Minority Children in Special and Gifted Education - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 58
About This Presentation
Title:

Minority Children in Special and Gifted Education

Description:

Minority Children in Special and Gifted Education Issues in Identification and Referral Impressions and Recommendations Overview Introduction. Disproportionate ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:614
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 59
Provided by: JonBa82
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Minority Children in Special and Gifted Education


1
Minority Children in Special and Gifted Education
  • Issues in Identification and Referral
  • Impressions and Recommendations

2
Overview
  • Introduction.
  • Disproportionate numbers of minority children in
    special education programs.
  • Statistical trends in identification.
  • Important litigation.
  • Causes of disproportionate identification.
  • Recommendations for change.
  • Gifted and talented underrepresentation.
  • What is giftedness?
  • Causes of limited identification for gifted
    education.
  • Recommendations for improved identification.

3
Introduction
  • Over-identification, misidentification, and
    under-identification of minority children for
    special education intervention or gifted
    education leads to minority children being both
    underserved and mis-served.
  • Percentages of minority students assessed as
    eligible for supports in both categories are
    disproportionate in comparison to total
    enrollment figures and non-minority student
    populations.
  • Identification issues for minority students can
    lead to inappropriate educational placement and
    educational failure.

4
Representation of Minority Children in Special
Education
  • Disproportionate Identification

5
Special Education by the Numbers
  • Approximately 5.4 million school-aged (6-21)
    children identified with disabilities (under
    IDEA).
  • 2,030,685 (38) are minority children.
  • (Source IDEA/OSERS)
  • 1.5 million of these are minority children
    labeled MMR, ED or SLD.
  • 876,000 of those--either Native American or
    African American.
  • (Source Executive Summary, 2002)

6
OVER-identification of Minority Children for
Special Education
  • Primarily soft disabilities
  • MMR, ED, SLD.
  • English language learners
  • Speech and language, LD.
  • Usually NOT in medically diagnosed categories
  • deafness
  • blindness,
  • Downs Syndrome, etc.

7
Percentages of Minority Groups that make up
Special Education Totals
  • 20 (15) African Americans
  • 14.5 (17.5) Hispanic/Latino
  • 2 (4) Asian/Pacific Islanders
  • 1.5 (1) Native Americans
  • 38 of special education population
  • minority students.
  • 37.5 of total school population
  • minority students.
  • (Source IDEA/OSERS, 2001)

8
Enrollment Comparisons
(Source Office for Civil Rights in Losen
Orfield, 2002)
9
Trends in Ethnic Demographics
  • Asian Americans
  • Generally underidentified for special education
    overidentified for gifted ed.
  • African American students
  • 3 times more likely--labeled mentally retarded.
  • 2 times more likely--emotionally disturbed.
  • Boys labeled MR 4 times more than non-minorities.

10
Ethnic Trends, cont
  • Native American students
  • 2 times more likely to be labeled ED or learning
    disabled.
  • Initially, 4 times more likely--speech or
    language impaired.
  • Hispanic students
  • More likely identified when attending schools
    with high numbers of ELL students.
  • Less likely eligible for services if attending
    schools with lower numbers of ELL students.

According to Losen Orfield (2002), each
minority group is at greater risk of being
labeled mentally retarded as their percentage of
the population increases.
11
Examples of Geographic Trends
  • District of Columbia
  • 67 of African Americans make up school
    population 91 identified eligible.
  • South Carolina, Mississippi
  • African Americans 4 times more likely to be
    identified mentally retarded.
  • Alaska
  • Native Americans 21 of school population over
    40 of students with MR.
  • Hawaii
  • Asian/Pacific Islanders identified with
    speech,language impairments 3 times more.

(Sources Losen Orfield, 2002 IDEA Data/OSERS,
2001)
12
In Arizona
(Source IDEA Data/OSERS, 2001)
13
Flagstaff Unified Schools
  • 1875 students identified for special education
    (17 of total population).
  • 867 are minority students (46 of special ed
    students).
  • Total population of minority students in the
    district 42.
  • (Based on data received from FUSD 2/10/03
    total school population 10,860. 100-day count
    cited in Arizona Daily Sun, 2/12/03 11,487.)

14
What Does the Data Tell Us?
  • Identification varies by
  • disability.
  • geographic location.
  • ethnicity.
  • gender.
  • Nationally
  • extreme disparities between Hispanic and African
    American identification rates.
  • National trends
  • do not always mirror local trends in
    identification.
  • CRUCIAL
  • to look at whats happening in special education
    locally.

