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Focus on Equity
Why are minority children overrepresented in special education?
In 1993, the U.S. Department of Education cited the Stamford,
Connecticut, school district with a civil rights violation. Black
children in the district were being labeled seriously emotionally
disturbed at three times the rate of white children, though they
comprised only a third of the school population. As a consequence
of this labeling, the students spent the majority of their school
day in special education, isolated from their mainstream peers,
taught in separate classrooms with a separate curriculum.
The Stamford case is typical of urban districts around the country.
Poor and minority students are disproportionately placed in special
education programs, driving up district costs and holding back
many children from a quality education. Among the many labels that
children at risk for school failure can receive, black students
are overwhelmingly categorized as seriously emotionally disturbed
or mildly mentally retarded; their white middle-class counterparts
tend to receive the less stigmatizing label of learning disabled.
While the financial costs to school districts of having so many
children misplaced in special education programs are significant,
the personal costs are even greater, according to EDC's Alana Zambone. "Two
of the most devastating things you can be called in our society
are retarded and crazy," she explains. "And once you
get labeled this way it tends to stick, so everything you do gets
looked at through that lens." In New York State, for example,
only 4 percent of the students labeled seriously emotionally disturbed
went on to graduate from high school, according to a study conducted
by EDC's Evelyn Frankford.
Despite ongoing attempts on the part of the Office of Civil Rights
(OCR) to address the problem, the practice of tracking minority
children into special education programs has persisted for decades. "Too
often school staff have only limited experience with the families
and communities of students who are poor, minority, or disabled," Zambone
explains. "And these are often the children whose history
and experience don't match the culture of the public schools, making
it especially difficult for them to achieve success." While
she is quick to emphasize that "most teachers are of good
will and want to do right by children," she also points to
the many competing demands on teachers that can make this difficult: "High-stakes
tests, the push toward standards, limited financial resourcesthen
you pair this with long-held ways of looking at certain kinds of
kidsways that are often unconscious—and it can be very hard
to see where the problem lies." She has seen many school districts
cited repeatedly by OCR: "The numbers go down, OCR leaves,
and the numbers shoot up again."
A Model For Sytemic Change
Currently, EDC is collaborating
with the Institute for Equity in Schools, which has developed a
more lasting solution to the
problem. Rather than take a strictly
procedural approachrevising policy statements, mandates, and accountability
programsthe Institute helps district staff examine how deep-seated beliefs
about poverty, race, and disability contribute to the problem. "Our method
helps teachers recognize how they are looking at kids," says Zambone,
who works at both the Institute and EDC. "We get them to look critically
at their own lenses, and then we offer them some new ways of looking."
The Institute's systemic change model begins with a collaborative
case-study process that brings together diverse representatives
from the school community to re-assess how referrals to special
education are made. "It's really a professional development
effort at all levels," Zambone says. Teams consisting of a
central office administrator, several teachersboth general
and special educatorsthe school psychologist, and a social
worker review actual cases from the district's files. "We
pull anonymous files from their records and use them as case studies," Zambone
explains. "It's important that the cases come from their districts,
so they can't say, 'This wouldn't happen here.'"
Together, the teams carefully review the criteria that were used
to refer students to special education, such as the student's cognitive
learning styles, academic performance, health records, family background,
and level of acculturation. "We help the staff make distinctions
between real data and inferences. Then we ask, 'Is there enough
information here to label a kid?' Usually, by the second or third
case they start to say, 'We don't have a lot of real information
here.'"
Through the case review process, school staff broaden their focus
from an examination of just the child to the larger environment
of the school and the curriculum in order to consider how other
factors might contribute to a student's difficulties. "We
start by posing two questions," explains Zambone. "Is
the child troubling to us or truly troubled? And do we assess children
in order to better teach them, or just to determine eligibility
for special education? It can be hard for teachers to look critically
at themselves in order to ask, 'What can we be doing differently?'
We try to get teachers to see that a difficult kid can sometimes
represent a limitation in their practice that they're not seeing."
Environmental factors involving the family and the community can
also contribute to in-class difficulties. "A kid could be
having a difficult time, or a difficult year, or a problem with
one particular teacher. But once he gets a label, it sticks," says
Zambone. "We reviewed one case of a student who had been labeled
emotionally disturbed after developing serious behavior problems
in second grade. A handwritten note in his file mentioned that
his mother died early that year, but this information had not been
factored into the analysis of his behavior and learning needs." For
this reason, Institute staff reinforce the necessity of bringing
parents, former teachers, and other community members into the
discussion about how to teach a child who may not be succeeding.
They learn to look for strengths that the student may exhibit in
other arenassuch as the playground, after-school activities,
past educational experiences, or at homethat may not be apparent
to the classroom teacher. And they work with staff to look at the
whole child and develop alternative solutions before making a special
education referral.
Long-Term Improvement
In Stamford, the case review process yielded
some dramatic changes. By the end of the second year, one-third
of the black students
labeled emotionally
disturbed had been reclassifiedeither they were returned to the general
education program or they were re-identified as learning disabled and given
more appropriate academic support. Policy changes were also made to shore
up the prereferral process, and a districtwide teacher support program was
established
to support teachers as they deal with challenging students.
Several years after OCR left the district, long-term change is
evident in Stamford, according to John Abbott, former director
of Pupil Personnel Services. Teacher teams meet in all of the elementary
schools, providing a venue for teachers to work through their problems
with challenging students before making a referral to special education. "We
trained three people from each elementary school to lead the teacher
support groups. The teams meet once a week to deal with difficult
children and share their expertise," says Abbott. "They
really enhance the general education staff's ability to deal with
all kids. This empowers teachers to deal with individual differences
in children without immediately assuming that there is something
wrong with the child."
In addition to this re-evaluation and deep professional development,
the Institute also works with districts at the administrative level
to effect some quick fixeseverything from being sure that
the central office is sending home letters in Spanish to Spanish-speaking
families to improving training for paraprofessionals. "All
of this helps make some improvements," Zambone says, "but
the real work comes in the groups. We have found that the case
method really works. It allows staff to see that they really do
have a problem in the way they're identifying kids, and gets them
very involved in figuring out how to fix it."
Zambone currently leads an EDC project to evaluate the Institute's
work in four urban districts cited by OCR. The project will produce
an assessment of the method, case materials, and suggestions for
sharing the process in school districts nationwide.
For more information, contact Alana
Zambone.
Read the project
description.
For questions or comments, contact mosaic@edc.org.
Copyright 2000-2003
Education Development Center, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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