The following article by Meg Benner and Rebecca Ullrich was posted on the Center for American Progress website February 2, 2017:
Introduction and summary
There is something that supporters of school vouchers—such as Betsy DeVos, President Donald Trump’s nominee for education secretary—will not admit: Children with disabilities can and will be harmed under voucher programs.
Consider Trinity Fitzer: In the spring of 2012 when Trinity was a 6-year-old kindergartener, she was kicked out of the private school she attended using a voucher provided by the Milwaukee Parental Choice Program.1 Over the course of the year, Trinity’s mother had been called several times to pick her up early because of behavioral problems, with school officials calling Trinity “out of control.” According to the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, Trinity suffered from gastrointestinal problems and anxiety, which led to challenging behaviors that her private school was not prepared—or required—to manage.
The Milwaukee Parental Choice Program is one of the oldest-running school choice programs in the country. While private schools that receive vouchers through the program cannot discriminate against students with disabilities, they are also not required to offer special education services beyond those that can be provided with “minor adjustments” to their educational program.2 This means that schools can deny admission outright to students such as Trinity if their needs are considered too severe. If schools do choose to admit students with special needs, they are not obligated to provide necessary behavioral and educational interventions and can refuse to continue services at any time.
President Trump’s education plan, centered around a similar approach to school choice, would dedicate $20 billion in federal funding to provide families with a stipend to send their child to a school of their choice, often a private school.3 For her part, DeVos has devoted her career to creating and expanding voucher programs across the country.4 Both Trump and DeVos assert that these programs improve educational opportunities for students in need, including students with disabilities. In actuality, using a voucher often denies families such as the Fitzers their rights to critical services that children with disabilities need to succeed. Parents may even be required to forfeit many of their children’s protections now afforded under federal law.
Students with disabilities are guaranteed various rights through a collection of federal laws. One of those statutes, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA, has guaranteed critical protections for more than four decades. In the past school year, it has served 6.5 million students and provided more than $11 billion in funding to the nation’s schools, making it the second-largest K-12 program in the U.S. Department of Education.5 In addition to providing much needed funding, the IDEA guarantees that students with disabilities have access to strong academic programs alongside their peers.
Trump and DeVos appear to have little knowledge of the protections provided by federal law. During her confirmation hearing, DeVos stated that enforcing the federal rights afforded under the IDEA is “best left to states” and admitted that she “may have confused” the IDEA.6 Her statements during the hearing make clear that she does not understand the rights that the U.S. Department of Education is charged with enforcing. In fact, in her responses to questions for the record from Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA), she stated that it would be “misguided” to require private schools to follow federal law.7 Without a deep appreciation for these laws, Trump and DeVos cannot comprehend the protections they are asking parents to forfeit by participating in voucher programs or the harm these programs pose to children with disabilities.
Kim Fitzer did not have a choice but to find another educational placement for Trinity, despite the school’s statement that the agreement was reached mutually.8 Trinity ultimately transferred to a public school in Milwaukee with just a few months left in her kindergarten year. The private school kept the full voucher amount—a total of $6,442. As of 2013, Trinity was still in a Milwaukee public school, where she benefitted from a small class size, a formal education plan, and a teacher trained in special education.9 Her mom told the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism that she was happy with Trinity’s new public school.
How voucher programs work for students with disabilities
Voucher programs provide families with a fixed amount of public funding to put toward private school tuition. The amount of each voucher, sometimes referred to as a scholarship, varies by program, grade level, and, for some programs specific to students with disabilities, disability category. The voucher is typically capped at a particular threshold, which may or may not cover the full cost of private school tuition.
