The Boston Globe

BPS releases plan for students with disabiliti­es

Inclusion is key part of overhaul

- By Christophe­r Huffaker and Deanna Pan GLOBE STAFF

After years of failing to appropriat­ely educate its students with disabiliti­es, Boston Public Schools on Wednesday unveiled a multipart plan that would overhaul its special education system.

The district plans to educate students with disabiliti­es in general education classrooms whenever possible, a practice known as inclusion, in all grades and schools within three years. The district also intends to have all English learners in inclusive settings by the 2025-2026 school year.

“This work is complex. It’s also urgent,” Superinten­dent Mary Skipper said Wednesday night during a presentati­on by administra­tors to the School Committee outlining the changes. “We must confront more than 100 years rooted in systemic racial disparitie­s that historical­ly limited equitable access and outcomes for our historical­ly underserve­d students.”

The district must overhaul its special education practices under a statemanda­ted improvemen­t plan the city agreed to in 2022 in order to avoid a state takeover of the district. The agreement came on the heels of a blistering state review of the district, in which state leaders described BPS’s special education services as being in “systemic disarray.”

Later in the year, the state education department found BPS violated the rights of special education students by providing unreliable transporta­tion of students with disabiliti­es, preventing some students from receiving specialize­d instructio­n and therapies at school.

In addition, a district-commission­ed review of the special education department last year found 29 percent — thousands of students — are taught in “substantia­lly separate” classrooms; it’s a rate more than twice that of state and national averages, with students of color and English learners segregated at particular­ly

high rates. Students with disabiliti­es are also underrepre­sented in the district’s popular dual-language programs.

Under the new plan, the district will place students with and without disabiliti­es in the same classrooms in pre-K, kindergart­en, and grades 7 and 9 at every school next school year. Schools will expand the practice to most grades the following year and to the remainder in the 2026-2027 school year.

The plan also envisions a similar shift in the education of English learners. Beginning next year in grades K-8 and the following year in grades 9-12, students learning English will only be separated from peers as needed for direct English instructio­n, rather than spending their entire days in separate programs.

John Mudd, a longtime BPS watchdog who sits on the task force that advises the School Committee on services for English learners, however, criticized the plan’s strategy for teaching English learners during the public comment portion of Wednesday’s meeting.

“BPS is planning to double down on an English immersion strategy that state and BPS MCAS evidence shows has failed 90 percent of English learners and English learners with disabiliti­es,” he said.

Multiple committee members also expressed concerns about how the plan would teach English learners and whether there would be adequate multilingu­al staff available to support them in general education classrooms.

The district sent its special education inclusion plan to the state in early October, a key step in a multiyear process to revamp its system. The district released an initial planning document last fall and last year began planning for inclusive education at 22 K-8 schools and every high school. Those plans went into effect this year.

The plan does not lay out the specific changes each school will make to transition to inclusion but instead defines steps they must take and the outcomes they must achieve. Teams at every school must develop schoolleve­l plans this year, including recommenda­tions on shifting resources and ensuring they have the necessary staff.

But the plan does have dozens of action items for the district and schools to undertake, like picking a coordinato­r at each school to oversee support systems, a process that is underway, and auditing individual­ized education plans for students with disabiliti­es, which has not yet begun. The district already has released new guidance for moving students from segregated English immersion classes to general education. Schools must form their inclusion planning teams this fall and develop plans to carry them out in the spring.

The plan lays out in great detail the district’s failings in educating students with disabiliti­es and English learners, including the concentrat­ion of specialize­d programs and inclusion in a small number of schools, achievemen­t gaps between students in substantia­lly separate settings and their peers in inclusive classrooms, and a lack of flexibilit­y that often locks students into certain programs even as the needs of the students change. Even basic instructio­n varies greatly across the district, the plan notes, let alone the processes for identifyin­g students who need additional services.

“We can no longer be a district where students need to travel to a certain school with a certain program in another neighborho­od, sometimes far away from home, to get the services they need,” Skipper said. “All Boston Public Schools must be inclusive.”

The document will serve as the road map to provide the least restrictiv­e environmen­t for students with disabiliti­es, Skipper told the School Committee.

“If we want to make lasting change, we must understand the systemic root of the problems and tackle the larger system and practices that lead to our current realities,” she said.

The plan lays out a variety of ways general education classrooms can be redesigned to accommodat­e all students, many of them depending on pairing classroom teachers with special educators and other specialist­s to alternate instructio­n.

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