A colleague (Joe Materia, who is also a member of our group) and I have been examining the data of the current Juniors in our Special Education program at our high school. We uncovered some disturbing things. Our special needs kids, - who are required to take the state exams like everyone else is - have not been afforded the opportunity to take part in the supplemental skills support classes provided by the English and Math departments for students who scored low on early warning tests. They are not enrolled in the classes because of a "scheduling conflict".
What we unearthed was damning; our special needs students have been doubled up in maths rather than placed in the support classes. Joe researched each of our Junior special needs student's schedules and found that these students are also doing average or sub avgerage work in thosee two math classes. Ethical dilemma to say the least.
Joe composed a memo to the Supervisors of Math and all of the Guidance counselors. We are meeting with them next week to discuss this travesty. They were not happy people, to say the least, when the memo showed up in their mailboxes. Apparently you can't divulge problems in memos - it hurts feelings. No time for feelings... Joe and I have errors to correct. Feelings be damned.
I have been in three districts as a teacher. Each of their SPED programs was nearly criminal in execution, expectations, and support. Our high school has, by far, the most well designed and meaning SPED program I ahve been exposed to. But it has its flaws (as noted above). Just last year, I discovered that our special education students were not eligible to apply to four year institutions because they lacked two years of lab sciences; rather than be placed in CP (college prep) sciences with labs, they were placed in G (general) classes that did not afford lab time. They were non-lab science credits. After voicing my concern at a curriculum meeting in May of last year, that has changed. I felt embarassed for the Science Supervisor and the Guidance department. But what was going on was in direct violation of all IDEA standards.
What have your experiences with Special Education been? Are we all providing "the least restrictive environemnt" for our most needy students? Or are we doing what is epxediant and fulfills the minimum standards of IDEA? What does a well designed Special Education program look like?
Tags: administration, education, ethics, leadership, special
Share
-
▶ Reply to This