The Denver Post

Special-needs kids in school choice spotlight

- By Maria Danilova

washington» Five-year-old Nico Rosenblatt cannot speak and struggles to learn because of a rare genetic condition, yet he thrives when surrounded by other children in a regular classroom, according to his parents. However, they say neither the public school system nor a charter school in the nation’s capital could provide an inclusive environmen­t for him.

“It’s a fundamenta­l question of civil rights and access to education for us,” said Karen Hoerst, Nico’s mother. “Does our kid, who happens to have a developmen­tal disability, deserve to be educated

alongside his peers or not?”

The Trump administra­tion has been promoting school choice, saying it can also benefit special-needs students. But charter schools, funded with public money, often are criticized for keeping out students with disabiliti­es because they may be more expensive to educate and because they tend to have lower academic results. A 2014 study by a special education advocacy and research group found that students with disabiliti­es accounted for 12.5 percent of those in traditiona­l public schools and 10.6 percent in charter schools.

Researcher­s disagree about the reasons for the di- vide. Some say it is a result of charters being less likely to classify students as having special needs and families of special-needs kids being less likely to apply in the first place. Others say charter schools tend to prefer students who are more likely to succeed.

The debate over inclusion of special-needs students is likely to intensify with Trump and his Education secretary, Betsy DeVos, seeking to expand access to charter as well as private schools.

Marcus Winters, associate professor in the school of education at Boston University, analyzed traditiona­l and charter schools in New York and Denver and found that students with special needs were less likely to switch schools if they were attending a charter elementary school than a traditiona­l public school.

“My work has shown that that concern is, at best, overstated,” Winters said. “It’s not to say that that doesn’t happen, that has never happened. And I do think that the charter sector could do an even better job in recruiting and retaining such students. But the widespread concern that charters are systemical­ly not serving those students is not consistent with the research that we have so far.”

Elizabeth Setren, a researcher at MIT, studied Boston charter schools and found that they were twice as likely as traditiona­l public schools to remove a student’s special-needs classifica­tion and three times as likely to move the student into a general education classroom. Despite that, attending charter schools improves special-needs students’ test scores and college readiness.

Kevin Welner, a professor of education at the University of Colorado, says charter schools cherry-pick students because they need to demonstrat­e academic success to stay alive and get funding.

In a two-year study, Welner identified 14 ways in which charter schools can shape enrollment. They range from steering families away, not advertisin­g the school in high-need neighborho­ods, setting conditions for enrollment as well as urging parents to find a different school for their child.

Lauren Rhim, executive director at the National Center for Special Education in Charter Schools, said new and small charter schools indeed can face struggles in serving specialnee­ds students. But she insisted that similar problems exist in the broader public school sector.

“There are charter schools that are amazing and are doing a great job and are trying new things and creative and innovative things. And then you have the other end of the continuum, where there are charters that are counseling out. And then you have everything in the middle,” Rhim said. “The truth is complicate­d. Similar to public schools, there is so much variabilit­y there is not one answer.”

In the case of Nico, who started a pre-kindergart­en program when he was 3, a charter school initially looked like a good option.

After public school officials in D.C. offered to place Nico in a self-contained classroom in his neighborho­od school, his family decided to try a charter school called Bridges, which had a reputation for being inclusive. After one year, Nico was moved into a generaledu­cation classroom and fell in love with it.

But toward the end of his third year at Bridges, the school insisted that Nico would have to spend more time in a self-contained setting, the family said. They are now thinking about relocating.

“To me this is one of the examples of what the dangers of this school choice environmen­t are, that with the lottery and the waiting list and everything, they are in a seller’s market,” said David Rosenblatt, Nico’s father. “They see every student as someone they could replace with the next person on the waiting list.”

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