Plaintiffs are fourteen handicapped 1 elementary and secondary students who are challenging a Peoria School District (School District) requirement that they pass a “Minimal Competency Test” (M.C.T.) in order to receive a high school diploma. After a hearing, the Illinois State Board of Education (State Board) issued an Administrative Order (A—46 to A-58) in which the State Superintendent of Education decided in favor of eleven of the plaintiffs, stating:
(1) The State Board of Education has jurisdiction of this matter, (2) [The] Peoria Board of Education [has] the right to impose reasonable additional standards for graduation with a regular high school diploma, (3) Neither the Education for All Handicapped Children Act, (20 USC 1401 et seq.), nor Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, (29 USC 794), prohibit local school districts from requiring that exceptional students meet all otherwise reasonable standards for graduation including, on its face, the Minimal Competency Test, (4) Federal law requires that school districts make reasonable modifications to tests such as the Minimal Competency Test in order to minimize the effect of an individual student’s handicapping condition, (5) Peoria District # 150 violated the “due process” rights of the petitioners by failing to give them adequate and timely notice that the Minimal Competency Test would be a prerequisite to the receipt of a diploma. Accordingly, the Board of Education of Peoria District # 150 is ordered to issue the petitioners regular high school diplomas in a manner consistent with this opinion and the individual orders attached hereto.
The State Superintendent also found that three of the plaintiffs did not have standing to challenge the M.C.T. An appeal by plaintiffs and the Peoria School District was taken to the district court 2 which held that there was no due process violation and reversed the order directing the School District to issue diplomas. 3 We reverse.
In the spring of 1978, the School District decided to require all students eligible for graduation in the spring of 1980 to pass an M.C.T. as a prerequisite to receipt of a diploma. The test is given each semester. It contains three parts—reading, language arts, and mathematics—and a student must score 70% on each part in order to receive a diploma. If a student fails any particular part, he is eligible to retake that part until he passes or becomes 21 years of age. Refresher courses are available during the school term and over the summer, though the summer program was on a tuition basis and scheduling problems made it impossible for a student to attend refresher courses in all three areas. Students who do not pass, but otherwise qualify for graduation, receive a Certificate of Program Completion at graduation time, and may continue to take the M.C.T. until age 21.
*182
After the M.C.T. policy was adopted in 1978, the School District undertook to notify students of the additional requirement through distribution of circulars in the schools, individual mailings to some parents, and repeated announcements in the mass media. The State Board said in its Administrative Order that “the record does not clearly establish how well these efforts succeeded, and in particular does not establish that they were adequate to bring notice of the additional requirement with all of its possible consequences to the attention of the parents of the exceptional children involved in these complaints.” A-49. While apparently accepting this finding, the district court said that “there is neither evidence nor contention that any plaintiff here did not know of the graduation requirement of passing the M.C.T. more than a year before his or her scheduled graduation.”
Brookhart v. Illinois State Board of Educ.,
Plaintiffs claim that the M.C.T. as applied to handicapped students violates federal and state statutes, as well as the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. We note at the outset that in analyzing these claims deference is due the School District’s educational and curricular decisions. See
Debra P. v. Turlington,
Before turning to the merits, we must address the question of standing to challenge the M.C.T. During the 1978/79 and 1979/80 school years, eleven of the plaintiffs who anticipated graduation in 1980 took the M.C.T. one or more times. None passed all three parts. Of the remaining three plaintiffs, one was eight years old at the time of the administrative hearing and had taken a portion of the third grade pilot M.C.T. while she was a special education pupil in the second grade; one was eleven years old and one was fifteen years old at the time of the hearing and both had not yet taken any portion of the M.C.T. (State Bd. Br. 8). None of these three plaintiffs had standing to challenge the institution of the M.C.T. as a graduation requirement. Two of the plaintiffs did not take the test; the third took a pilot test, the failure of which could not have affected the awarding of a diploma, since she was only in the second grade. These plaintiffs may renew their claims, if appropriate, at a later date. 4
1. Education for All Handicapped Children Act
Plaintiffs claim that the denial of diplomas in this case violates the Education for All Handicapped Children Act (EHA) because it denies the individual handicapped students a “free appropriate public education.” 20 U.S.C. § 1412(1). The Supreme Court recently examined this statutory requirement in
Board of Educ. v.
