racial/ethnic inappropriate identification: are spp indicators making a difference? leadership for...
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Racial/Ethnic Inappropriate Identification: Are SPP Indicators Making a Difference?
Leadership for Equity and Excellence Forum Sue Gamm, Esq.Public Consulting GroupMarch, 2011
More than 30 Years Later
AA Students Increasingly Overrepresented in ID/EI
Intellectual Disability increased by 3%:
AA increased by 7%
Hispanic, Asian increased some but usually underidentified
Due to Poverty?
The largest gender gap is between African American girls and boys
There are relatively little or no racial/ethnic differences among students with medically diagnosed disabilities
Hart & Risley, Meaningful Differences
Average number of words children heard per hour ranged from 2,153 to 616
Extrapolated out, by 4 years of age children heard 13 M to 48 M words
Talkative v Taciturn Parents
Talkative Parents: Children heard they were right 750,000 times & wrong 120,000 times
Taciturn Parents: Children heard they were right 120,000 times & wrong 250,000 times
Due to Academic Performance?
Most students are referred for IDEA evaluation because of academics and then behavior
AAs/Hispanics average NAEP scores are significantly lower than whites in reading, writing, math & science
Lessons from Research
In practice, it can be difficult to
distinguish internal child traits that require the ongoing support of special education from
inadequate opportunity or contextual support for learning behavior.
Many children are “instructional casualties” of failed or poor
reading instruction.
2000 National Reading Panel
Reading deficits often reflect an inadequate opportunity to learn & correlated sped referral rates for mild disability areas reflect quality of instruction.
Reading failure rates as high as 38-40% can be reduced to ≤6% through early identification & multitiered intervention.
Minority Students in Gifted & Special Education (2001)
1. Data showing prior to/part of
evaluation process, student is given:
Appropriate instruction in regular education settings
Delivered by qualified personnel
Reading essential components: phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary & comprehension (2001 ESEA)
Math essential components: conceptual understanding, procedural fluency, strategic competence, adaptive reasoning, & productive response (2001 National Research Council)
Appropriate Instruction
2. Documented Progress
Data-based documentation of repeated achievement assessments Reasonable intervals Reflecting formal assessment of
student progress during instruction Provided to parents
Reasonable intervals
Reflecting formal assessment of student progress during instruction
Provided to parents
AA students 15 times more likely than white students to score below proficiency
One District: Reading
95 AA students not proficient compared to 15 white (15% to 1%)
Black students 20 times more likely than white students to score below proficiency
89 AA students not proficient compared to 11 white (14% to 1%)
Math
Black Male Performance
2009 NAEP comparison of large city black males without disabilities to nationwide white males with disabilities: Average reading scale score •Grade 4, 2 points higher •Grade 8, 5 points higher Average math scale score
• Grade 4, 2 points lower • Grade 8, 2 points lower
How Do You Know?
If poor performance or behavior is due to inadequate general education instruction & support or a disability?
Are there standards for knowing the difference?
IF: NO provision of research & standards
based core curriculum/instruction NO scientific research-based
interventions implemented with fidelity
NO periodic & appropriate progress monitoring
NO regular review of data & analysis
Can team determine underachievement is based on a disability?
