Independent Educational Evaluation in Hawaii: What Parents Need to Know
Your child's HIDOE evaluation said she doesn't qualify for services. Your gut says the assessors missed something. You have a federal right to challenge that finding — but in Hawaii, exercising that right runs into some obstacles that mainland families don't face.
Here's how independent educational evaluations work in Hawaii, what HIDOE is required to do, and what neighbor island families need to plan for when the only qualified evaluator is on Oahu.
What an IEE Is and Why It Matters
An independent educational evaluation is an assessment conducted by a qualified examiner who is not employed by HIDOE. You can request one any time you disagree with an evaluation HIDOE performed — including an initial evaluation, a reevaluation, or any individual assessment that fed into an eligibility or placement decision.
Once you make the request in writing, HIDOE has two options:
- Fund an IEE at public expense, or
- File for due process to defend the adequacy of its own evaluation
HIDOE cannot simply ignore the request or stall indefinitely. If they don't file for due process promptly, they owe you the IEE at public expense.
The IEE findings don't bind the IEP team — HIDOE isn't required to accept the outside evaluator's conclusions — but the team must consider them, and a strong IEE is often the piece that shifts a stalled IEP conversation.
How to Request an IEE in Hawaii
Send a written request to your child's school and copy the Complex Area Educational Specialist. "Written" means email is fine — keep a timestamped record.
Your letter needs to say:
- You disagree with HIDOE's evaluation of your child (name the evaluation and approximate date)
- You are requesting an independent educational evaluation at public expense
- You request HIDOE's criteria for IEEs, including the cost cap and list of approved evaluator qualifications
That last point is important. HIDOE is required to give you information about where an IEE may be obtained and what its criteria are (including any cost cap). You want this in writing before you start identifying evaluators.
Under HAR §8-60-33, HIDOE has 60 calendar days to complete an initial evaluation after receiving parental consent. The IEE request process doesn't have an identical statutory countdown, but unreasonable delay triggers the same due process pressure — document everything with dates.
Cost Caps and What They Mean in Practice
HIDOE sets a cost cap for IEEs at public expense. The specific amount varies by evaluation type (psychoeducational, speech-language, occupational therapy, etc.) and is subject to change, so get the current cap in writing when you make your request.
If you find an evaluator whose fee exceeds the cap, you have options:
- Ask HIDOE to justify why the cap is set where it is (they must provide that justification)
- Find an evaluator who accepts the capped fee
- Pay the difference yourself — then later argue for reimbursement if you go to due process and prevail
Private psychoeducational evaluations in Hawaii typically run $2,500–$4,500 depending on the scope and the evaluator's credentials. If HIDOE's cap is below that range and you can demonstrate that no qualified evaluator in your area accepts the capped fee, that's a leverage point.
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The Neighbor Island Problem
Hawaii has 15 Complex Areas managing the state's single school district. On Oahu, you can usually find qualified independent evaluators — licensed psychologists, SLPs, OTs — within reasonable driving distance. On Maui, the Big Island, Kauai, Molokai, and Lanai, the evaluator shortage is severe.
BCBAs, SLPs, and OTs who can conduct evaluations are scarce on neighbor islands. The evaluators who do exist often have long waitlists. This creates a practical problem: HIDOE sets a cost cap that reflects Oahu market rates, but on a neighbor island, you may need to fly an evaluator in from Oahu — or fly your child to Oahu — neither of which the cost cap covers.
If you're on a neighbor island, document this gap explicitly. In your IEE request letter, ask HIDOE to identify any qualified evaluator within your island who can conduct the needed assessment for at or below the cost cap. If they can't name one, you have a strong argument that the cost cap is unreasonable for your geography.
The Hawaii Disability Rights Center (HDRC) at (808) 949-2922 has helped neighbor island families navigate this exact issue. SPIN (Special Parent Information Network) also provides guidance — they're reachable at (808) 839-5372 and have experience with inter-island logistics.
What to Look for in an Independent Evaluator
The evaluator should:
- Hold current licensure in Hawaii for the relevant discipline (don't assume mainland credentials automatically transfer)
- Have experience with the disability category you're concerned about
- Be willing to observe your child in the school environment, not just conduct clinic-based testing
- Provide a written report that includes diagnostic findings, functional implications, and specific recommendations — not just scores
For psychoeducational evaluations, ask specifically whether the evaluator uses culturally and linguistically appropriate assessments. Hawaii's population is diverse, and assessments normed exclusively on mainland English-speaking populations can produce unreliable results for Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, and multilingual children. If your child attends a Kaiapuni (Hawaiian immersion) program, this matters even more — virtually all standardized assessments are normed in English only.
After the IEE Is Complete
Send the completed report to your child's case manager and request an IEP meeting to review the findings. You can request this meeting in writing — HIDOE must convene one.
Bring the evaluator to the IEP meeting if possible, or at minimum be prepared to walk through the key findings yourself. The IEP team must document that it considered the IEE, even if it ultimately disagrees with the recommendations.
If the IEP team dismisses the IEE without a substantive explanation, that becomes part of your record for any future due process or state complaint.
The Hawaii IEP & 504 Advocacy Playbook covers the full IEE request process with template letters, cost cap negotiation language, and scripts for the IEP meeting review — built specifically for Hawaii's single-district structure.
If HIDOE Files for Due Process to Defend Its Evaluation
This does happen. HIDOE may decide to challenge your IEE request rather than fund it.
If that occurs, stay-put rights mean your child's current placement continues unchanged during the proceedings. You'll want to document why you disagree with the original evaluation — specific concerns, specific subtests, specific observations that weren't captured.
At the due process hearing, the burden is on HIDOE to prove its evaluation was appropriate. If you've already obtained a private evaluation (even at your own expense), that report becomes evidence in the hearing.
Due process in Hawaii goes through HIDOE's Office of Administrative Hearings. The hearing officer is appointed through that process — which is the same department being challenged, a structural concern that advocates and attorneys in Hawaii regularly note.
Request a pre-hearing conference early. Many IEE disputes resolve at resolution session or mediation before reaching a full hearing.
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