Rowley, - U.S. -,
special education and related services which (A) have been provided at public expense, under public supervision and direction, and without charge, (B) meet the standards of the State educational agency, (C) include an appropriate preschool, elementary, or secondary school education in the State involved, and (D) are provided in conformity with the individualized education program required under section 1414(a)(5) of this title.
20 U.S.C. § 1401(18). The Court recognized that the “intent of the Act was more to open the door of public education to handicapped children on appropriate terms than to guarantee any particular level of education once inside.”
5
- U.S. at -,
This analysis implies that the EHA does not require “specific results,”
Board of Educ. v. Ambach, supra
Plaintiffs further contend that the imposition of the M.C.T. violates the EHA and corresponding regulation mandating that “no single procedure shall be the sole criterion for determining an appropriate educational program for a child.” 20 U.S.C. § 1412(5)(C); see also 34 C.F.R. § 300.532 (1981). Yet plaintiffs admit that graduation requirements in Peoria are threefold: earning seventeen credits, completing State requirements such as a constitution test and a consumer education course, and passing the M.C.T. (Pl.Br. 31). In the face of this admission, passing the M.C.T. is clearly not the sole criterion for graduation. 6
2. Rehabilitation Act of 1973
Plaintiffs also argue that application of the M.C.T. requirement constitutes unlawful discrimination under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (RHA), providing
No otherwise qualified handicapped individual in the United States ... shall, solely by reason of his handicap, be excluded from the participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance ....
29 U.S.C. § 794. In
Southeastern Community College v. Davis,
Plaintiffs in this case have no grounds on which to argue that the con
*184
tents of the M.C.T. are discriminatory solely because handicapped students who are incapable of attaining a level of minimal competency will fail the test. Altering the content of the M.C.T. to accommodate an individual’s inability to learn the tested material because of his handicap would be a “substantial modification,”
However, an otherwise qualified student who is unable to disclose the degree of learning he actually possesses because of the test format or environment would be the object of discrimination solely on the basis of his handicap. It is apparent, as the district court said, that “to discover a blind person's knowledge, a test must be given orally or in braille .... ”
Plaintiffs make one additional argument, urging that federal law requires tests to be validated separately for handicapped students. The purpose of validation is to determine whether tests are suited to the purposes for which they are used with respect to a particular testing population. Cf.
Larry P. v. Riles,
3. The Due Process Claim
Plaintiffs’ final argument is that the School District provided them inadequate notice of the M.C.T. requirement, thus depriving them of a protected liberty or property interest without due process of law. 8 Although the issues in this case do not fit easily into a traditional procedural due process analysis, we conclude, after close consideration, that the School District failed to satisfy constitutional requirements.
The first question to be decided is whether the plaintiffs have a protected liberty or property'interest at stake. Denial of a diploma clearly affects a student’s reputation. It attaches a “stigma” that will
*185
have potentially disastrous effects for future employment or educational opportunities. See
Board of Educ. v. Ambach, supra,
Plaintiffs in this case have more than merely an interest in protecting their reputations and avoiding the stigma attached to failure to receive a high school diploma. They, too, as in
Goss v. Lopez, supra,
had a right conferred by state law to receive a diploma if they met the requirements imposed prior to 1978: completion of seventeen course credits and fulfillment of the State’s graduation requirements. In changing the diploma requirement, the governmental action by the School District deprived the individual of a right or interest previously held under state law. Plaintiffs thus have a liberty interest sufficient to invoke the procedural protections of the due process clause.
Board of Educ. v. Ambach, supra
The consequence of identifying a protected liberty interest is that governmental action cannot be used to deprive an individual of that interest without due process of law. Traditionally, a procedural due process right means “an opportunity to be heard on the factual basis underlying the loss of a liberty or property interest .... ”
Anderson v. Banks, supra
at 504. A determination of what process is due involves defining the appropriate contours of the “opportunity to be heard.” See
Goldberg v. Kelly,
We think that procedural due process protections are flexible enough to encompass notice of this kind. This approach has been followed by the Fifth Circuit and the New York State Supreme Court. In
Mahavongsanan v. Hall,
This holding does bear some resemblance to a substantive, rather than a procedural due process holding. 10 See Anderson v. Banks, supra at 505. As a matter of procedural due process, plaintiffs have a liberty interest in receipt of a diploma that cannot be infringed without notice. Yet, as a matter of substantive due process, the nature of plaintiffs’ right is by necessity limited by the School District’s authority to change the diploma requirements. Plaintiffs’ substantive right therefore is better defined as a right to adequate notice of any new diploma requirement in order to allow time to prepare. Denial of sufficient notice would make denial of a diploma and its attendant injury to reputation fundamentally unfair. Debra P. v. Turlington, supra at 404.