Must Initiate LD Evaluation When:
No adequate progress
Appropriate period of time
Provided appropriate instruction
Progress monitored
Indicator 9
71% (37) states, DC & VI with LEAs having DR4.8% (671) of all LEAs have DR (except for DC/DE that reported no # of LEAS)
VA: 100% (132) of LEAs with DR; none found to have inappropriate ID10 states found LEAs with inapprop ID.5% (68) LEAs have innapprop ID
2005-6: 26 states
2006-7: 38 states
2007-8: 42 states
2008-9: 40 states
Number of States with NO Inappropriate ID
Percent of LEAS in State with Inappropriate ID
% LEAs 0% 0.1 -
2.9%3.0 –5.9%
6.0- 8.9%
9% or >
05-6 26 13 3 3 206-7 38 7 4 1 007-8 42 6 1 1 008-9 40 9 1 0 0
Indicator 10
83% (48) states, DC & VI with DR
9.8% (1379) of all LEAs (except for DC that reported no # of LEAS)
17 states found LEAs with inapprop ID
.8% (116 LEAs) with innapprop ID and 2.9% of all LEAs with DP
LEAs with DR & All Approp ID AL: 127 (96%) NH: 52 (34%)
VA: 110 (83%) SC: 26 (32%) MD: 15 (63%) WA: 64 (22%)
RI: 23 (46%) WI: 87 (20%)
LEAs with DR & 1 Inappropriate ID
LA: 55 (52%) CT: 38 (22%)
Percent of LEAS in State having Inappropriate ID
% LEAs 0% 0.1-
3.9%4.0- 7.9%
8.0- 11.9%
12% or >
05-6
21 11 3 6 4
06-7
27 13 3 3 2
07-8
34 12 1 1 1
08-9
33 11 5 0 1
Number of LEAs with DR having Inapprop ID
Oregon
Indicator 9: 47% (8) of 17 LEAs Indicator 10: 61% (11) of 18 LEAs
New Jersey
Indicator 9: 38% (9) of 24 LEAs Indicator 10: 50% (8) of 16 LEAs
2005-6: 21 states
2006-7: 27 states
2007-8: 34 states
2008-9: 33 states
Number of States with NO Inappropriate ID
For Discussion
Why do some states identify no LEAs - or a very small percentage of LEAs – with DR?
Compare: One state (VG) with all LEAs found to have DR.
What is at play when a large percentage of LEAs in a state are identified with DR but NONE or few are found to have inappropriate identification?
Compare: Only two states (OR & NJ) have a high percentage of LEAs with DR that are found to have inappropriate identification.
What has been the impact of Indicators 9 & 10? Has there been real progress?
Percent of states with no inappropriate ID (’06 to ‘09)
9: 26 to 40 10: - 6 to 33
Child Find Hearing Decision #1
Provided 504 accommodations, additional tutoring & Saturday tutoring camps
No positive academic benefits
Continued to struggle: reading, math & science
El Paso Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Richard R (W.D. Tx. 2008)
“Why [the district’s assistance team] would have suggested these measures, knowing that [the student] had undertaken each of these steps in the past three years and that none had helped him achieve passing [state test] scores, simply baffles this court.”
HO Decision #2
15 year-old student was retained twice and in 8th grade
Referred 3 times for evaluation; denied in 2nd & 8th grades
5th grade: team determined no LD because of lack of adequate instruction in reading and math
Chicago Public Schools, JF 2009-0318 (8/7/09)
HO Finding
No evidence to support conclusion that lack of inappropriate instruction caused poor performance
Student received same instruction as other students who were not failing.
Alternatively, it would be obvious that he needed different instruction, based on his lack of progress
Order Private school recommended by independent
evaluators for children with severe LD that has such appropriate methodology as Orton Gillingham, Wilson or other multi-sensory, sequential systematic intensive reading program
AT based on expert’s recommendations, e.g., Inspiration, Draft builder, Earobics Step 1, Lexia, Co:Writer and Write Outloud, screen reading/scanning software; and laptop that includes all such programs needed for homework.
Compensatory Services
1:1 tutoring (2 times/week for 60 minutes each) after the regular school day by a certified special educator trained in scientific research based interventions for nonreaders
1:1 speech/language and OT services (each 60 minutes/week)
Sensible for LEAs to explore options in regular ed before determining need for special ed
Improved with interventionsPassed statewide assessment without accommodation
A.P. v Woodstock Bd of Ed (D. Conn
2008)
Court Approved Interventions
Class Action
Federal class action ruling: Milwaukee Public Schools violated child find (SEA failed to oversee)
Compensatory ordered for nonidentified students September, 2000 to June, 2005
State’s Agreement
MPS will implement system of early intervention services to:
Address behavior resulting in suspensions; and
Consider possibility of IDEA evaluation
Monitoring Standard - Consider Referral for:
95% of students in k–5 suspended 10 or > or days
95% of students in 6–12 suspended 20 or > days
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