At present, 16 states and the District of Columbia have one or more voucher programs in place.10Eligibility criteria vary by state and specific program, but participation is commonly restricted to low- or middle-income students, students in low-performing schools, or students with disabilities.11
Ten states have one or more programs that specifically target students with disabilities.12 Among them, the Ohio Autism Scholarship Program has the highest participation rate, with 14 percent of eligible students with autism enrolled, while Florida’s John M. McKay Scholarship for Students with Disabilities Program is the largest, serving more than 30,000 students per year.13
Supporters of voucher programs assert that the programs offer parents much-needed choice, as vouchers allow parents to shop around for a school that best meets their child’s needs.14 However, this choice comes with a high cost. Voucher programs either eliminate or greatly diminish the rights and protections of participating students with disabilities that are otherwise guaranteed by federal law.
Protections provided by federal law for students with disabilities
The federal government affords critical protections to students with disabilities through various civil rights laws, including the IDEA; the Americans with Disabilities Act, or ADA; and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, or 504.15 These protections ensure that students and young adults with disabilities have an equal opportunity to pursue an education similar to that of their peers without disabilities, free of discrimination.
The ADA and Section 504 ensure that students with disabilities are not discriminated against or denied access to programs because of their disabilities. Some of the rights under the IDEA are outlined below.
Key rights under the IDEA
A ‘free and appropriate public education’
Schools must evaluate children who they suspect to have a disability, classify their disability, and develop an Individualized Education Program, or IEP, describing the appropriate placement and services that will help the children meet grade-level standards. Some IEPs prescribe minimal services or accommodations, such as additional time to complete assessments, while others include more intensive services, such as support from a one-on-one aide. IEPs must be re-evaluated on an annual basis to determine if the student’s needs have evolved and new supports or services are required.16
The IDEA requires that all of the services and the placement that are deemed appropriate for a child are provided at no cost to the parent or guardian. Districts cannot pick and choose which students they serve. They must meet the needs of all students with disabilities regardless of the cost.17
Education in ‘the least restrictive environment’
IEPs not only describe the supports that children are entitled to receive but also mandate that students be educated “to the maximum extent appropriate with children who are not disabled.” This means students with a disability must be educated in a general education environment unless their disability dictates that supplemental services in a general education setting will not meet their needs.18
In some instances, the IEP team will determine that the district cannot meet the needs of a child and will recommend a placement outside of the local district. This may be a private school specially designed to serve students with disabilities.19
Protection against exclusionary discipline policies
Schools may not suspend children for more than 10 consecutive days without formally changing their education placement in their IEP. If the behavior that warrants exclusion from their educational placement is determined to be the result of their disability, schools must conduct an evaluation to determine appropriate behavioral supports that will meet the children’s needs and return the children to their original placement.
Due process to contest a child’s placement or services
If, at any point, parents or guardians do not believe that the placement, services, and supports described in the IEP meets their child’s needs or are not being implemented with fidelity, the family has the right to file a due process complaint and challenge the district.20
Data transparency
In addition to the rights and protections provided by the IDEA and other federal laws specific to individuals with disabilities, broader federal K-12 education laws also apply to students with disabilities. For example, since the No Child Left Behind Act was enacted in 2001, the performance of students with disabilities has been included in accountability systems, which affect school ratings, and data on the academic performance of students with special needs have been publicly reported.21 Before this, the achievement of students with disabilities was largely hidden, and, as a result, they were rarely held to the same academic standards as their peers without disabilities. The Every Student Succeeds Act, enacted in 2015, continues the requirement that every school report and be held accountable for the success of students with disabilities.22 Data transparency for subgroups of students in public schools is lauded by legislators on both sides of the aisle.23
Vouchers deny students these rights and protections
To participate in many voucher programs, parents must sign away some or all of their protections and rights under federal law.24 What’s more, some states are not transparent about this stipulation. For example, Florida’s McKay Scholarship requires students to forfeit their rights described above and that condition is not clearly stated in the information available to parents on the state’s website.25 Moreover, when choosing a private school, parents may not understand that private schools eligible to receive vouchers are not necessarily required to meet a particular threshold of quality.