15
Problems with Statistical Information
  • Data collection, reporting procedures
    inconsistent (state to state, district to
    district, no federal oversight).
  • Discrepancies exist, state by state, between
    enrollment data and disability identification.
  • About 400,000 children identified as disabled not
    identified with any ethnic group.
  • Numbers, percentage totals must be considered
    approximations.
  • Numerical discrepancies exist between data
    collection sources.
  • Difficult to collect concise information in rural
    areas.
  • IDEA 97 mandated data collection but no
    standardization.

16
Important Litigation Minority Rights in Special
Education
  • Hobson vs. Hanson (1967)
  • Ability tracking denied equal education for
    minorities.
  • Diana vs. CA State Board Of Education (1970)
  • Non-discriminatory testing provision (i.e.,
    testing done in native language).
  • Guadalupe vs. Tempe (1972)
  • Upheld non-discriminatory testing.
  • Larry P. vs. Riles (1972, 1979, 1984)
  • Barred use of IQ scores as sole determiner of
    student placement.

17
Important Litigation, cont.
  • Lau vs. Nichols (1974)
  • Non-discriminatory testing San Francisco LEP
    students.
  • PASE vs. Hannon (1980)
  • Upheld the use of IQ test scores BUT
  • other assessment measures used, too.
  • Lee vs. Macon (1967, Alabama)
  • One of the longest active cases on record.
  • 2000 decision, mandated mechanisms to correct
  • African American overrepresentation in MR, ED.
  • Underrepresentation in areas of LD, gifted.
  • (Source Paolino, 2002)

18
Litigation Has Led Directly To
  • Protective legislation
  • Public Law 93-112.
  • Public Law 94-142 (EHA) which became--
  • IDEA and its reauthorizations.
  • Generally occurs only after parent-initiated
    litigation.
  • Establishment of Protection in Evaluation
    Procedures requirements
  • Comprehensive, individualized evaluations.
  • Use of nondiscriminatory practices.
  • Use of multiple assessments.
  • Establishment of team process for referral,
    evaluation, placement.
  • Purpose Protection of students whose learning
    differences may be related to cultural and ethnic
    differences from being misidentified as disabled.

19
Factors in Identification Disparities of Minority
Students
  • 30 years of research and documentation have
    found the following leading causes
  • Test bias.
  • Teacher bias.
  • Poverty/environmental effects.
  • Cultural and linguistic differences.

20
Current Research Focus
  • Latest research
  • Continued test bias, teacher bias,
    poverty/environmental effects, cultural/linguistic
    differences.
  • Teacher/classroom characteristics.
  • Parental involvement.
  • Issues of subjectivity.
  • Funding.
  • Emerging responses to high-stakes testing.
  • Continued wait-to-fail model prevalent in the
    United States (or, wait-to-succeed).
  • .

21
Test Bias/High Stakes Testing
  • Test bias in general
  • Echoes experiences of middle class children.
  • Based on authors cultural, linguistic,
    experiential background.
  • Normative sample problems.
  • Usually given by non-minority professionals.
  • Often, still not written and/or administered in
    students native language.
  • Continued reliance on IQ scores.
  • High-stakes tests
  • Contain many of the same built-in biases,
    problems.
  • Can validity be established?
  • Teacher pay, school performance tied to student
    achievementmay result in increased special ed
    referrals.
  • Increased pressure on minority student
    performanceresult increased failure.

22
Teacher Bias and Characteristics
  • Lowered behavioral, academic expectations.
  • Expectations of failure.
  • Teacher experience, training.
  • Instructional quality.
  • Classroom management (quiet vs. social??)
  • Unconscious racial bias, lowered or stereotypical
    expectations.
  • Quality of reciprocal relationships,
    interactions.
  • Teacher ethnicity.

23
Poverty and the Environment
  • Considered to be related to racial bias.
  • Insufficient nutrition, medical and/or prenatal
    care
  • Poor living conditions.
  • Toxins and pollutants.
  • (e.g., lead exposure, etc.)
  • Poor community supports.
  • Geographic location.

24
Cultural and Linguistic Differences
  • Childs life experiences, activities, etc.,
    shaped by his/her culture.
  • Cultural experiences influence a childs
    strengths, needs.
  • A students cultural background may help
    determine which neurodevelopmental strengths get
    stronger and which ones dont, (Levine, 2001).
  • Cultural influences can affect learning
  • modalities.
  • Historical cultural experiences,
  • views may differ.
  • Vocabulary differences may
  • hamper learning.

