sts7049 said:
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:
Nobody is blaming SpEd students. It's a fact that is costs significantly more money to educate a special education student. Most people are uncomfortable with acknowledging this for some reason.
what percent of the overall spend is directed towards those programs?
I'm not sure that you can really calculate this, or it would be exceedingly difficult to do so with a true level of accuracy.
Because beyond the direct costs of 504, you have the hidden costs that really can't be quantified. Every single 504 student has to have, I believe minimum once a school year (but may be each semester or half year) a 504 meeting that goes over the specific 504 plan and requirements for that student. That meeting involves the school's 504 counselor(s), usually a teacher that is primarily involved, a coordinator/director/assistand principal/prinicpal and the student and parents. These meetings can last anywhere from an hour to ofent 2 hours or more, depending on a host of factors.
I know when my wife has to go through these at her distric that she will have weeks at a time where half of her day is dedicated to 504 meetings. That's half of her day that she is not doing her normal work. Plus the time from every other district employee required to be in the meetings.
Quote:
Section 504 requires recipients to provide to students with disabilities appropriate educational services designed to meet the individual needs of such students to the same extent as the needs of students without disabilities are met. An appropriate education for a student with a disability under the Section 504 regulations could consist of education in regular classrooms, education in regular classes with supplementary services, and/or special education and related services.
Beyond that, you have the hidden costs - namely the fact that because the federal law doesn't allow anything they consider discrimination, many of these students are put in regular classes. Which means that, right or wrong, those classes are often watered down or at the very least a significant amount of time is dedicated to the 504 students in class and not to the other students. You can't really account for those costs, but the fact of the matter is that they are there regardless. Compare it to disciplinary issues where you have a small percentage of students that create the largest percentage of disciplinary issues, but the school won't segregate those kids out of fear of being sued by parents looking for a quick payday so they are left to disrupt and otherwise stifle the learning experience and atmosphere for the majority of kids that aren't problems.*
*not saying that all 504's cause problems, just comparing hidden cost type scenarios if that makes any sense.