Guest guest Posted January 31, 2005 Report Share Posted January 31, 2005 Under IDEA children that qualify as special needs bring additional funds into the school district. The ADHD label and other learning disabilities " MAY " qualify a child as " special needs " for this purpose. Many children who are labeled with ADHD and other learning disabilities are not considered special needs students, participate in normal classes and activities, and do not get the additional funds. However, schools often push for children with ADHD and learning disability labels to get labeled as special needs students, and in some school districts, the percentage of children with these labels that are considered special needs is very high. An additional source of revenue for a school district in a state like Texas is for a school district to get their students who perform poorly on standardized tests to be labeled with ADHD and other learning disabilities. By doing this, the school district often does not have to count the test scores of these children as part of their overall district testing averages. The school districts then get to advertise their high average test scores, which drives up property values in the area. Texas school districts derive their revenue from property taxes, which are assessed based on the value of the property. Properties are always assessed at a higher rate, resulting in higher taxes to the school district, in the areas in which school districts have shown higher standardized test scores. Scores go up if the poor test takers do not count against the school district average, on the basis of disability labels. So, there are always a couple of ways to manipulate the use of disability labels to equate to income for a school district. The question is whether or not an individual school district decides to participate in these methods. In Texas in late 2003, we were given a copy of an email from one rich Austin school district, where they had decided to try to get 25% of their fourth grade class labeled within the school year. That district was known for manipulating the system. Jim I stand by my statement that schools are not given funding for putting children on Ritalin as claimed by the glitter ( " The schools receive $500 a kid for each one dx'd with some kind of ADD/ADHA. " http:// health./group/SSRI medications/message/17569 ) and Starris ( " The school district in Rancho Cordova, CA, gets $873 in federal funds for every child on ritalin. " http://health.groups. /group/SSRI medications/message/17587 ) Those statements are not true. It is not semantics. IDEA does not require that children be on medication to get services or enable schools to order parents to give their children drugs. In fact, the recent amendment specifically prohibits it for one class of drugs, oddly the one under discussion. Nor does it say that any child taking medication for any reason automatically qualifies them for IDEA. We have an obligation to be honest and not repeat misinformation, something we are very critical of the medical industry for doing. > > > The first time I heard of it, it was part of Goals 2000. > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > > From: Sara > > > What I disagree with is the allegation that schools receive > federal > > > funds for every kid on a stimulant. > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2005 Report Share Posted January 31, 2005 Exactly, it's a downward spiral for the kids and the funding. Jim Exempting IDEA identified children from standardized tests is more difficult since No Child Left Behind came into being. They keep records on IDEA identified children as well as non-identified children. Only 1% of the students can be exempted from NCLB testing. State testing laws differ from state to state as does state funding. Generally, the money received from the federal government no where near reaches the level of expenditures for idenified children. The paperwork and meetings alone probably eat up most of the funding, at least in the districts which do thing according to the regulations. (I lived in one that sent prewritten generic IEPs home with kids and promised pizza parties if they got their parents to sign them as written and returned the next day with none of the required meetings being held. Pizza parties are cheaper than having school personnel spend their time meeting with parents.) IDEA is underfunded by the federal government. However, after years of reading multiple internet boards where parents of IDEA identified children post, I have to say that I believe that many of the children with the most expensive accomodations -- often special schools including residental treatment -- and most expensive administrative expenses -- due process hearings, mediation, multiple IEP meetings every year, detailed psychological testing -- are for children who are taking antidepressants and stimulants, children whose identified disabilties seem to get worse the longer they are in treatment. [sarcasm] Hmmmmmmmm. I wonder why????? [/sarcasm] Trying to get kids IDEA identified with alleged ADHD, then placed on stims to make them passive in the regualar classroom without expensive accomodations might seem like an easy way to rake in extra money from the feds. But in the long run, the slippery slope they will start down by triggering additional behavioral problems when they give those kids stims is going to use up more funding than they receive. It will take just one kid being triggered in behavior that lands him in a RTC or alternative placement to eat up all the extra few hundred dollars they get for each kid the get labeled ADHD. > > > > The first time I heard of it, it was part of Goals 2000. > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > > > From: Sara > > > > What I disagree with is the allegation that schools receive > > federal > > > > funds for every kid on a stimulant. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2005 Report Share Posted January 31, 2005 Exactly, it's a downward spiral for the kids and the funding. Jim Exempting IDEA identified children from standardized tests is more difficult since No Child Left Behind came into being. They keep records on IDEA identified children as well as non-identified children. Only 1% of the students can be exempted from NCLB testing. State testing laws differ from state to state as does state funding. Generally, the money received from the federal government no where near reaches the level of expenditures for idenified children. The paperwork and meetings alone probably eat up most of the funding, at least in the districts which do thing according to the regulations. (I lived in one that sent prewritten generic IEPs home with kids and promised pizza parties if they got their parents to sign them as written and returned the next day with none of the required meetings being held. Pizza parties are cheaper than having school personnel spend their time meeting with parents.) IDEA is underfunded by the federal government. However, after years of reading multiple internet boards where parents of IDEA identified children post, I have to say that I believe that many of the children with the most expensive accomodations -- often special schools including residental treatment -- and most expensive administrative expenses -- due process hearings, mediation, multiple IEP meetings every year, detailed psychological testing -- are for children who are taking antidepressants and stimulants, children whose identified disabilties seem to get worse the longer they are in treatment. [sarcasm] Hmmmmmmmm. I wonder why????? [/sarcasm] Trying to get kids IDEA identified with alleged ADHD, then placed on stims to make them passive in the regualar classroom without expensive accomodations might seem like an easy way to rake in extra money from the feds. But in the long run, the slippery slope they will start down by triggering additional behavioral problems when they give those kids stims is going to use up more funding than they receive. It will take just one kid being triggered in behavior that lands him in a RTC or alternative placement to eat up all the extra few hundred dollars they get for each kid the get labeled ADHD. > > > > The first time I heard of it, it was part of Goals 2000. > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > > > From: Sara > > > > What I disagree with is the allegation that schools receive > > federal > > > > funds for every kid on a stimulant. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2005 Report Share Posted January 31, 2005 Not completely true, Children can be targeted by schools to receive funding, it depends on the schools and I have seen the documents, as stated earlier, that showed schools were doing just that. It's true that many schools don't do that. But I know many schools do. You are telling me that what I have seen is incorrect, sorry but I have seen what I have seen. Maybe this link will help to clear things up http://www.ldonline.org/ld_indepth/add_adhd/ael_legal.html State education agencies (SEAs) have oversight responsibility for special education. **TO RECEIVE FEDERAL FUNDING UNDER IDEA**, SEAs must demonstrate to the U. S. Secretary of Education that the following eligibility requirements are met: a.. state policy must provide all disabled children the right to a free appropriate public education, b.. the state must submit a plan detailing policies and procedures to assure that federal funds are spent in ways consistent with IDEA, c.. the state plan must contain procedural safeguards as specified in IDEA, d.. the state plan must assure that special education students are educated in regular classrooms to the extent possible, and e.. the state plan must assure that testing and evaluation materials and procedures are not culturally or racially biased.5 Jim No Jim, IDEA identified kids will not have the push to be drugged. Kids identified through educational laws will be served, i.e. have Occupational Therapy (the best way to train other parts of the brain to do the processing not normally done in ADD brain) Physical Therapy, Speech Therapy, Resource Room help part of the day, or a Contained Class. If a child is identified it costs everyone money. Therefore the push for the school system is not to identify the kids, but just get by having their parents medicate them. If you have good people in schools doing a good job, they will not push just for Ritalin. This push usually comes from regular classroom teachers, or school counselor, or principal who do not want to access special services for the child. Again, it is cheaper for the school just to get by with Ritalin, and not serve the educational needs of the child. Sweep it under the rug so to speak. The best thing for the child is a complete comprehensive evaluation and services most appropriate for the child, in the setting that allows the child to learn the most. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2005 Report Share Posted January 31, 2005 Not completely true, Children can be targeted by schools to receive funding, it depends on the schools and I have seen the documents, as stated earlier, that showed schools were doing just that. It's true that many schools don't do that. But I know many schools do. You are telling me that what I have seen is incorrect, sorry but I have seen what I have seen. Maybe this link will help to clear things up http://www.ldonline.org/ld_indepth/add_adhd/ael_legal.html State education agencies (SEAs) have oversight responsibility for special education. **TO RECEIVE FEDERAL FUNDING UNDER IDEA**, SEAs must demonstrate to the U. S. Secretary of Education that the following eligibility requirements are met: a.. state policy must provide all disabled children the right to a free appropriate public education, b.. the state must submit a plan detailing policies and procedures to assure that federal funds are spent in ways consistent with IDEA, c.. the state plan must contain procedural safeguards as specified in IDEA, d.. the state plan must assure that special education students are educated in regular classrooms to the extent possible, and e.. the state plan must assure that testing and evaluation materials