25
Parental Involvement
  • Lack of support, involvement in childs
    educational experience.
  • Lack of knowledge of special ed rights, services,
    procedures, language, etc.
  • Uncomfortable advocating against professionals.
  • Acceptance, without question, of educators
    conclusions.

26
Subjectivity, Funding Concerns
  • Subjectivity.
  • Permeates decision-making on every
    level--referral,
  • assessment, placement despite best
    intentions, team
  • process, increased awareness.
  • Funding.
  • Parrish (Losen Orfield) believes some
    overidentification occurs so that poor schools
    can qualify for state, federal funding.

27
Recommendations for Better Identification
  • In the classroom
  • High quality instruction for all students (i.e.,
    much improved teacher training).
  • General education classes geared toward success
    for all students.
  • Improve early identification, intervention
    programs.
  • Target monitoring, improving reading skills.
  • Recruit educators from diverse background,
    provide culturally diverse instruction.
  • Use pre-referral process before special ed
    assessment referral.

28
More Recommendations
  • For support staff
  • Provide consistent monitoring of all students
    through primary grades.
  • Ensure appropriate special education services
    provided.
  • For parents
  • Educatorsencourage parental involvement.
  • Be encouraged to seek legal help, mediation,
    assistance.
  • Be provided with information, supports to better
    advocate.

29
Recommendations, cont
  • For districts, state and federal governments,
    others
  • Improve data collection, student population
    monitoring.
  • Require school districts to report disparities in
    special ed identification, placement (Losen,
    Orfield, 2002).
  • Improve federal and state oversight and
    enforcement.
  • Guarantee that schools receive adequate funding.
  • Increase referral, evaluation accuracy use
    multiple assessments, teams w/cultural diversity,
    parental input.

30
  • The concern with the overrepresentation of
    minorities in special education placements
    would be mitigated if the evidence suggested that
    minority children reaped the same benefit from
    more frequent identification and isolation. But
    as government officials acknowledge and as data
    demonstrate, this does not appear to be the
    case. (Losen Orfield, 2002)

31
Gifted Talented Minority Students
  • Underrepresented and Underserved

32
The Need For Change
  • By 2040, 40 of the nations students will be
    students of color.
  • By 2050, the numbers of Hispanic students will
    increase to more than 18 million--27 of all
    school-aged children.

33
What is Giftedness?
  • The definition of giftedness has not been
    universally decided
  • Districts, states, and some schools decide how to
    identify gifted students.
  • Gardner says there are multiple intelligences
  • Knowledge
  • Language
  • Leadership
  • Memory
  • Reading
  • Art
  • Music
  • Creativity

34
More about Giftedness
  • Giftedness is usually defined as success in
    academics.
  • U.S. Department of Education shows 3 groups
    consistently underrepresented
  • Native Americans
  • Hispanics
  • African Americans

35
Why are these groups so underrepresented?
  • Teacher expectations/
  • perceptions.
  • Test bias.
  • Lack of universal definition of giftedness.
  • Just what is giftedness?
  • Parent awareness.
  • Administrative issues.

36
Underrepresentation of minority groups in gifted
programs is related to a breakdown in the
referral process, the assessment process, or
both. (Masten Plata, 2000)
37
Teacher Expectations/Perceptions
  • Teachers perceptions are based on
  • Gender
  • Hispanic females nominated fewer times than any
    other group.
  • Social class
  • Do not realize the limitations of a low
    socioeconomic environment to stimulate and
    support the development of higher intellectual
    capacities.
  • (Source Plata Masten, 1997)
  • Language proficiency.

38
Teacher Perceptions, cont
  • Race
  • Perceive Hispanic students behavior as less
    favorable than Anglo students.
  • Perceive Hispanic students as having lower
    academic potential.
  • Interact less affirmatively with Hispanic
    students than with Anglo students.
  • Anglo students nominated more than any others.

39
Teacher Perceptions, cont
  • Teachers identify giftedness based on academic
    performance only.
  • Expectations of the mainstream culture have
    biased the process of identification of gifted
    children.
  • There exists a persistent attitude that
    giftedness simply cannot be found in some groups.

