New WHYY Post: NJ's Special Education Segregation Habit
At
Newsworks:
Last month a federal court ruled that New Jersey's public school
system unlawfully segregates children with disabilities in isolated
schools and classrooms. This is old news.
Federal law (I.D.E.A.)
mandates that children with disabilities have access to a "free public
education" in "the least restrictive environment." Mountains of case
law, not to mention federal and state regulations, require local
districts to work hard to integrate special needs kids into regular
classrooms instead of self-contained classrooms, where children are
segregated from typical peers, and out-of-district placements in private
and public special education schools.
However, according to court documents, N.J. continues to
disproportionately keep our special needs students out of the regular
classroom, a habit so ingrained into our educational psyche that the
only hope for a cure is an intervention.
According to the Settlement Agreement in "Disability Rights N.J. v. N.J. Department of Education," N.J. must now implement a new monitoring system for our worst offenders, 75 school districts with the highest rates of segregation.
Read the rest
here.
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