and procedures are not culturally or racially biased.5 Jim No Jim, IDEA identified kids will not have the push to be drugged. Kids identified through educational laws will be served, i.e. have Occupational Therapy (the best way to train other parts of the brain to do the processing not normally done in ADD brain) Physical Therapy, Speech Therapy, Resource Room help part of the day, or a Contained Class. If a child is identified it costs everyone money. Therefore the push for the school system is not to identify the kids, but just get by having their parents medicate them. If you have good people in schools doing a good job, they will not push just for Ritalin. This push usually comes from regular classroom teachers, or school counselor, or principal who do not want to access special services for the child. Again, it is cheaper for the school just to get by with Ritalin, and not serve the educational needs of the child. Sweep it under the rug so to speak. The best thing for the child is a complete comprehensive evaluation and services most appropriate for the child, in the setting that allows the child to learn the most. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2005 Report Share Posted January 31, 2005 Not completely true, Children can be targeted by schools to receive funding, it depends on the schools and I have seen the documents, as stated earlier, that showed schools were doing just that. It's true that many schools don't do that. But I know many schools do. You are telling me that what I have seen is incorrect, sorry but I have seen what I have seen. Maybe this link will help to clear things up http://www.ldonline.org/ld_indepth/add_adhd/ael_legal.html State education agencies (SEAs) have oversight responsibility for special education. **TO RECEIVE FEDERAL FUNDING UNDER IDEA**, SEAs must demonstrate to the U. S. Secretary of Education that the following eligibility requirements are met: a.. state policy must provide all disabled children the right to a free appropriate public education, b.. the state must submit a plan detailing policies and procedures to assure that federal funds are spent in ways consistent with IDEA, c.. the state plan must contain procedural safeguards as specified in IDEA, d.. the state plan must assure that special education students are educated in regular classrooms to the extent possible, and e.. the state plan must assure that testing and evaluation materials and procedures are not culturally or racially biased.5 Jim No Jim, IDEA identified kids will not have the push to be drugged. Kids identified through educational laws will be served, i.e. have Occupational Therapy (the best way to train other parts of the brain to do the processing not normally done in ADD brain) Physical Therapy, Speech Therapy, Resource Room help part of the day, or a Contained Class. If a child is identified it costs everyone money. Therefore the push for the school system is not to identify the kids, but just get by having their parents medicate them. If you have good people in schools doing a good job, they will not push just for Ritalin. This push usually comes from regular classroom teachers, or school counselor, or principal who do not want to access special services for the child. Again, it is cheaper for the school just to get by with Ritalin, and not serve the educational needs of the child. Sweep it under the rug so to speak. The best thing for the child is a complete comprehensive evaluation and services most appropriate for the child, in the setting that allows the child to learn the most. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2005 Report Share Posted January 31, 2005 Not completely true, Children can be targeted by schools to receive funding, it depends on the schools and I have seen the documents, as stated earlier, that showed schools were doing just that. It's true that many schools don't do that. But I know many schools do. You are telling me that what I have seen is incorrect, sorry but I have seen what I have seen. Maybe this link will help to clear things up http://www.ldonline.org/ld_indepth/add_adhd/ael_legal.html State education agencies (SEAs) have oversight responsibility for special education. **TO RECEIVE FEDERAL FUNDING UNDER IDEA**, SEAs must demonstrate to the U. S. Secretary of Education that the following eligibility requirements are met: a.. state policy must provide all disabled children the right to a free appropriate public education, b.. the state must submit a plan detailing policies and procedures to assure that federal funds are spent in ways consistent with IDEA, c.. the state plan must contain procedural safeguards as specified in IDEA, d.. the state plan must assure that special education students are educated in regular classrooms to the extent possible, and e.. the state plan must assure that testing and evaluation materials and procedures are not culturally or racially biased.5 Jim No Jim, IDEA identified kids will not have the push to be drugged. Kids identified through educational laws will be served, i.e. have Occupational Therapy (the best way to train other parts of the brain to do the processing not normally done in ADD brain) Physical Therapy, Speech Therapy, Resource Room help part of the day, or a Contained Class. If a child is identified it costs everyone money. Therefore the push for the school system is not to identify the kids, but just get by having their parents medicate them. If you have good people in schools doing a good job, they will not push just for Ritalin. This push usually comes from regular classroom teachers, or school counselor, or principal who do not want to access special services for the child. Again, it is cheaper for the school just to get by with Ritalin, and not serve the educational needs of the child. Sweep it under the rug so to speak. The best thing for the child is a complete comprehensive evaluation and services most appropriate for the child, in the setting that allows the child to learn the most. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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