40
Teacher Perceptions
Teacher perceptions affect nominations of
Hispanic and Anglo students for gifted programs
(Source Plata, Marsten Trusty, 1999.)
41
Test Bias
  • Historically, gifted and talented programs are
    filled by White, middle and upper middle class
    students.
  • Test makers are of the same class, so they tend
    to favor students from same background.
  • Test are not given in the native tongue of ELL
    students.

42
Test Bias, cont
  • Intelligence tests strongly biased against
    culturally disadvantaged students because they
    emphasize
  • Rapid response.
  • Verbal comprehension.
  • Answers that are acquired in the dominant middle
    class culture.

43
Test Bias, cont
  • Objective tests items
  • Biased because they are based on
  • Differences in values
  • Urban ghetto
  • experience compared
  • to surburban and other life
  • patterns.
  • Differences in racial and cultural experiences.
  • Differences in language usage common to the
    cultural group.

44
What is Giftedness?????
  • Academic performance
  • Creativity
  • Language
  • Leadership
  • Memory
  • Reading
  • Art
  • Music skills

45
What??? cont
  • No universal definition of giftedness.
  • Most definitions are defined by academic
    achievement.
  • Different cultural perceptions of giftedness
  • Anglo Culture
  • Focus on high standardized test scores.
  • Competitive.
  • Superior academic skills.
  • Standing out in a group.
  • Assertive.

46
What???? cont
  • Navajo Culture
  • Quietness.
  • Noncompetitive.
  • Non assertive.
  • Does not show leadership qualities in public.
  • Hispanic Culture
  • Follows orders.
  • Does not lead.
  • Obeys, cooperates, submissive.
  • Doesnt meddle in adult affairs.
  • Doesnt judge or criticize others.
  • Opposing cultural values will put student at odds
    with significant others (family, culture, etc...).

47
Parent Awareness
  • Study by Bracey
  • Hispanic parents are less aware of their
    childrens giftedness.
  • Parents are not involved in nomination process.
  • Parents not aware of nomination processes or
    existence of gifted programs.

48
Awareness, cont
  • Hispanic parents are more reserved and less
    likely to nominate their children.
  • Parents are not aware of what definition of
    giftedness is.
  • Parents not included in assessment process.

49
Administrative Issues
  • Administrators do not train teachers to recognize
    characteristics of gifted ELL learners.
  • Psychologists not always aware of limitations of
    teacher rating scales.
  • Parents generally not included on evaluation
    committee.
  • Administrators do not usually inform community of
    gifted characteristics or assessment process.

50
. . . Youth are the most important natural
resource of a great nation. Gifted programs can
help prepare youth of all cultures and languages
to become productive citizens and critical
thinkers, ensuring that the future of the country
is in good hands.
51
Recommendations
  • Gifted Special Education
  • Use of ethnographic assessment procedures
  • Student is observed in multiple contexts over
    time.
  • Use of dynamic assessment
  • Student is given opportunity to transfer newly
    acquired skills to novel situations.
  • Portfolio assessment.
  • Use of tests written in native language of ELL
    students.

52
Recommendations, cont
  • Use of test scores from several instruments
  • Progressive Matrices, Standard.
  • SOI Screening Form for Gifted.
  • System of Multicultural Pluralistic Assessment.
  • Culture Fair Intelligence Test, Scale 1.
  • Include people from diverse cultural
    backgrounds in the assessment process.

53
Recommendations, cont
  • Education of teachers on gifted characteristics
    of different cultures.
  • Explicit information such as
  • The experiences and abilities of Hispanic
    children.
  • How those experiences enhance skills, talents,
    traits and/or values attached to giftedness.
  • Knowledge of how acculturation influences
    teachers ratings.

54
Recommendations, cont.
  • Training of assessment personel as to bias in
    behavior rating scales.
  • Encourage parents to be a part of the process of
    evaluation.
  • Recruitment of teachers of color.
  • Parent education about the process and
    characteristics of gifted children.

55
What Educators Must Do
  • Interact with ALL students as consistently,
    compassionately, and culturally informed as
    possible.
  • Make intelligent, individualized (not
    stereotypical) assessments of student strengths
    and needs.
  • Continue professional growth and development in
    cultural diversity, special education, and
    differing learning modalities.
  • Remember that a quality educator can be the
    single most positive influence on any childs
    educational experience. Quality success.

56
Education is not a product.it is a process.a
never-ending one.Bel Kaufman, 1967
57
(No Transcript)
58
All images Microsoft PowerPoint Clips or Google
Images.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com