However, the opposite is true, at least in California. Special needs students receive exceptional attention, often double that given to others. Each has a tailored written plan, unique to their needs, along with a detailed report reviewed by a team of specialists at the end of every trimester, significantly adding to the workload.
Meanwhile, exceptionally bright students receive no extra focus whatsoever.
this zero-sum understanding of what IEPs are makes me sad, and i feel bad for your kid’s’ teachers
> “Meanwhile, exceptionally bright students receive no extra focus whatsoever”
perhaps consider a child with a parent who considers them exceptionally bright _is_ receiving “extra focus” just… outside of the classroom
Hartford public schools spends about ~30% of its budget on the ~15% of special education students; basically 2x more money per student than non-special ed students. Nominally that's actually one of the highest percentages on special education in the nation, though that might have to do with how they've structured their programs.
For a variety of reasons, special education is a money pit. Your returns on investment quickly diminish, yet its easy to drum up outrage when programs fall short. Just like in medicine, specialists cost way more than regular staff, yet you need a lower ratio of students to specialists. The economics are brutal. And there are federal requirements regarding mandatory funding of special education, so parents and education lobbyists manipulate the system to get their student or preferred program under the special ed umbrella so school districts are forced to prioritize funding, removing funding from regular education programs. Over the past couple of decades special education has eaten up the lion's share of increases in K-12 public education spending in many states (especially left leaning ones like Connecticut, California, New York, etc).
Finding the right balance is really hard. You can easily find yourself in a situation like SF wrt homeless and addicted, where you can spend insane amounts of money per person yet barely move the needle.
> They would just either tell me to stay in a corner and sleep or just draw pictures, flowers for them
It doesn't take a specialist to recognize something's off (the fundamental assumption is that, barring a diagnosed learning disability, everyone is able to learn to read and write), and you don't need a full time specialist to do a one-off diagnosis. Whether they had the budget for continued full-time support after that (ex: preparing accessible teaching materials) is a separate question.
TFA is light on details, but it's hard to imagine everyone was doing the best with what they had here.
No, that's the sad thing. She has NOT been diagnosed with neurological dyslexia. The school never evaluated her. As near as her family can tell, she was simply never properly taught to read. That's what all the fuss is about.
A much more useful stat from that report is here:
>For every student enrolled, the average nonwhite school district receives $2,226 less than a white school district," the report says.
https://www.npr.org/2019/02/26/696794821/why-white-school-di...
If a child is not meeting the requirements, they use to be kept back. But there have been times where school systems have been sued and had to make a payout, never mind legal fees.
Private Schools can just expel the student, but if the parents are very wealthy, that can make a "donation" to avoid this.
In reality the school system is in a tough bind. The honors thing is odd, but not the first time I have heard about this. I wonder if honors placement is based upon a curve and/or an average of all classes.