Manifestation Determination in Tasmania: Disability and School Discipline
If you've searched "manifestation determination" while dealing with a school suspension or exclusion for your child with a disability, you've likely found American resources. The term is specific to US federal law under IDEA. In Tasmania, the mechanism looks different — but the underlying legal protection is real and enforceable.
What Manifestation Determination Means in the US
Under the US Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), if a student with a disability is facing suspension of more than 10 days, the school must hold a "manifestation determination review" — a formal meeting to determine whether the behaviour that triggered the discipline was a direct result of the student's disability or a failure to implement the IEP.
If the behaviour is a manifestation of the disability, the school cannot simply punish the student. They must address the underlying disability-related cause.
Tasmania does not have this formal process under that name. But the core principle — that disability-related behaviour must be assessed before discipline is applied — exists through federal anti-discrimination law.
The Australian Framework: DDA, DSE, and DECYP Policy
Disability Discrimination Act 1992 (DDA): The DDA makes it unlawful for an educational authority to discriminate against a student on the basis of disability. Applying disciplinary measures to a student for behaviour that is directly caused by a disability, without reasonable accommodation, is likely to constitute disability discrimination.
Disability Standards for Education 2005 (DSE): The DSE requires schools to make reasonable adjustments and to eliminate harassment and victimisation of students with disabilities. Punitive responses to disability-related behaviour, applied without proper support structures, can conflict with these obligations.
DECYP Student Behaviour Management Procedure: Tasmania's state-level policy explicitly acknowledges that behavioural presentation must be assessed contextually and may be intrinsically linked to a student's disability, trauma history, or neurodivergence. Before applying significant disciplinary consequences, schools are expected to consider whether appropriate adjustments and support have been in place.
What This Means in Practice
If your child with a diagnosed or suspected disability faces repeated suspensions, reduced timetables as a disciplinary measure, or exclusion from school activities, here are the questions you need to ask — and document in writing:
Has a Functional Behaviour Assessment (FBA) been conducted? Any behavioural intervention should be preceded by an assessment of what function the behaviour serves. If no FBA has been done, the school is responding to symptoms without understanding causes.
Is there a Behaviour Support Plan (BSP) in place? The BSP should be part of the Learning Plan, with specific antecedent strategies, replacement behaviour teaching, and agreed response protocols. Suspension is not a BSP.
Has the school documented what adjustments were in place at the time of the incident? If the Learning Plan specifies certain supports and those supports were not being implemented when the behaviour occurred, the school is in a difficult position under the DSE.
Was the behaviour consistent with known disability presentations? An autistic student who becomes physically dysregulated during an unannounced fire drill — without the pre-warning they require per their Learning Plan — is exhibiting a known, predictable disability response. Treating this as willful misconduct without reference to the disability is exactly the scenario the DDA was designed to address.
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Reduced Timetables and Informal Exclusion
One of the most significant patterns in Tasmanian disability education is the use of "reduced timetables" as an informal management tool — sending children home at midday or asking parents to collect them early due to "challenging behaviours."
DECYP policy is clear: a reduction in school hours can only be formalised through the Learning Plan, must be explicitly in the student's best interest (not the school's operational convenience), and must be implemented for a maximum of one school term with a clear plan to return to full-time attendance.
If your child is on an informal reduced timetable — verbal agreement only, no Learning Plan entry — that arrangement is not compliant with DECYP procedure. The school is both denying your child education and failing to document the adjustments that would generate NCCD funding for the support they need.
Request an SSG meeting in writing and insist that any hours reduction be formalised through the Learning Plan with a documented return-to-school milestone strategy.
When Suspensions Do Happen
If your child is suspended and they have a disability, these are the practical steps:
Step 1: Request a meeting (which effectively functions as an SSG) before the student returns to school. Ask explicitly that the meeting address whether the behaviour that triggered the suspension was assessed against the student's known disability presentation and existing Learning Plan adjustments.
Step 2: Ask whether the school believes the behaviour was a manifestation of the disability. If they say no, ask them to document that position in writing with their reasoning.
Step 3: If you believe the suspension constitutes disability discrimination — particularly if the school failed to implement documented Learning Plan adjustments at the time of the incident — this forms the basis of an escalation through DECYP, and potentially a formal complaint to the Australian Human Rights Commission under the DDA.
Step 4: Request that the Learning Plan be reviewed to address the breakdown that led to the incident, with specific new strategies added rather than returning to the same unsupported classroom environment.
Dual Enrolment as an Alternative
For students with complex disabilities whose needs cannot be met in a standard mainstream setting, Tasmania's Education Act 2016 allows for dual enrolment — concurrent enrolment in a specialist support school while maintaining a mainstream enrolment. Tasmania has four dedicated support schools. Dual enrolment creates a hybrid program tailored to the student's needs and can be formalised through the Learning Plan and SSG process.
If your child is cycling through reduced timetables, suspensions, and partial exclusions in a mainstream setting, dual enrolment is worth raising explicitly at the next SSG meeting as an alternative to ongoing crisis management.
The Bottom Line
Tasmania doesn't call it a manifestation determination review, but the legal protection is real. The DDA 1992 and DSE 2005 require schools to assess whether a disability is the underlying cause of behaviour before applying punitive measures. If your child is facing repeated discipline without an FBA and Behaviour Support Plan in place, you have solid grounds to push back — in writing, citing the DSE, and requesting an SSG meeting that treats the situation as a support failure rather than a conduct failure.
For the complete escalation pathway, SSG preparation templates, and the specific policy language to use in writing to the school, see the Tasmania Disability Support Blueprint.
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