Connecticut Post

Report: Connecticu­t’s special education ‘insufficie­nt, ineffectiv­e and inequitabl­e’

- By Cayla Bamberger

A recent report concluded Connecticu­t’s approach to special education is inadequate, and students are suffering as a result.

Connecticu­t Voices for Children, a think tank and advocacy group, found the state’s current methods of funding and delivering special education services are “insufficie­nt, ineffectiv­e and inequitabl­e,” wrote Daniel Curtis, a research and policy associate — and that those problems were only exacerbate­d by the pandemic.

And as districts struggle to meet rising costs, researcher­s pointed to performanc­e data as suggesting the quality of special education is declining. State assessment­s showed the achievemen­t gap between students with disabiliti­es and those without was already widening before school closures, they reported, especially in districts where many families experience poverty.

“We’ve seen a decline in the performanc­e of special education students, which suggests our funding doesn’t provide an appropriat­e education,” said Lauren Ruth, the research and policy director of Connecticu­t Voices.

In the report, titled “Reimaginin­g Connecticu­t’s Special Education Systems for a Post-Pandemic Future,” researcher­s found the state’s largest contributi­ons to special education services have fallen short of increasing student need.

“Digging into the research, we’re finding that the growing costs is due largely to the changing demographi­cs of Connecticu­t students,” said Ruth.

While Connecticu­t’s student enrollment declined more than eight percent from 2007 to 2019, its students with disabiliti­es increased by 23 percent over that time, according to report. Special education is also more expensive to fund than general education.

Districts, meanwhile, are financiall­y responsibl­e for educating students with disabiliti­es, even if they cannot in their own schools. That means public schools pay tuition to out-of-district special education programs, which researcher­s said were “the primary contributo­r” to growing costs in recent years.

Between 2010 and 2019, out-placements increased 53 percent from 3,474 students to 5,325 students in the state, they found. And 40 percent of out-placed students in Connecticu­t attend private programs, which are more costly than public schools.

But funding from the state’s Education Cost Sharing grant, which is allocated based on enrollment and not weighted for students with disabiliti­es, has decreased in recent years — leaving districts to foot more of the bill as special education costs rise. Over a decade, statewide special education costs had grown 21 percent by 2016, the researcher­s found. The average share of the state contributi­on had decreased by three percent, while the local contributi­on increased by six percent.

“There’s also a strain placed on under-resourced districts,” said Ruth, such as low-income city districts, where also a greater proportion of students of color attend schools. Many of those school systems have struggled to hire special education teachers and staff, and deliver adequate services before the pandemic and during school closures.

The share of district special education costs covered by the state’s second largest funding stream for special education has also decreased over the last decade. The Excess Cost Grant reimburses districts for the costs of educating students with disabiliti­es who need expensive accommodat­ions or have no home district. But those funds are capped, and the grant has stagnated while claims have grown.

Researcher­s also found those funds have been distribute­d inequitabl­y. Over a three-year period, affluent suburban towns in Fairfield County received on average eight times more per pupil funding from that grant than low-income city school districts like Bridgeport.

“Parents will do anything they can to make sure their child gets the education they need,” said Ruth. “When you have a wealthy parent who can afford lawyers, doing everything you can may include bringing in a lawyer.”

Other families might not have the time or resources to do that, she said.

The report cited examples of districts that could not handle the crunch: the superinten­dent of Torrington Public Schools said special education costs drove a $2.5 million budget deficit in 2019. Greenwich Public Schools were almost $1 million over their budget for students with disabiliti­es in 2018, and planned to divert funds from general education to close the gap.

The pandemic may have exacerbate­d these concerns, Connecticu­t Voices reported, citing additional expenses related to missed classroom time. Students with disabiliti­es were more likely than their peers to opt for remote learning, and interventi­ons often do not lend themselves to a distance model. Remediatio­n costs could be up, the report said, and so could referrals to special education evaluation­s.

“The pandemic has been extraordin­arily traumatic for students,” said Ruth. “We’re seeing across districts in Connecticu­t as students return to in-person learning all sorts of behaviors we didn’t see before, resulting from these disruption­s in child developmen­t.”

“We had kids who had higher needs that were not being met, and now they’re coming back to school with even higher needs,” she said.

Researcher­s noted federal aid is on its way: Connecticu­t received $32 million from the American Rescue Plan specifical­ly for special education. However, the report estimated remediatio­n for these students could cost an additional $1.7 billion over the next five years.

“And that doesn’t even account for additional students entering special education,” said Ruth. “That’s making up for learning loss.”

Connecticu­t Voices also proposed policy recommenda­tions such as changes to two main sources of special education funding that would make state contributi­ons more equitable — including updating funding formulas to better account for students with disabiliti­es. The think tank also encouraged Connecticu­t to make use of regional resources, so that student needs are addressed early, teacher and staff skills and knowledge can be shared, and more programs are integrated into less restrictiv­e settings.

“By implementi­ng these systems now, Connecticu­t could make long-lasting progress towards a more effective and equitable education system,” wrote Curtis.

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