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-- NEA President Reg Weaver
Disproportionality exists in various forms and at different levels. For example, overrepresentation can be present in any or all of these ways:
Some CLD groups are under-represented because the proportions of these students who receive special services are notably less than the percentage of these same students in the overall school population. For example, Hispanics and Asian and Pacific Islanders are generally under-represented in special education programs while American Indians/Alaska Natives are under-represented in programs for the gifted. Why is disproportionality a concern?Research suggests that a child's race and ethnicity significantly influence the probability that he or she will be misidentified as needing special education and that disproportionality can have immediate and long term negative effects. [3] Labeling students as disabled when they really are not leads to unwarranted services and supports. Misidentified students are likely to encounter limited access to rigorous curricula and diminished expectations. And, more importantly, it creates a false impression of the child's intelligence and academic potential. Here's why:
Discipline and segregated classesStudies show that CLD students with disabilities are often educated in more segregated or restrictive environments than their white peers. For example, African-American, Hispanic, American Indian/Alaska Native, and ELL students with disabilities are more likely to be taught in separate classrooms or schools than students who are white or Asian and Pacific Islander. [3] In addition, CLD students have higher rates of office referrals, suspensions, and expulsions from school. Often, they receive more severe punishment than white students do for the same type of behavior. [4] Contributing Policies and ProceduresA variety of policies, procedures, and practices exist at the national, state, district, school, or classroom levels that can lead to overrepresentation or under-representation of CLD populations in special education programs and under-representation in gifted and talented programs.
Researchers have found that some specific state policies and procedures contribute to disproportionality. For example, differences in how states define special education categories, such as specific learning disabilities and emotional disturbance, and state special education eligibility criteria can influence the procedures used to identify students as disabled. [5] When school polices or procedures strain needed supports or restrict options for students, disproportionality can be intensified. For instance, funding policies that create large general education class sizes or constrict the availability of early intervention programs and support services impede the ability of teachers to give students the personalized attention they need. Also, rigid discipline policies, such as zero tolerance rules, may inadvertently promote lower tolerance for cultural differences. This, in turn, can increase discipline-related referrals of CLD students. Call to actionAll stakeholders -- classroom teachers, parents, and community leaders, school and district decision makers, and state and federal policymakers -- have an important role in decreasing disproportionality. Working together, we can make changes in state, local, and classroom policies, procedures, and practices so that every child, no matter his or her cultural or linguistic background, receives an appropriate education in a great public school. References:1 Gamm, S., Disproportionality in Special Education: Identifying Where and Why Overidentification of Minority Students Occurs, (Bethesda, Md.: LRP Publications, in press).2 U.S. Department of Education, Twenty-fourth Annual Report to Congress on the Implementation of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, (Washington, D.C.)3 de Valenzuela, J.S., S.R. Copeland, C. Huaqing Qi, & M. Park,. Examining Educational Equity: Revisiting the Disproportionate Representation of Minority Students in Special Education. Exceptional Children 72, no. 4 (2006): 425-441; Keller-Allen, C., English Language Learners with Disabilities: Identification and Other State Policies and Issues, (Alexandria, Va.: Project Forum, National Association of State Directors of Special Education, 2006).4 Cartledge, G., K.Y. Tam, S.A. Loe, A.H. Miranda, M.C. Lambert, C.D. Kea, & E. Simmons-Reed, Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students with Behavioral Disorders, (Arlington, Va.: Council for Exceptional Children).5 Harry, B., J.K. Klinger, K.M. Sturges, & R. Moore, "Of Rocks and Soft Places: Using Qualitative Methods to Investigate Disproportionality," in Racial inequity in special education, ed. D.J. Losen and G. Orfield, (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Education Press, 2002).Hollins, E.R., Culture in School Learning, (New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc., 1996).Campbell-Whatley, G.D., & R. Gardner III, R., Strategies and Procedures for Designing Proactive Intervention with Culturally Diverse Population of Students with Emotional or Behavioral Disorders and Their Families/Caregivers, (Arlington, Va.: Council for Children with Behavioral Disorders, 2002).ResourcesBuilding the legacy: A training curriculum on IDEA, disproportionality and overrepresentation module . National Dissemination Center for Children with Disabilities (NICHCY). (2007). www.nichcy.org/training/contents.aspC.A.R.E.: Strategies for closing the achievement gaps . National Education Association. Washington, DC. (2003).The role of general education teachers in the Response-to-Intervention (RtI) process. National Education Association. Washington, DC (2006).Truth in labeling: Disproportionality in Special Education . National Education Association. Washington, DC (2007).Meeting the challenge: Special education tools that work for all kids . Ralabate, P. Washington, DC: NEA Professional Library. (2002).
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