No guarantee of necessary services and support
Many of the state voucher programs, particularly those that target students with disabilities, require parents or guardians to sign away their rights under the IDEA and 504, and sometimes the ADA. Other states are silent on whether participating private schools have to meet federal requirements.26 Under the Succeed Scholarship Program for Students with Disabilities in Arkansas, for example, parents must “sign waivers that release the State of Arkansas and the student’s resident school district from any legal obligation to provide services or education to the student participating in the Program” and “sign an acknowledgement that, by enrolling a child in a private school, the parent/guardian, acting on behalf of the child, waives the procedural safeguards granted by the IDEA.”27 In Georgia’s Special Needs Scholarship Program, accepting a voucher has the same legal effect as refusing special education services.28
By requiring parents to forfeit their rights, voucher programs leave families with no assurance or guarantee that their children will receive the services and supports they need to meet grade-level academic standards. Parents also have no recourse but to remove their children from the school if they are not satisfied with the education provided. In instances where a private school does identify necessary supports for children to meet their potential, such as one-on-one reading instruction or occupational therapy, parents must often foot the bill for those supplemental services when they exceed the total cost of the voucher.
These additional costs can be significant. The amount provided by each voucher program varies by state and, for some programs that apply specifically to students with disabilities, by student need. Some programs offer as little as $2,500 for a year of tuition and other programs offer close to $30,000.29 The average tuition of private schools across the country is $10,740, which does not include any additional services.30 For nonreligious schools, that number is much higher—$21,810.31 In most cases, parents are responsible for paying the difference between the tuition costs and the amount provided by the voucher. Parents may not be aware of potential out-of-pocket costs when they sign up for a voucher and enroll their child in a private school. For example, if a school determines that a student needs more supports in the middle of the school year, parents must cover the cost or stand in the way of their child accessing those services. Conversely, in public schools, districts are responsible for the cost of all services and supports.
Private schools can also pick and choose the students they want to serve and can refuse to educate a child if they deem their instructional program is not a fit for the child or vice versa.32 In 2014, a Huffington Post article reported three instances in which students with disabilities participating in voucher programs were either denied admission or asked to leave the participating private school midyear due to behaviors or challenges related to their disabilities. In these types of circumstances, families must scramble to find another option for their child midyear with little or no notice by either finding another participating private school or re-enrolling the child in a public school.33
In short, voucher programs can leave children and families with fewer services, hefty bills, and no opportunity for legal recourse.
No information about a child’s progress
Just as students attending private schools through voucher programs may have waived their IDEA and 504 rights, many states also do not require participating private schools to adhere to the same accountability provisions required of public schools.34 That means that private schools may not have to test their students annually, report the test results publicly, or take action if schools are low-performing. Education Secretary nominee DeVos endorsed this approach during her confirmation hearing when she did not agree with Sen. Tim Kaine (D-VA) that every school receiving public dollars should follow the same accountability provisions.35
Without comparable data on school quality, it is difficult to assess whether private schools are providing a high-quality education in exchange for public dollars. For example, participating private schools in the McKay Scholarship Program in Florida are not required to report any evidence or data of student outcomes.36 Similarly, the Georgia Department of Education releases an annual report at the end of school year for its Special Needs Scholarship Program, but it does not include any information on student achievement.37 Parents cannot make informed decisions about the best school for their child without comparable data on student outcomes.
Participating private schools also do not have to hire teachers with the same rigorous credentials that federal law requires of public schools. Given the body of evidence demonstrating the importance of teacher quality on student achievement, parents should have knowledge and confidence that highly trained teachers are responsible for their child’s education.38 Vouchers provide no such guarantee.
Conclusion
Since the passage of the IDEA more than 40 years ago, opportunities for students with disabilities have vastly improved. The collection of federal laws that protect the rights of and hold high standards for students with disabilities has paved the way for greater inclusion and opportunities for students with unique learning and behavioral needs. There is still work to do to ensure that children and youth with disabilities have access to rigorous academic and career opportunities alongside their peers. The government must work hand in hand with teachers, parents, and students to improve services that meet unique needs and hold all children to high standards.
