District Leadership Roles
When you have hit a wall at the campus level, it is time to escalate. Here are the specific central office roles you should ask for when contacting Alief ISD:
| Role | Who to Ask For | Why This Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Executive Director of Special Education | Director of Special Programs / SPED | Chief compliance officer for IDEA and TEA. Direct all formal written requests, complaints, and escalations here. |
| Dyslexia Coordinator | District 504 / Dyslexia Director | Oversees dyslexia screening and the 2024 Texas Dyslexia Handbook compliance across the district. |
| Autism Specialist / BCBA | District Behavior Analyst | Ensures ARD committees address all 11 required Autism Supplement strategies. |
| Evaluation Coordinator | Lead Educational Diagnostician | Manages FIE evaluations and enforces the strict 45-school-day evaluation timeline. |
| Special Education Records | SPED Records Department | Handles IEP/FIIE records, TREx transfers, and formal FERPA requests for student data. |
How to Effectively Contact Special Education Staff
Contacting the right person at Alief ISD is crucial for effective communication. To avoid being ignored, remember these rules:
- Keep a Paper Trail: Phone calls are fine for quick updates, but always follow up with an email summarizing what was discussed. If a promise isn't in writing, it never happened.
- The Chain of Command: Always start with the Special Ed teacher or Diagnostician. If they fail to act, email the Principal and CC the district's Executive Director of Special Education.
- Be Specific: Do not send a multi-page email venting frustrations. State the facts: "I am writing regarding [Child's Name]'s reading goals. I am requesting a formal ARD meeting within the next 10 days."
What to Do If You Can't Reach Anyone
If you are having difficulty getting a response from Alief ISD campus staff regarding an urgent special education matter, follow these formal escalation steps:
- Step 1: Email the campus Special Education Coordinator and the Principal again, clearly stating this is your second attempt to contact them.
- Step 2: If you don't receive a response within 48 hours, forward the entire email chain to the Alief ISD Director of Special Education.
- Step 3: File a formal Level 1 Grievance with the district (usually an FNG Local policy).
- Step 4: As a last resort, file a formal complaint with the Texas Education Agency (TEA) for ignoring parental rights under IDEA.
Your Right to District Records
If staff are ignoring you, one of your most powerful tools is requesting the underlying data. As a parent, you have the absolute right to access your child's educational records.
- FERPA Request: You have the right to inspect and review your child's educational records (including internal emails mentioning your child) within 45 days of submitting a written request.
- How to file: Send a written request to the Alief ISD Special Education Records Clerk or the Director. Clearly state you are requesting a complete copy of all educational records under FERPA.
Alief Independent School District serves one of the most diverse communities in the Houston metropolitan area, with over 45,000 students from more than 80 countries speaking dozens of different languages. The district's Special Education Department works to ensure that students with disabilities receive appropriate services regardless of their cultural or linguistic background, which requires specialized expertise given Alief's unique multilingual student population.
The Special Education leadership team oversees services across all Alief ISD campuses, coordinating with bilingual specialists and cultural liaisons to serve families who may be navigating both special education processes and language barriers simultaneously. The department manages everything from initial evaluations and IEP development to transition services for students preparing for post-secondary life.
Alief ISD's position in southwest Harris County means the Special Education Department serves families from established neighborhoods as well as newer immigrant communities, requiring flexible approaches to family engagement and communication that reflect the district's remarkable cultural diversity.
Show the ISD You Mean Business
A verbal request has no legal weight. A written letter starts the 45-day clock and forces a response within 15 school days.
Get Your Letter — $25 →