themes from the president’s commission on excellence in special education

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Page 1: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Themes from the Themes from the President’s Commission President’s Commission

on Excellence in on Excellence in Special EducationSpecial Education

www.hdc.lsuhsc.edu

Page 2: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

““A New Era for Special Education”A New Era for Special Education”

President's Commission on Excellence in Special

Education• 19 members across the U.S. (5 Ex-Of)

• Representing parents, schools, business, communities

• Investigate and report on 9 areas

Page 3: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Commission’s job Commission’s job (1)(1)

•“Examine the effectiveness & cost of special education and the federal government’s role

•Recommend:

–How to improve special education

–Research agenda”

Page 4: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Commission’s job Commission’s job (2)(2)“Analyze:• Effect of funding, differences in size, location,

demographics, & wealth on decisions to refer & place students and cost of special education;

• How federal government can help states & LEAs provide high quality instruction

• Impact of early intervention• Impact of federal/state requirements on cost &

effectiveness of special education• If changes needed in “supplement not

supplant” & “maintenance of effort”

Page 5: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

The Commission’s The Commission’s strategiesstrategies

• Examined special education broadly (not just I.D.E.A.)

• Held 13 public hearings• Obtained expert testimony and

public input (100+ witnesses)• Received and analyzed white

papers and external documents• Drafted and approved a report to

the President by 7/1/02

Page 6: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Complementary contextComplementary context

•No Child Left Behind Act (accountability with consequences)

• Emerging consensus on shift from processes to results (& focused monitoring)

• Promising research on early intervention (WH Conference)

• Shift in assessment and instruction practices (NRC Report, LD Summit, etc.)

Page 7: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Context #2Context #2PremisePremise of I.D.E.A. of I.D.E.A.

“Congress finds:

•Disability is a natural part of the human experience and in no way diminishes the right of individuals to participate in or contribute to society. “

Page 8: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

The The promisepromise of I.D.E.A. of I.D.E.A.

“Improving educational results for children with disabilities is an essential element of our national policy of ensuring equality of opportunity, full participation, independent living, and economic self-sufficiency for individuals with disabilities” (sec. 1400 (c) (1)

Page 9: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Myths about the Myths about the CommissionCommission

“The Report was written before the Commission began.”

“Commissioners have their minds made up.”

“This is a hatchet job on special education.”

“Everything in Florida is going national.”

Page 10: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

A new era:A new era: Revitalizing special Revitalizing special

education for children and education for children and their familiestheir families

• Summary lists:– 9 major findings– 3 major recommendations

• Report contains:– 7 sections– 32+ additional findings – 33 general recommendations– Numerous additional (specific)

recommendations (47)

Page 11: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Commission themesCommission themes

•Increase accountability•Emphasize results•Provide flexibility•Empower parents

and their choices

Page 12: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Major Major recommendationsrecommendations

• Major recommendation 1: Focus on results — not on process.

• Major recommendation 2: Embrace a model of prevention, not a model of failure.

• Major recommendation 3: Consider children with disabilities as general education children first. 

Page 13: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Too much processToo much process

Finding 1: IDEA is generally providing basic legal safeguards and access for children with disabilities. However, the current system often places process above results, and bureaucratic compliance above student achievement, excellence, and outcomes.

Page 14: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Major Major recommendationsrecommendations

• Major recommendation 1: Focus on results — not on process. – Adequate yearly progress (set by

states) – Sensitive measures of continuous

progress– Student-level data system

(disaggregate)– Variety of results measures (“gap,”

etc.)

Page 15: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Hold states accountable (1)Hold states accountable (1)• Recommendation — set high expectations

for special education: NCLB requires states to establish high expectations.

• The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act should require each state to establish additional ambitious and conforming goals for students with disabilities by using measures such as graduation rates, post-graduation outcomes and parent satisfaction surveys. States should also be required to define "adequate yearly progress" under IDEA for students with disabilities in local education agencies (LEAs) toward these goals.