We must now consider whether the notice provided to plaintiffs was sufficient to satisfy constitutional requisites. The older eleven plaintiffs were informed that they were subject to the M.C.T. requirement during their junior year in high school. The State Superintendent found they therefore had approximately one and a half years to master the skills necessary to pass the M.C.T. (App. 56); the district court found that all plaintiffs had notice of the M.C.T. requirement one year prior to graduation.
Plaintiffs’ educational programs were developed in accordance with 20 U.S.C. § 1414(a)(5) requiring that each handicapped student receive an individualized educational program (IEP). An IEP is developed through the cooperative efforts of parents, teachers, and school administrators. Tr.Vol. I, at 148. Plaintiffs’ expert at the hearing developed a matrix by which to compare the goals and objectives of the M.C.T. with the goals and objectives of plaintiffs’ IEP’s. The matrix indicated that as much as 90% of the material on the M.C.T. did not appear on the IEP’s (App. 50, 56). The district court found that the “only possible reason” for the lack of exposure was that the students were incapable of learning the material,
Finally, rather than reflecting an incapacity to pass the M.C.T., the record reflects that the plaintiffs’ programs of instruction were not developed to meet the goal of passing the M.C.T., but were instead geared to address individual educational needs. Since plaintiffs and their parents knew of the M.C.T. requirements only one to one and a half years prior to the students’ anticipated graduation, the M.C.T. objectives could not have been specifically incorporated into the IEP’s over a period of years. If they were incorporated at all, it could only have been during the most recent year and a half. As the Superintendent found, “in an educational system that assumes special education students learn at a slower rate than regular division students,” a year and a half at most to prepare for the M.C.T. is insufficient. Thus the length of the notice, rather than a deliberate decision not to instruct plaintiffs because of their incapacity to master the material, explains the overwhelming lack of exposure to M.C.T. goals and objectives.
There is some evidence in the record that after being informed of the M.C.T. requirement, several parents preferred to emphasize aspects of plaintiffs’ education other than M.C.T. preparation. In the long run, as Dr. Mueller pointed out, parents and teachers may evaluate students and conclude that energies would be more profitably directed toward areas other than M.C.T. preparation; toward, for example, vocational training. Here however parents had only a year to a year and a half to evaluate properly their children’s abilities and redirect their educational goals. We agree with the parents and the State Board that this was insufficient time to make an informed decision about inclusion or exclusion of training on M.C.T. objectives.
The analysis prescribed by the Supreme Court in
Mathews v. Eldridge,
As described in
Board of Educ. v. Ambach, supra,
We turn finally to the question of remedy. Plaintiffs argue that the only proper remedy is issuance of diplomas, and the district court apparently agreed, stating that “if the M.C.T. program is constitutionally invalid as applied to these students, there is no impediment to issuance of the diplomas.”
The School District’s position is not without merit. Some plaintiffs might have failed the M.C.T. despite decades of preparation; others might have opted out of it even if notified years in advance. By awarding these plaintiffs diplomas, the School District would be putting th.^m in a better position than they would have been in had there been no due process violation. Traditionally, procedural due process remedies provide plaintiffs only with an opportunity to prove their eligibility for a benefit, rather than providing the benefit itself. See
Goldberg v. Kelly,
Plaintiffs argue that it is impossible to put them back in the position that they would have been in had they received adequate notice while still in school. Several are employed and would be forced to leave their jobs in order to participate in the remedial program and prepare for the M.C.T. Eleven plaintiffs have been away from school for over two years, since June of 1980, and it would be difficult, both psychologically and academically, for them to make up for lost time. They ask, essentially, why they should endure these hardships when the School District was at fault for providing inadequate notice.
