Journal Pioneer

Students with special needs increasing­ly asked to stay home from school: report

- TORONTO

An education advocacy organizati­on says students deemed to have special needs are increasing­ly being asked to stay home from school in Ontario rather than remain in class with their peers. The annual report from People for Education does not speculate on the cause of the trend, which it began documentin­g in 2014 after hearing anecdotes from parents. In that four-year period, however, the organizati­on noted an increase in the number of elementary and secondary school principals who report recommendi­ng a special education student stay home for at least part of a day. Of the more than 1,200 principals surveyed this year, the organizati­on found 58 per cent of elementary school heads and 48 per cent of high school principals made the request, up from 48 per cent and 40 per cent respective­ly in 2014. The majority of the principals surveyed cited safety as the primary reason, with others saying they do not have adequate resources to address students’ needs. Inclusive education researcher­s say the trend is not unique to Ontario, adding factors such as inadequate­ly deployed resources or poor attitudes toward specialed students may also be at play. People for Education’s executive director, Annie Kidder, said the results are especially striking given that the amount of provincial funding directed towards special education initiative­s has climbed by $1 billion over the past 10 years. “We can glean from this that there is a problem in terms of the amount of support that’s there for kids who may have a higher level of special education needs,” Kidder said in an interview. “Not just in terms of how many people are there, but also their capacity to provide these supports.” Kidder said the organizati­on first began watching the issue after a growing number of parents began reporting that they’d been asked to either pull their children out of school early or keep them home altogether. The principals surveyed on the issue come from 70 of Ontario’s 72 publicly funded school boards. Of those surveyed, 73 per cent said the student was being kept away from class out of concern for safety. Kidder said the respondent­s did not indicate whether that safety concern was for the student in question, that student’s peers or the education workers. But some survey responses shed some light on the situation. “If I have asked a parent to keep a student home it is almost always related to safety (the student runs, hits self/peers/ adults, or vandalizes the space he/she is in),” one elementary school principal said. Kidder said the current system is evidently struggling to cope with the growing number of students receiving special education services. The current report found 17 per cent of elementary students and 27 per cent of secondary students currently qualify for such services, figures that are nearly twice as high as those reported in 2000. Gordon Porter, Director of Inclusive Education Canada, said capacity is a growing challenge as schools try to accommodat­e students who might at one time have simply have been discourage­d from pursuing an education.

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