The Hechinger
Report recently published a column
reporting on two recent studies that suggest Black students are under identified as having disabilities
and therefore are not receiving the special education services they need.
Leading the
charge in this fight to identify more Black students as having a disability and
therefore needing special education services is Dr. Paul Morgan, Professor of
Education at Penn State and his team of researchers. The Hechinger Report
refers to his research presentation in May of this year to the Society for Prevention Research and his latest study to be published in an
upcoming issue of Exceptional Children.
If his previous
work is any indication, we may have some insight into what the article will
read. In 2015, Dr. Morgan and his research team published their analyses of
longitudinal data that suggests there is no “evidence that minority representation
[in special education] is occurring.” Wow.
In the “Contributions
and Implications” section, he and his co-authors suggest that “minority
children are underidentified as having disabilities and are less likely to be
receiving special education services than otherwise similar White,
English-speaking children in the United States.”
First, the
construction of race created the social differences and subsequent myriad
inequalities experienced by Black folks today, children included. Exhibits A
through etc, include, inequitable laws, policies, education funding, economic
opportunities, lending practices, etc. These structural inequalities should not
nor ever suggest less than, othering, or Black children being de
facto disabled.
He elaborates, “Our
results indicate that racial- and ethnic-minority children who are otherwise
similar to White children are consistently less likely to be identified as
disabled whether the specific condition being investigated is learning
disabilities, speech or language impairments, intellectual disabilities, health
impairments, or emotional disturbances.” In other words, students of color
aren’t being identified enough as being disabled, whether it’s a physical or nonphysical
disability and therefore aren’t accessing special education services. I could
opine ad nauseam about nonphysical disabilities and Black children but I’ll
save that for another day/time.
According to the National Center for Education
Statistics (NCES), during the 15-16 school year, Black students, ages 3-21,
were 16% of those who were served under the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act (IDEA). At the beginning of that school year Black students were
15% of the public school population. Now, there are a lot of people who are way
smarter that I am, but the raw numbers alone not only seem to debunk the idea
of underrepresentation, but in fact a saturation of Black students in special
education.
Let’s continue…
In his writings,
he suggests a bemoaning on the part of researchers that the system for
identification of students for special education is racially bias. Umm, it is
(Patton, 1998; Mills, 2003; Blanchett, 2006; Cartledge & Dukes, 2008;
Wright et al., 2016).
He writes, “Our
findings support policies and practices that result in increased use by
practitioners of culturally and linguistically sensitive special education
evaluation methods.” Sounds okay, right? The very next sentence, immediately
after that period reads, “Use of these methods may be necessary to ensure that
special education eligibility procedures do not result in unwarranted
overrepresentation of White, English-speaking children.” Yup, you read that
correctly!
According to
NCES, during the 15-16 school year, White students were 49% of the nation’s
public school population and 14% of all students, ages 3-21, served under IDEA.
Overrepresentation?
Whatever makes him sleep at night.
Oh it gets much
worse, but I can’t. He’s teaching would-be teachers over at Penn State.
Dr. Wanda
Blanchett, Dean and
Distinguished Professor at Rutgers University’s Graduate School of Education
writes disproportionality exists when “students’ representation…exceeds their
proportional enrollment in the school’s general population.” No reasoned,
non-bigoted person could possibly conclude that White students are
overrepresented in special education, based on this definition and the
aforementioned data. Dr. Blanchett also pushed back against Morgan and his team’s
analyses in a 2016 article she published titled, 'We Won't Be Silenced': Senior Scholars in Special Education Respond to
Deficit Derived Claims That ' Minorities [Students of Color] Are
Disproportionately Underrepresented in Special Education'.
Dr. Blanchett
responded, in part, “…these researchers reported the findings of their study
that employed a deficit theoretical and conceptual framework that seek to erase
nearly five decades of strong empirical research that illustrates that African
American and other students of color are indeed disproportionately overrepresented
in special education. Despite their claims, the existing research and empirical
literature also demonstrates how issues of race, class culture, language, and
perceived disability play out in both general and special education to create
conditions that have given birth to and continue to maintain disproportionality
(Blanchett, 2013).”
I'll continue and end with
Dr. Blanchett’s words back in 2016.
“As senior
scholars in the field of special education committed to disrupting educational
inequalities…we will not be silenced by one study using hypothetical children
to suggest that African American and other students of color are
underrepresented in special education when the evidence is clear that this
claim is simply false and unfounded when examining real federal reporting data.”
No comments:
Post a Comment