Title: Chapter One: Overview of Todays Special Education
1Chapter One Overview of Todays Special
Education
2Chapter OneOverview of Todays Special Education
- In the 1999-2000 school year, approximately 5.75
million students, ages 6 to 21 received some form
of special education in US. - More than two-thirds of all students receiving
special education are male. - Students with specific learning disabilities,
speech or language impairments, mental
retardation, and emotional disturbance make up
about 90 of all students with disabilities.
3Labels and Language
- Labels can qualify students for special services
but they also stigmatize students. - Educators are trying to replace current
categories with a system that identifies special
individual needs 1) only as such needs become
relevant to providing an appropriate education
and 2) through the process and terminology that
have direct relevance to intervention and that
minimize negative consequences.
4Terms Reflecting Social ChangesArea of
disability
Present terms
- Mental Retardation mild, moderate, severe
- Learning disabilities learning disabilities,
dyslexia - Emotional disturbance emotional/ behavioral
disorders - Attention Deficit Disorder ADD or AD/HD
- Head injuries traumatic brain injury
- Deafness severely/ profoundly hearing impaired
- Orthopedic Disabilities physical disabilities
- Autism autism
5Esteeming Labels
- Cognitive worthy, competent, strong
- Affect attraction/ affection
- Action nurture/ empower
6Family Income
- The proportion of American children living in
poverty has increased significantly in the past
decade. - The greatest concentration of poverty is found
among single-parent households. - Each of these trends is stronger in households
where a child has a disability than in households
where a child does not have a disability.
7Ethnic Trends
- Children from diverse backgrounds
disproportionally are members of families with
low incomes. - Low income is associated with higher rates of
exposure to dangerous toxins, poor nutrition,
sell stimulating home and child care
environments, and lower birth rates. - Given the higher accumulation of risk factors in
children by race/ethnicity groups, it is not
surprising that race/ethnicity differences are
evident in school readiness at the kindergarten
level.
8Ethnic Trends
- Three major factors are associated with
underrepresentation of students from African
American, Latino, and Native American
backgrounds - 1) Teachers and parents tend to refer students
from diverse backgrounds less frequently, and
students from diverse backgrounds tend to be not
as proficient in performing well on standardized
tests as students from other backgrounds
9Ethnic Trends
- 2) Educators place students from poor and
diverse backgrounds in lower ability grouping and
have lower expectations and provide fewer
opportunities for them than for other students. - 3) They may feel isolated in gifted programs
when the percentage of other students from
diverse backgrounds in those programs is low.
10The Law and Special Education
- In the early and middle decades of the 20th
century schools discriminated against students
with disabilities by completely excluding them or
by not providing an effective or appropriate
education.
11History of Discrimination
- Cases Prior to IDEA that Prohibited
Discrimination - Separate is not equal Brown v. Board of
Education (1954)- This case held that schools
may not segregate by race or discriminate by
ability or disability.
12History of Discrimination
- In 1972 the federal courts ordered that
Pennsylvania and Washington D.C. to 1) provide a
free appropriate public education to all students
with disabilities, 2) educate students with
disabilities in the same schools and 3) put into
place a way for students to challenge the
schools. -Pennsylvania Association for
Retarded Citizens (PARC) v. Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania (1972) and Mills v. Washington, DC,
Board of Education (1972)
13IDEA
- In 1975, Congress enacted the IDEA (then called
the Education of All Handicapped Students Act, or
Public Law 94-142). - IDEA defines special education as specially
designed instruction, at no cost to the childs
parents, to meet the unique needs of a student
with a disability. - There is a categorical and functional component
to this definition.
14IDEA
- Part A Sets out Congresss intent and national
policy to provide a free appropriate public
education to all students, ages birth through 21. - Part B Benefits students ages 3 through 21 who
have a disability and because of it need special
education. - Part C Benefits any child under age 3 who needs
early intervention services because of 1)
developmental delays, or 2) has been diagnosed
with a physical or mental condition that might
lead to developmental delays.