Page 16: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

LEA must be accountable LEA must be accountable (1)(1)

• “Recommendation — Hold LEAs accountable for results: State and local accountability systems should include all children, and each system must be consistent with the No Child Left Behind Act.

• IDEA should require states to report annually on the success of each school and LEA in achieving IDEA goals for students with disabilities.”

Page 17: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

LEA must be accountable LEA must be accountable (2)(2)

Recommendation: “IDEA should provide for technical assistance for LEAs that fail to make adequate yearly progress under IDEA, and it should require states take more intensive corrective actions —including state direction of IDEA funds for LEAs that do not demonstrate adequate yearly progress under IDEA for three consecutive years.”

Page 18: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Hold feds accountableHold feds accountable

• Recommendation — Replace federal monitoring practices with a focused approach. Radically change how it conducts technical assistance and monitoring activities to focus on results instead of process.

• Recommendation — Utilize federal special education staff more effectively. Within three months of the issuance of this report, the Secretary of Education should provide recommendations to Congress on how OSERS can better utilize its staff and resources to implement federal special education law.

Page 19: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Participation and Participation and performanceperformance

• Students with disabilities must participate in state-wide assessments whenever appropriate (80% or NCLB 95%?)

• For those who participate, compare their average performance to students without disabilities (gap for now, trends later)

Page 20: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Increase participationIncrease participation• Recommendation —

Incorporate universal design in accountability tools: Ensure all tools used to assess students for accountability and the assessment of progress are designed to include any accommodations and modifications for students with disabilities.

Page 21: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Reduce burdensReduce burdens• Recommendation — Reduce

regulatory burden and increase flexibility: emphasize flexibility to achieve results for children with disabilities,

• Including a unified system of services from birth through 21, and

• Simplify the Individualized Education Program to focus on substantive outcomes.

• Dramatically simplify IDEA federal regulatory and administrative requirements to be more understandable for parents, educators and administrators

Page 22: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Must be one systemMust be one systemFinding 3: Children placed in special education are general education children first. Despite this basic fact, educators and policy-makers think about the two systems as separate and tally the cost of special education as a separate program, not as additional services with resultant add-on expense.

Page 23: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

A specific A specific recommendationrecommendation

• “The Commission recommends that the U.S. Secretary of Education ensure all federal requirements for accountability be integrated into a unified system of accountability throughout the Department.” (p. 16)

Page 24: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Poor outcomes Poor outcomes (1)(1)

Finding 9: The focus on compliance and bureaucratic imperatives in the current system, instead of academic achievement and social outcomes, fails too many children with disabilities. Too few successfully graduate from high school or transition to full employment and post-secondary opportunities, despite provisions in IDEA providing for transition services.

Page 25: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Poor outcomes Poor outcomes (2)(2)

Finding 9:... Parents want an education system that is results oriented and focused on the child’s needs —in school and beyond.

Page 26: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Exiting Exiting with a with a regular regular diplomadiplomaAges 14 -

21+

Note: There are no currently uniform standards guiding standards for diplomas for students with disabilities. Considerable differences exist across states.

Page 27: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Nat. Avg. = 61.6% - Ages 17-21+, 97-98 school year

90.3%

77.3%

80.9%

78.4%78.4%

24.6%13.7%

28.4%27.3%

24.9% Highest 5

Lowest 5

All students with disabilities All students with disabilities exiting with a regular exiting with a regular

diplomadiploma

Page 28: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

All students with specific learning disabilities exiting with a regular

diploma

Nat. Avg. = 67.5% - Ages 17-21+, 97-98 school year

90.2%

79.9%

84.8%

83.9%

83.4%

29.3%16.6%

44.5%

38.6%

36.5%

Highest 5

Lowest 5

Page 29: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Dropping out: All students Dropping out: All students with disabilitieswith disabilities

Highest 5

Lowest 5

Nat. Avg. = 31.2% - Ages 14-21+, Table AD5

23.9%

49.2%

50.1%

23.5%13.2%

17.8%

16.4%

45.9%

45.8%

45.3%

32.9%

Page 30: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Dropping out: Students with Dropping out: Students with specific learning disabilitiesspecific learning disabilities