Students with disabilities deserve leadership that will maintain and advance their rights and opportunities. The voucher policies, pushed by President Trump and Education Secretary nominee DeVos, do the opposite. They undercut the progress of the past few decades by requiring parents to sign away hard-sought rights and do not hold schools accountable for students’ progress. Advocates, parents, and policymakers must push back against these policies to ensure that all children, including those with disabilities, get the education they deserve and is afforded to them by federal law.
Endnotes
- Rory Linnane, “In some choice schools, disabilities are a liability,” July 7, 2013, WisconsinWatch.org, available at http://wisconsinwatch.org/2013/07/in-some-choice-schools-disabilities-are-liability/. ↩
- Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction, “Private School Choice Programs in Wisconsin,” available at http://dpi.wi.gov/sites/default/files/imce/sms/Choice/Student_Application_Webpage/PSCP_Brochure_2017-18_Final.pdf (last accessed January 2017). ↩
- Donald J. Trump for President, “Education,” available at https://www.donaldjtrump.com/policies/education (last accessed January 2017). ↩
- Caitlin Emma, Benjamin Wermund, and Kimberly Hefling, “DeVos’ Michigan schools experiment gets poor grades,” Politico, December 9, 2016, available at http://www.politico.com/story/2016/12/betsy-devos-michigan-school-experiment-232399; Emily Lawler, “Betsy DeVos could ‘destroy’ public schools with vouchers, Michigan educators worry,” MLive Media Group, November 24, 2016, available at http://www.mlive.com/news/index.ssf/2016/11/betsy_devos_could_destroy_publ.html. ↩
- National Center for Education Statistics, “Fast Facts: Students with disabilities,” available at https://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=64 (last accessed January 2017); U.S. Department of Education, “Fiscal Year 2016 Congressional Action” (2016), available at https://www2.ed.gov/about/overview/budget/budget16/16action.pdf. ↩
- U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, “Nomination of Betsy DeVos to serve as Secretary of Education,” January 17, 2017, available at http://www.help.senate.gov/hearings/nomination-of-betsy-devos-to-serve-as-secretary-of-education. ↩
- Michael Stratford and Kimberly Hefling, “DeVos questionarie reveals her views on wide range of issues,” Politico Pro, January 30, 2017. ↩
- Northwest Catholic School, “Northwest Catholic School responds on special-needs students,” Press release, June 14, 2013, available at https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/716687-nw-catholic-statement.html (last accessed January 2017). ↩
- Linnane, “In some choice schools, disabilities are a liability.” ↩
- EdChoice, “School Choice in America,” available at https://www.edchoice.org/school-choice/school-choice-in-america/ (last accessed January 2017). ↩
- National Conference of State Legislatures, “School Voucher Laws: State-By-State Comparison” (2014), available at http://www.ncsl.org/documents/educ/StateByStateVoucherComparison.pdf. ↩
- Ibid. ↩
- Ibid. ↩
- Jonathan Butcher and Lindsey M. Burke, “Expanding Education Choices: From Vouchers and Tax Credits to Savings Accounts” (Washington: The Heritage Foundation, 2013), available at http://thf_media.s3.amazonaws.com/2013/pdf/SR136.pdf. ↩
- U.S. Department of Education Office of Civil Rights, “Protecting Students with Disabilities,” available at https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/504faq.html (last accessed January 2017); ADA National Network, “What is the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)?”, available at https://adata.org/learn-about-ada (last accessed January 2017). ↩
- Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of 2004, Public Law 108-446, 108th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 3, 2004). ↩
- Ibid. ↩
- Ibid. ↩
- Ibid. ↩
- Ibid. ↩
- No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, Public Law 107-110, 107th Cong., 1st sess. (January 8, 2002). ↩
- Every Student Succeeds Act, Public Law 114-95, 114th Cong., 1st sess.(December 10, 2015). ↩
