Guest guest Posted May 27, 2008 Report Share Posted May 27, 2008 Program aims to prevent kids from being rushed into special education By Singleton-Rickman Staff Writer Last Updated:May 26. 2008 11:29PM Published: May 27. 2008 4:30AM School districts across the country are adopting early intervention programs in hopes of steering some children away from expensive special education classes. While it's a cost savings to the system, the payoff comes mainly for the student who, through intervention from the school, won't be among those identified as in need of special education. The adoption of such programs, known as Response to Intervention, is catching on across the country as school districts are trying to cut down on over-identification - too many children being shunted off to special education who don't need to be there. This year, there were 84,772 special education students in Alabama schools. The cost to educate a student through a special education program can be twice as much as a general education student, up to $12,000 a year. Researchers have long argued that students are getting stuck in special education not because of biological disabilities but because of environmental factors, such as parents not reading to their children enough or allowing children to stay home from school too often. Alabama is joining the drive to help steer children as early as kindergarten away from special education through intervention programs at the first sign that they are falling behind their peers in basic subjects such as reading and math. Teachers keep careful records, and children in need of help get extra instruction. Alabama has yet to deliver the Response to Intervention plan for implementation in schools, but some education officials say it could be as early as this summer. " When RTI became the buzz word, we were told that about half of the special education students had actual learning disabilities and the others simply hadn't had proper instruction or a conducive learning environment, " said Lynn Sharp, special education coordinator for Florence City Schools. " The feeling was that if they had more or a different, more-intense type of instruction there would be (academic) improvement. " The RTI model is a multi-tiered approach using research-based interventions. Students move through the tiers of intervention based on the progress made at each level. Before a student can be referred for a special education evaluation, the student must have had intensive interventions in the three tiers for a significant amount of time at each level with no measurable progress. Students not experiencing success after three tiers of intervention will most likely be students with severe cognitive disabilities. Response to Intervention is considered a general education program and is implemented through the general education curriculum. School districts across the state are implementing their own interventions. Several local districts are having success through intervention programs, including special reading programs and remediation classes. Local schools have implemented student support teams. The intensity of the instruction has paid off markedly in districts such as Colbert County. That district has raised expenditures, to the tune of $183,000 since 2006, for additional research-based programs that are helping prevent special education referrals. Special education enrollment in Colbert County has decreased in the past three years from 14.9 to 12.7 percent, a sign that the intervention is working, according to the district's special education coordinator, Vicki Turberville. Money in a school district's special education budget provides teachers, classroom aides, transportation, evaluations, counseling or therapy and professional development for teachers. In Muscle Shoals, nearly 7 1/2 percent of the school district's funds is dedicated to special education. In that district, special education numbers were up this year from 170 to 225 students. Approximately 5 percent of all public high school students are identified as having a learning disability, with most being in the area of reading. The cost of testing students referred to special education covers a wide range. Sharp said certain testing kits can cost up to $1,000. Though Florence has an in-house psychometrist - those who measure a student's mental progress - and four other employees who handle special education referrals, much of the expense of special education comes through contracting with those who test the children. All referrals to special education must first have mandatory vision and hearing screenings. The Bush administration is backing Response to Intervention, allowing districts to spend up to 15 percent of the money they receive for special education on the program and setting aside $14 million in federal dollars to help states implement it. Response to Intervention found its foothold nearly a decade ago in school districts in Oregon and Iowa. In Virginia, special education numbers statewide dipped by about 4,000 students this year, which officials attribute, at least partly, to increased early intervention. In Oklahoma, where 15 school districts are piloting the program, some schools reported a 50 percent decrease in the number of special education referrals between 2006 and 2007. Still, there is a fear that children with learning disabilities might have to wait too long to get the intensive help they need. " There are really no guidelines for how long a child can remain in RTI before they are moved into evaluation, but we hear from some parents that it can take a long, long time, " said Pat Lillie, a board member for the Learning Disabilities Association of America and mother of two sons who were in special education programs. Some educators say it could take as long as three years to get the early intervention system in place, and then it might not save the school district much money, even if fewer children end up in special education. Highfield, special education coordinator for Muscle Shoals City Schools, said the danger of the method of identifying students with learning disabilities is that research shows that more that 75 percent of the students in special education probably don't have a true disability but haven't had intensive, effective instruction. " The longer a child goes with a disability in reading without identification and intervention, the more difficult the task of remediation, and the chance of success is less likely, " she said. Singleton-Rickman can be reached at 740-5735 or lisa.singleton-rickman@.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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