Highest 5

Lowest 5

Nat. Avg. = 29.3% - Ages 14-21+, Table AD5

46%

47.7%

52.8%

19.4%13.7%

18.9%

16%

45.5%

45.1%

19.7%

37.2%

Page 31: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Dropping out:Dropping out: Students Students with emotional disturbancewith emotional disturbance

Highest 5

Lowest 5

Nat. Avg. = 53.5% - Ages 14-21+, Table AD5

27.6%

77.9%

72%

77.5%

25.3%

29.3%

27.5%

73.5%

76.3%34.7%

61.5%

Page 32: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Improve outcomesImprove outcomes• Recommendation — Simplify federal

transition requirements in the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act

• Recommendation — mandate federal interagency coordination of resources.

• Recommendation — Create a Rehabilitation Act Reauthorization Advisory Committee.

• Recommendation — Support higher education faculty, administrators and auxiliary service providers to more effectively provide and help students with disabilities to complete a high quality post-secondary education.

Page 33: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Added measure of Added measure of accountabilityaccountability

• “Note: While measurements of ‘least restrictive environment’ are not necessarily outcomes per se, they are important and should be measured and reported at state, local and school levels.”

Page 34: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

What are “Class What are “Class Settings”?Settings”?

•Regular = 20% or less of school day outside of the regular class. At least 80% of day in the regular class.

•Separate = 61% or more of the school day outside of the regular class.

•Resource = 21% to 60% of school day outside of the regular class.

Now, just use the numbers.Now, just use the numbers.80%+ v. - 40%80%+ v. - 40%

Page 35: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Comparing percent of children ages 6-21 served in different educational environments

Under IDEA, Part B, During the 1996-97 School Year (21st Report)all disabilities, Sorted by % in Regular Class (lowest to highest)

Other = PUBLIC SEPAR FACIL + PRIVATE SEPAR FACIL + PUBLIC RESID FACIL + PRIVATE RESID FACIL + HOME HOSP ENVIR

STATEREGULAR

CLASSRESOURCE

ROOMSEPAR CLASS OTHER

(Low est to Highest)

TEXAS 25.6% 50.8% 21.5% 2.1%ILLINOIS 36.1% 29.8% 27.3% 6.8%PENNSYLVANIA 37.8% 31.0% 26.6% 4.6%FLORIDA 38.6% 25.1% 32.8% 3.5%NEW YORK 42.3% 13.1% 33.6% 11.0%50 STATES, D.C. & P.R. 45.8% 28.5% 21.4% 4.3%CALIFORNIA 52.6% 21.0% 22.7% 3.7%OHIO 61.5% 24.9% 8.4% 5.3%

Table AB2-7Table AB2-7Data prepared by GLARRC

Page 36: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Really big mythReally big myth

“The Commission did NOT endorse

‘full funding’ of the federal share of

special education costs.”

Page 37: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Reward resultsReward results• “Recommendation — Increase

discretionary Part B federal funding and establish a definable threshold percent of excess costs

• Recommendation — Link future funding increases above the threshold percent to state plans to improve accountability for results. Funding in future years should be contingent on achievement of results in that plan.”

Page 38: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Fear of litigationFear of litigation“Finding 5: The culture of compliance has often developed from the pressures of litigation, diverting much energy of the public schools’ first mission: educating every child.“

Page 39: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Reduce litigationReduce litigation• Recommendation — prevent

disputes and improve dispute resolution: IDEA should empower parents as key players and decision-makers in their children’s education. IDEA should require states to develop early processes that avoid conflict and promote individualized education program (IEP) agreements, such as IEP facilitators.

Page 40: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Reduce litigationReduce litigation• Recommendation — prevent

disputes and improve dispute resolution: Require states to make mediation available anytime it is requested and not only when a request for a hearing has been made. Permit parents and schools to enter binding arbitration and ensure that mediators, arbitrators and hearing officers are trained in conflict resolution and negotiation.

