Maya remembers the day her son Jamal came home from third grade exhausted and humiliated. He’d spent the afternoon in a separate room doing worksheets while his classmates drew and read aloud. The teacher called it “just easier for him.” The principal called it “temporary.” Maya called it wrong. That moment — a parent’s quiet fury meeting a system’s shrug — is where policy either becomes protection or paper. Laws promise non-discrimination, reasonable accommodations, and an education that fits. But for many families, those promises arrive in a foreign language: IEP meetings, 504 forms, memos that never make it to the file. The story of neurodiversity rights is, at heart, a story about translation — turning legal language into justice Jamal deserved. What The Law Should Do Purpose: Disability law requires institutions to remove unnecessary barriers and enable meaningful participation. In Practice: Formal evaluations, Individualized Education Programs (IEPs) or 504 Plans in s...
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