- William McKenzie and Sandy Kress, “The Big Idea of School Accountability,” George W. Bush Institute, February 5, 2015, available at http://www.bushcenter.org/essays/bigidea/; Education Trust, “Students Can’t Wait: Considerations for State Accountability Systems,” available at https://edtrust.org/students-cant-wait/improving-outcomes-for-students-with-disabilities/ (last accessed January 2017). ↩
- National Conference of State Legislatures, “School Voucher Laws: State-By-State Comparison”; Selene Almazan and Denise Stile Marshall, “School Vouchers and Students with Disabilities: Examining Impact in the Name of Choice” (Towson, MD: The Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates Inc., 2016), available at https://c.ymcdn.com/sites/copaa.site-ym.com/resource/resmgr/2016_Conference/COPAA_Voucher_paper_final_R6.pdf. ↩
- Florida Department of Education, “McKay Parent Responsibilities,” available at https://www.floridaschoolchoice.org/pdf/now-what.pdf (last accessed January 2017); Florida Department of Education, “McKay Scholarship Program FAQs,” available at http://www.fldoe.org/schools/school-choice/k-12-scholarship-programs/mckay/mckay-faqs.stml (last accessed January 2017). ↩
- National Conference of State Legislatures, “School Voucher Laws: State-By-State Comparison”; Almazan and Marshall, “School Vouchers and Students with Disabilities.” ↩
- Arkansas Department of Education, “Succeed Scholarship Program Explanatory PowerPoint,” available at https://arksped.k12.ar.us/documents/policyAndRegulations/SucceedScholarship/SucceedScholarshipProgramExplanatoryPowerPoint.pptx (last accessed January 2017). ↩
- Georgia Department of Education, “Georgia Special Needs Scholarship Program Frequently Asked Questions” (2014), available at https://www.gadoe.org/External-Affairs-and-Policy/Policy/Documents/SB10%20FAQ%20for%20Parents.pdf. ↩
- Indiana Department of Education, “Choice Scholarship Program Actual Award Amounts, 2016-2017 School Year,” available at http://www.doe.in.gov/sites/default/files/choice/actual-2016-2017-choice-award-amounts.pdf (last accessed January 2017); Sara Mead, “Information Underload: Florida’s Flawed Special-Ed Voucher Program” (Washington: Education Sector, 2007), available at http://educationpolicy.air.org/sites/default/files/publications/McKay_Vouchers.pdf; Ohio Department of Education, “Autism Scholarship Program Fact Sheet” (2015), available at http://education.ohio.gov/getattachment/Topics/Other-Resources/Scholarships/Autism-Scholarship-Program/Autism-Scholarship-Program-Check-Your-Eligibility/ASPFY2016FactSheet.pdf.aspx. ↩
- National Center for Education Statistics, Digest of Education Statistics 2014 (U.S. Department of Education, 2016), Table 205.50, available at http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2016/2016006.pdf. ↩
- Ibid. ↩
- National Conference of State Legislatures, “School Voucher Laws: State-By-State Comparison.” ↩
- Shayna A. Pitre, “‘School Choice’—As Long as Your Child Doesn’t Have a Disability,” The Huffington Post, July 13, 2014, available at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/shayna-a-pitre/school-choicetrue-choice-_b_5318677.html. ↩
- National Conference of State Legislatures, “School Voucher Laws: State-By-State Comparison.” ↩
- U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, “Nomination of Betsy DeVos to serve as Secretary of Education.” ↩
- Mead, “Information Underload: Florida’s Flawed Special-Ed Voucher Program.” ↩
- Georgia Department of Education, “Georgia Special Needs Scholarship Program, End of Year Report, 2015-2016 School Year,” available at https://gosa.georgia.gov/sites/gosa.georgia.gov/files/related_files/document/Special%20Needs%20Scholarship%20End%20of%20Year%20Report%202015-2016-FINAL.pdf (last accessed January 2017). ↩
- Whether a teacher was “highly effective” was measured by that teacher’s value-added growth score. Raj Chetty, John N. Friedman, and Jonah E. Rockoff, “The long-term impacts of teachers: Teacher value-added and student outcomes in adulthood.” Working Paper 17699 (National Bureau of Economic Research, 2012), available at http://www.nber.org/papers/w17699.pdf. ↩