Student Support Services
The Student Support Services department oversees a wide variety of programs to ensure that all students receive the support needed to reach their full academic potential. Our support teams work collaboratively to address student needs, build positive relationships, and provide support and guidance.
- Homebound Instruction
- Non-public Specialized Services
- Section 504
- Special Education
- Student Health Services
Homebound Instruction
- The purpose of Homebound Instructional Services is to provide K-12 students who are unable to attend classes at a school building for health or other reasons with educational services which will allow the students to maintain academic progress on agreed upon classes and to facilitate a successful transition back to a school building as quickly as possible.
- Medical Homebound Instructional Services are educational services provided to a student in the home or other non-school building site within PLSAS boundaries when a medical authority (ie; licensed physician, psychiatrist) submits verification of the student’s confinement to their home and inability to attend school. The district referral process includes receipt of the following: written documentation of a medical diagnosis, anticipated dates of absences and possible return dates, as well as a medical request for homebound service to begin during the treatment process which includes verification of the student’s confinement to their home and inability to attend school. It is expected that homebound instructional services will be short-term and unless there are exceptional circumstances, homebound services shall not exceed 172 school days, i.e. the normal school year. While a student is receiving homebound instructional services that student remains enrolled in and the responsibility of the school site the student attended immediately before receiving homebound instructional services.
Non-public Specialized Services
- Children enrolled by their parents in private schools or who are home schooled may participate in publicly funded special education programs, and school districts have the clear responsibility to offer a free appropriate public education (FAPE) to students with disabilities. The amount that local education agencies must spend for special education services for parentally enrolled private school students with disabilities is limited by federal law to a proportionate share of federal funding available to the local education agency under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEIA). This allocation also includes the provision of Health Services, Secondary Counseling and Guidance, along with management of Title funding.
- Prior Lake-Savage Area Schools is also responsible for locating, identifying, and evaluating all children with disabilities within its boundaries, including those who attend nonpublic schools within its boundaries.
Section 504
Prior Lake-Savage Area Schools is committed to providing a free and appropriate public education to all students. Students who have a diagnosed medical condition identified to be a disability may be eligible for certain protections under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. Schools are required to provide access to education for all students and to make available reasonable accommodations to a child’s educational program or setting. If a student is eligible for protection under Section 504, a Section 504 Plan will be developed by the child’s team including parents, child (if appropriate) and other knowledgeable personnel. Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 is a civil rights law designed to eliminate discrimination on the basis of disability in any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance. Section 504 guarantees certain rights to individuals with disabilities, including the right to full participation and access to a free and appropriate public education (FAPE) to all children regardless of the nature or severity of the disability. Specifically, 34 C.F.R.§104 states:“No otherwise qualified individual with a disability in the United States… shall, solely by reason of her or his disability, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” Section 504 requires the provision of appropriate educational services; services that are designed to meet the individual needs of qualified students to the same extent that the needs of students without a disability are met. Essentially Section 504 was designed to “level the playing field,” to ensure full participation by individuals with disabilities.
Special Education
Student Health Services
Health Services are provided for all students in Prior Lake-Savage Area Schools. Each building is staffed with a health aide, LPN or RN, and overseen by a district Licensed School Nurse (LSN).
Click here to visit the Student Health Services page.
Public Notices
Educational Rights for Children and Youth that are Homeless
This public notice provides information about the rights of children, youths, and unaccompanied youth that are homeless to attend a public school or public charter school. An unaccompanied youth is a youth that does not live with a parent or guardian. This notice includes information to help you know if you or someone you know is considered homeless and is eligible for services from our school district. Children or youths that are homeless have rights that include the right to attend public schools. If you need assistance understanding this letter, please contact:
Do you need an interpreter? Please tell us and we will make sure one is available.
Our school district actively enrolls and provides services for children and youth that are homeless. If you are homeless or know of a child, youth, or unaccompanied youth that may be homeless, please contact the person listed here for help.
District Liaison: __________________________________________________
Phone: ____________________________________
Email: _____________________________________
4540 Tower St. SE
Prior Lake, MN 55372
Who is “homeless”? Children or youth (including children of migrant workers) who lack a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence are homeless. Fixed means the home is connected to the ground and is not easy to move. Regular means a place where the child sleeps every night. Adequate means the home meets modern standards of living. Children who are sharing someone else’s housing because they lost theirs or because they cannot afford their own housing are homeless. Children and youths who are homeless may be living in:
- motels;
- hotels;
- trailer parks (this does not refer to a mobile home (trailer) park, this refers to a type of camping ground for fifth wheel camper trailers or other types of movable campers);
- camping grounds because they do not have an adequate home;
- emergency or transitional shelters;
- or are abandoned in hospitals.
- Children and youth who are homeless may have a place they usually sleep that is a public or private place not meant to be a regular place for people to sleep. They may also be living in:
- cars;
- parks;
- public spaces;
- abandoned buildings;
- substandard housing (housing that does not meet modern standards of living);
- bus or train stations;
- or other similar settings.
If you are not sure, please contact .
- What are the education rights of children and youth that are homeless? Our schools provide the same educational services to all students without regard to their living situation. Children and youth who are homeless also have rights that include:
- Based on what is best for the child or youth, the child or youth can continue to attend the “school of origin” or be immediately enrolled in any public school where the student now lives. This includes any school that students who are not homeless attend that is in the area where the child or youth now lives.
- Being given services without delay, such as transportation and meal programs.
- Other appropriate services and programs, such as programs for:
- gifted children;
- children with disabilities;
- English learners;
- career and technical education;
- and preschool.
- Help in school through the district’s federally funded Title I program. A student that is homeless can receive Title I services even if the student is not attending a Title I funded school.
- School activities for parents or guardians.
- Participation in athletics, fine arts, or other extra-curricular activities.
- Being treated the same as students who are not homeless by school personnel;
- What is the “school of origin”? ‘School of origin’ means the school the child or youth attended before becoming homeless or the school the child or youth last attended, including a preschool. When the child or youth completes the final grade level of a school of origin, then ‘school of origin’ means the school the child or youth would attend at the next grade level. The district must consider what is best for the child or youth when making a decision about which school the student will attend. Placement at the school of origin must be a choice unless doing so is not what is best for the student or is against the wishes of the parent, guardian or unaccompanied youth.
- What if there is disagreement about school placement? If the district places a student in a school that is not the school of origin or a school requested by the parent, guardian or unaccompanied youth, then the parent, guardian or unaccompanied youth may appeal (ask to change) the placement decision. The student will be immediately enrolled in the school that the student or parent asked for while an appeal is being considered. The district homeless liaison listed on this notice will provide information and assistance to appeal a placement decision.
No Child or Youth Should Be Denied Access to a Free and Appropriate Public Education
Contact Us
Michelle Cuka
Director of Student Support Services
(952) 226-0033
Whitney Weber
Assistant Director of Special Education (gr. K-5)
(952) 226-0073
Kristen Laffe-Thao
Assistant Director of Special Education (gr. 6-12)
(952) 226-0034
Lori Parker
Early Childhood Special Education (ECSE) Coordinator
(952) 226-0986
Kate Keil
Health Services Coordinator
(952) 226-0093
Julie Siegle
Assistant Director of Teaching, Learning & District Improvement
(952) 226-0075
Linda Freemark
Administrative Assistant for Student Support Services
(952) 226-0032