At school, too often children with disabilities still face obstacles--some of them man-made. Read on, and don't let your child be treated unfairly:
*******************************************
Despite many states making policy updates in recent years, a new analysis
suggests that students with disabilities continue to experience high rates of
restraint and seclusion at school.
The practices were employed at similar levels during both the 2011-2012
school year and the 2009-2010 year, according to a review of federal education
data conducted by researchers at the University of New Hampshire.
Between those time periods, the report indicates that about half of states
revised their policies on restraint and seclusion.
The analysis found that 69 percent of school districts reported no use of
restraint and 87 percent did not use seclusion, but a small percentage of
districts had “exceedingly high rates.” School districts at both the high and
low ends were found in nearly every state.
“Although restraint and seclusion rates across states continue to range
considerably, between-state variation is overshadowed by the tremendous
within-state variation,” the researchers said. “These findings suggest that
local policy decisions and other factors related to school culture, rather than
state policy, seem to be the greatest determinants of restraint and seclusion
rates.”
During the 2011-2012 school year, the U.S. Department of Education found that kids with disabilities accounted for three-quarters
of those who were physically restrained and 58 percent of students who were
placed in seclusion or some other form of involuntary confinement at schools
across the country. (Read all of Disability Scoop’s coverage of restraint and
seclusion »)
Efforts to enact federal legislation to regulate restraint and seclusion in
schools have been unsuccessful, leaving a patchwork of state and local
policies.
*******************************
No comments:
Post a Comment