the team must review all relevant information in your child's file, including their IEP, any teacher observations, and any information you provide. The team's job is to answer two specific questions:
1. Was the conduct in question caused by, or did it have a direct and substantial relationship to, the child's disability? 2. Was the conduct in question the direct result of the school district's failure to implement the IEP?
If the team answers 'yes' to either of these questions, the behavior is considered a 'manifestation' of the child's disability. This decision has a major impact on what happens next.
If the team determines the behavior was a manifestation of the disability (by answering 'yes' to either of the two questions), the school must take immediate steps. First, if the child does not have a Behavior Intervention Plan (BIP), the IEP team must conduct a Functional Behavioral Assessment (FBA) and create one. If a BIP already exists, the team must review it and modify it to address the behavior.
Second, the child must be returned to the placement from which they were removed, unless you and the school agree to a change of placement as part of modifying the BIP. The school cannot proceed with the long-term suspension or expulsion that triggered the MDR meeting.
If the team answers 'no' to both questions, the behavior is not considered a manifestation of the disability. In this situation, the school can apply the same disciplinary procedures to your child as they would to a child without a disability, which may include long-term suspension or expulsion.
However, even if your child is removed from their regular school setting, the school must continue to provide them with educational services. This is a key protection under IDEA. Your child must be able to continue to participate in the general education curriculum, although in a different setting, and continue to make progress toward meeting their IEP goals.
You are a required and equal member of the team making this decision. Before the meeting, ask for a copy of all the information the school will be reviewing, including incident reports and your child's complete educational file. Review the current IEP and any Behavior Intervention Plan. Consider if it was being followed correctly.
You can bring your own information to the meeting, such as reports from outside doctors or therapists, that might help explain the connection between your child's disability and their behavior. Your input is critical to the process.
If you disagree with the MDR team's decision, you have the right to challenge it. You can request a due process hearing to have an impartial hearing officer review the decision. You should receive a copy of your procedural safeguards from the school, which explains this process in detail.
If you file for an appeal, your child will usually remain in the disciplinary setting assigned by the school (such as an interim alternative educational setting) until the hearing officer makes a decision. This is an exception to the usual 'stay-put' rule.
Understanding the topic is one thing; using it in a meeting is another. SENTINEL·IEP gives you plain-language reference and a companion that follows the conversation in real time — so you can recognize this when it comes up and know what to ask.