We agree with the School District that, in theory, the proper remedy for a violation of this kind is to require it to provide free, remedial, special education classes to ensure exposure to the material tested on the M.C.T., and a reasonable opportunity for plaintiffs to learn that material. We take note of the fact that the School District presently offers such courses (Tr.Vol. I, at 143-144), and we advise future handicapped students to bypass the courts and enroll in those courses when necessary. In this particular case however it is unrealistic to assume that eleven of these plaintiffs would be able to return to school without undue hardship. Consequently, the School District may not require those plaintiffs to pass the M.C.T. as a prerequisite for a diploma.
The judgment of the district court is reversed with directions to order the School District to issue high school diplomas to the eleven plaintiffs who satisfy the remaining graduation requirements.
Notes
. Plaintiffs manifested a broad spectrum of handicapping conditions. One student was physically handicapped, one was multiply handicapped, and four were educably mentally handicapped. The other eight were learning-disabled. (Pl.Br. 6.)
. Plaintiffs asked the court to sustain the order directing issuance of the diplomas and requiring appropriate modification of the M.C.T. for handicapped students, but also sought an order invalidating the M.C.T. and promulgating validation and modification guidelines. The State Board asked the district court to uphold the order and direct the School District to implement it. The School District asked the district court to affirm the portion of the order upholding the facial validity of the M.C.T. program but reverse the order insofar as it mandated issuing diplomas.
. The district court’s jurisdiction was based on the Education of All Handicapped Children Act, 20 U.S.C. § 1415(e)(2), which provides that
any party aggrieved by the findings and decision under subsection (c) of this section [providing for a hearing before the State educational agency], shall have the right to bring a. civil action ... in any State court of competent jurisdiction or in a district court of the United States without regard to the amount in controversy. In any action brought under this paragraph the court shall receive the records of the administrative proceedings, shall hear additional evidence at the request of a party, and, basing its decision on the preponderance of the evidence, shall grant such relief as the court determines is appropriate.
. In support of their claim that these three plaintiffs have interests which diverge from those of the other eleven, the State Board points to a 1981 amendment of Ill.Rev.Stat., ch. 122, ¶ 14-6.01. Prior to September 25, 1981, Illinois law authorized but did not require a school district “to issue certificates of graduation to handicapped pupils completing special education programs.” The statute was amended in 1981 to read:
No handicapped student may be denied promotion, graduation or a general diploma on the basis of failing a minimal competency test when such failure can be directly related to the student’s handicapping condition. For the purpose of this Act, “minimal competency testing” is defined as tests which are constructed to measure the acquisition of skills to or beyond a certain defined standard.
The State suggests that the new statute might well preclude denying a diploma to these three even if their inability to learn is a result of a handicapping condition (State Bd. Br. 19). The question is presently premature for resolution.
. The Court expressly rejected the district court’s interpretation in
Rowley
that .the disparity between the deaf student’s “achievement and her potential” meant that she was not receiving a free appropriate public education.
Id.
at -,
. For the same reason, the M.C.T. requirement does not violate the State Board’s regulation ensuring that “no single procedure is used as the sole criterion for determining an appropriate educational program for a child.” Rule 9.11(6)(d), Rules and Regulations To Govern the Administration and Operation of Special Education.
. After the Administrative Order was issued, the School District agreed to administer the language arts test to plaintiff Ellen Ioerger with a large print booklet and to administer the mathematics and language arts test to plaintiff Deborah Brookhart in a small, quiet room. Neither plaintiff took advantage of this offer. (School Dist.Br. 29 and n. 12.)
. Plaintiffs also raise an equal protection claim for the first time on appeal. They appear to argue only that the M.C.T. requirement is invalid as applied to handicapped students, conceding that the “Peoria School District ... does have the prerogative to determine that the competency of graduating students is best ensured by determining that certain minimal standards of achievement have been met.” (Pl.Br. 16.) Neither the Superintendent nor the district court addressed this issue, and for that reason we decline to do so now.
Sharp v. Ford Motor Credit Co.,
. Some courts have held that state law creates a legitimate expectation of receipt of a diploma, thereby creating a property interest for purposes of due process analysis. See
Board of Educ. v. Ambach, supra
. For a discussion of their overlap, see Easter-brook, Substance and Due Process, 1982 Sup. Ct.Rev.
