What Do You Think?
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NY State Education Department Questions School Fiscal Policies Concerning Special Education Allocations
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Providing Financial Support to
Help Students With Disabilities Meet State Learning Standards New York State Board of Regents New York State Education Department September 2004 LINK Goals "Eliminate unnecessary referrals to special education "Assure that students unnecessarily placed, or who no longer need special education services, are returned to a supportive general education environment "Hold special education services to high standards of accountability to improve results for students with disabilities "Integrate students with disabilities with their nondisabled peers "Provide mechanisms for school districts to develop or expand support and prevention services Relevant Facts: Program Issues Gaps between actual and desired achievement of students with disabilities must be closed around the State Poor general education performance is correlated with even poorer special education performance In too many districts, large portions of students with disabilities are educated outside general education "New York State, especially in large urban areas, places far more students in restrictive settings compared to other states "Students in more restrictive settings have poorer outcomes than those who spend most of the day in general education Fiscal Issues "Historically costs and classification of students with disabilities have increased, mirroring a national trend "In recent years, New York States special education population is holding steady at 12 percent of enrollment "Costs for general and special education continue to rise proportionally "Aid for the education of students with disabilities has grown at a faster rate than aid for general education "The current process for claiming Public Excess Cost Aid is time-consuming and complex. Audits of school districts have revealed that claims are often inaccurate, putting school districts in jeopardy of significant disallowances Options States(including District of Columbia) Have Chosen for Funding Special Education "Basis of allocation (2003): Pupil weights (multiples of regular education aid): 18 states Total district enrollment (census): 9 states Resource-based (teachers or classrooms): 6 states Percentage reimbursement (percent of expenditures): 6 states Combination: 5 states Variable block grant: 4 states None: 2 states Flat grant: 1 state 2004-05 State Aid for Students with Disabilities "Districts receive operating aid for students with and without disabilities educated in public schools "In addition, school districts receive aid to help meet the excess costs of educating students with disabilities. This aid: Provides wealth-equalized aid in public schools and BOCES based on the average spending on all students in the district Requires a substantial local contribution Provides substantial minimum aid Provides extra aid for high cost students and students integrated with their nondisabled peers This integrated services weighting is extended for 2004-05 Myths "Most districts cover the majority of their public school special education instructional costs with special education state aid. Fact: More than half of special education instructional expense comes from local sources "Providing State Aid for special education ensures that a student will receive mandated services Fact: The requirement to provide mandated special education services results from federal program requirements, not State Aid Subgroup Assignment: Create Your Own State Special Education Funding System 1. Should aid for pupils with disabilities be a separate categorical aid or general purpose aid? 2. Should aid: --Be driven by total district enrollment and poverty? -- Be based on the number of students with disabilities and/or the special education services provided? --Provide different levels of aid within public schools for special classes versus special education integrated with general education? --Distinguish between regular and high cost students with disabilities? --Provide different levels of aid for similar public versus private school placements? |