15IDEA Categories for Children 6 thru 21
- Specific learning disabilities
- Emotional disturbance
- Mental retardation
- Autism
- Other health impairments
- Orthopedic impairments
- Traumatic brain injury
- Speech or language impairments
- Hearing impairments, including deafness
- Visual impairments, including blindness
- Multiple disabilities
16Individuals with Disabilities Education ActIDEA
- Six Principles of IDEA (PL 105-17)
- Least restrictive environment A rule requiring
schools to educate students with disabilities
with students without disabilities to the maximum
extent appropriate for the students with
disabilities. - Procedural due process A rule providing
safeguards for students against schools actions,
including a right to sue in court. - Appropriate education A rule requiring schools
to provide individually tailored education for
each student based on the evaluation and
augmented by related services and supplementary
aids and services.
17Individually Appropriate Education
- IEP- individualized education program that
provides the foundation for the students
appropriate education and assures that the
student will benefit from special education
through full participation - reviewed at least once a year
- must promote movement from school to adult
outcomes
18IEP Contents
- Present levels of educational performance
- measurable annual goals, including benchmarks
- special education and related services and
supplementary aids and services - extent to which the student will not participate
with students who do not have disabilities in
general education classes - individual modifications in the administration of
assessments
19IEP Contents
- projected dates for beginning the services and
program modifications ( frequency, location, and
duration) - transition plans
- how progress toward annual goals will be measured
and how parents will be informed
20IFSP Contents
- Present levels of development
- familys resources, priorities, and concerns
- major outcomes (criteria, procedures, and
timelines) - early intervention services (frequency,
intensity, and method of delivery) - natural environments in which services will be
provided - dates for starting services and how long they
will last - Familys service coordinator
- transition plan
21Individuals with Disabilities Education ActIDEA
- Parent and student participation A rule
requiring schools to collaborate with parents and
adolescent students in designing and carrying out
special education programs. - Zero reject A rule against excluding any
student. This has been controversial in
disciplining students. Congress decided that a
student cannot be completely excluded if the
behavior that got the student in trouble is a
manifestation of his disability. This is the
no-cessation rule. - Nondiscriminatory evaluation A rule requiring
the schools to evaluate students fairly to
determine if they have a disability and, if so,
what kind and how extensive.
22Nondiscriminatory Evaluation
- Evaluation Team- group that performs the full
nondiscriminatory evaluation - Two Purposes of Evaluation
- 1. Determine whether a student has a disability
- 2. Decide the nature of the special education
and related services - Four-Step Process
- 1. Screening
- 2. Prereferral
- 3. Referral
- 4. Nondiscriminatory evaluation procedures
23Nondiscriminatory Evaluation A Funneling Process
All Students Some students Students in need
of special education and related services
- SCREENING
- Prereferral
- Referral
- Nondiscriminatory
- evaluation process
24Other Federal Laws
- Entitlements and Services
- Rehabilitation Act- 1973 Provides for work
training, especially supported employment. - Technology-Related Act (Tech Act)- 1988 Makes
assistive technology available statewide in each
state.
25Other Federal Laws
- Prohibition of discrimination solely on the basis
of disability in a wide range of services, both
in and outside of school. - Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act- 1975
- Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)- 1990
26Outcome Goals
- Equality of opportunity People with
disabilities have the same chances and
opportunities in life as people without
disabilities. - Full participation People with disabilities
will have opportunities to be included in all
aspects of their community and will be protected
from any attempts by people to segregate them
solely on the basis of their disability.
27Outcome Goals
- Independent living People with disabilities
will have the opportunity to fully participate in
decision making and to experience autonomy in
making choices about how to live their lives. - Economic self-sufficiency People with
disabilities will be provided with opportunities
to engage fully in income-producing work or
unpaid work that contributes to a household or
community.
28Results for Students with Disabilities
- In the 1996-1997 school year, approximately on
fourth of all students with disabilities age 17
and older graduated from high school with a
diploma. - The dropout rate for special education students
is double that of general education students. - In 1990, 31.2 of special education students
were enrolled in postsecondary academic program
or postsecondary vocational program.