SUCCESS TALE OF AN AUTISTIC TEEN
Ma: Charters don't ignore kids with disabilities
A Brooklyn mom says the city’s charter schools saved her autistic daughter’s life.
Despite a troubling start to her education at a district school in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Marcia Ward-Mitchell’s 14-year-old daughter, Kimana, who has autism and ADHD, is now at her third city charter school and thriving.
“I have to say, I really feel that [first] charter school saved my life and my daughter’s life,” Ward-Mitchell, 45, said, crediting the smaller classroom settings and “one-on-one care” of students.
“Switching from a district school to a charter school was a breath of fresh air. I’m serious when I tell you, it literally brings me to tears sometimes when I think about it because I really was at a point where I didn’t know what to do.
“These people didn’t know how to take care of my child. They didn’t care. She was just a number to them,” the mom-of-two added.
Ward-Mitchell spoke out about her daughter’s success amid Gov. Hochul’s push to allow dozens more charters to open in the city in coming years — despite objections from progressive Democrats and teachers unions.
While charter critics have long argued the publicly funded, privately run institutions don’t properly serve students with Independent Education Plans — which outline funded special-ed needs — parents and charter school leaders are pushing back, telling The Post this week the claims are a “slap in the face.”
Timothy Castanza, the executive director of Bridge Preparatory Charter School on Staten Island, where 64% of students have an IEP, defended the curriculum, arguing they cater specifically to those with dyslexia and other language-based disabilities.
“Every student that’s in our school, whether they have dyslexia, a language-based learning disability, an IEP or they’re just [general education] students, every student gets a full hour every single day of Orton-Gillingham instruction,” he said, referring to a multisensory, phonics-based teaching method.
Castanza said students are grouped together based on their ability, but reading readiness assessments are done regularly to track progress. The approach, he said, allows students to move to different ability-based groups continuously throughout the school year.
Bridge Prep, like many city charter schools, uses what’s called an integrated co-teaching system, or ICT — placing IEP students and general-education students in the same classroom with multiple certified teachers.
“You’d never be able to walk into a classroom and say, ‘Oh that’s the kid right there that has dyslexia’, because we integrate all of our students with their peers — and that is the way that special education is supposed to happen,” Castanza said.
‘It’s a myth’
“As a charter school, I think one of the things that we’re experiencing some frustration with is that all we hear about is, like, charter schools don’t serve kids with IEPs. And for us, like, not only do we serve them, but, like, we serve a majority of our school,” he continued.
“That narrative that we get . . . is a little bit of a slap in the face.”
LaMae deJongh, chief schooling officer at Success Academy Charter Schools, where 14% to 15% of students have learning disabilities, agreed. “It’s a myth,” she said of the claim that charters underserve special-needs students. “It’s unfortunate that that narrative is out there. It’s not the first time we’ve heard it.”
Success Academy also offers a 12:1 teacher-student ratio setting for children who require it at any of the 49 campuses, allowing for small-group instruction.
DeJongh said test results speak for themselves. “In just last school year, 54% of our students with IEPs passed the ELA exam, and that compares to 18% of DOE students with learning disabilities, so kind of the same kind of peer group. In math, it’s even more impressive: 63% passed math, compared to 14% at the DOEs.”
The NYC Autism Charter Schools and Neighborhood Charter Schools — each with campuses in Harlem and The Bronx — have specific Autism Spectrum Disorders programs for kids, according to their websites.
Meanwhile, key aspects of the Neighborhood Charter Schools program involves smaller class sizes, ICT and “social club” — a social skills lesson led by a speech pathologist.