Page 41: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Parents need powerParents need powerFinding 4: When a child fails to make progress in special education, parents don’t have adequate options and little recourse. Parents have their child’s best interests in mind, but they often do not feel they are empowered when the system fails them.

Page 42: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Empower parents Empower parents (1)(1)

• Recommendation — increase parental empowerment and school choice:

• Parents should be provided with meaningful information about their children’s progress, based on objective assessment results, and with educational options.

• The majority of special education students will continue to be in the regular public school system. Students with disabilities attend schools or access services of their family’s choosing, provided states measure and report outcomes for all students benefiting from IDEA funds.

Page 43: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Empower parents Empower parents (2)(2)

• Recommendation—increase parental empowerment and school choice: …

• IDEA should increase informed opportunities for parents to make choices about their children’s education. Consistent with the No Child Left Behind Act, IDEA funds should be available for parents to choose services or schools, particularly for parents whose children are in schools that have not made adequate yearly progress under IDEA for three consecutive years.

Page 44: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Wait to fail modelWait to fail modelFinding 2: The current system uses an antiquated model that waits for a child to fail, instead of a model based on prevention and intervention. Too little emphasis is put on prevention, early and accurate identification of learning and behavior problems, and aggressive intervention using research-based approaches.

Page 45: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Identify differently Identify differently (1)(1)

• Recommendation — Identify and intervene early: Implement research-based, early identification and intervention programs to better serve children with learning and behavioral difficulties at an earlier age. Include early screening, prevention and intervention practices to identify academic and behavioral problems in young children.

Page 46: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Identify differently Identify differently (2)(2)

• Recommendation — simplify the identification process: Simplify the IDEA identification and eligibility determination process, and clarify the criteria used to determine the existence of a disability, particularly high-incidence disorders.

Page 47: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Identify differently Identify differently (3)(3)

• Recommendation — Incorporate response to intervention: Implement models during the identification and assessment process that are based on response to intervention and progress monitoring. Use data from these processes to assess progress in children who receive special education services.

Page 48: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

What does L.D.A. say?What does L.D.A. say?

“The preliminary exploration and discussion of alternative

approaches to identification and eligibility processes have

not yet addressed many specifics that must be determined

prior to widespread adoption. Research and pilot projects

must clearly describe students, professional competencies,

settings, services, and interventions so the most effective of

the alternatives can be replicated and moved into large

scale settings. In implementing such an approach, the

required and optimal components, their sequence, and

timelines will need to be specified, as well as who has the

ultimate responsibility for each component.”

Page 49: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Better personnelBetter personnel

Finding 7: Children with disabilities require highly qualified teachers. Teachers, parents, and education officials desire better preparation, support, and professional development related to the needs of serving these children. Many educators wish they had better preparation before entering the classroom as well as better tools for identifying needs early and accurately.

Page 50: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Improve personnelImprove personnel• Recommendation — recruit and train

highly qualified general and special education teachers.

• Recommendation — create research and data-driven systems for training teachers of special education.

• Recommendation — institute ongoing field experiences.

• Recommendation — require rigorous training in reading.

• Recommendation — require public reporting.

• Recommendation — increase special education and related services faculty.

• Recommendation — conduct research.

Page 51: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Upgrade researchUpgrade researchFinding 8: Research on special education needs enhanced rigor and the long-term coordination necessary to support the needs of children, educators and parents. In addition, the current system does not always embrace or implement evidence-based practices once established.

Page 52: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Improve researchImprove research• Recommendation — Change the

current grant review process to create scientific rigor.

• Recommendation — Improve the coordination of special education research.

• Recommendation — Support long-term research priorities.

• Recommendation — Improve the impact of research findings.

Page 53: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

In summary:In summary:Commission themesCommission themes

•Increase accountability•Emphasize results•Provide flexibility•Empower parents

and their choices

Page 54: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education

Questions ???Questions ???

Comments ???Comments ???

Page 55: Themes from the President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education