Congressman Danny Davis and Special Education
December 30, 2003
by
Bernard Chapin
Unlike
many of my redstate conservative counterparts, in Illinois, the public
servants who represent me seldom share any of my views or beliefs,
and this will be even truer when Peter Fitzgerald retires from the
Senate next year. That is why, upon receiving a mailing from my Congressman,
Danny Davis, I instinctively headed for the kitchen trashcan. However,
on the way, I saw the headline, “Education is Still the Key”, so I
decided to take a look in case he had something worthwhile to say.
Predictably, he did not. On the page was a familiar, but always
bizarre, argument that is often directed against people like me:
“The Improving Education Results for Children
With Disabilities Act of 2003 (HR 1350) is designed to guarantee
an appropriate and publicly financed education for students with special
needs. During debate and markup (the process of amending a bill)
my amendment to positively impact the disproportionately high number
of African American boys being placed in special education was included.
The amendment requires any school district with a disproportionately
high number of individuals from any population group to report to
the Secretary of Education what actions are being taken to better
understand and rectify the situation.”
As Woody Allen might say, “the key word here is disproportionately.”
In this country there is a disproportionate attempt on the part of
the media, politicians, and academics to attribute any group differences
to the diabolical, yet unwitting, machinations of our entire political
system. This system supposedly contaminates institutions and results
in workers within those institutions (like me) plotting against “the
other”–be they black, Hispanic or females of all varieties.
The plot of this plot has been provided by the conspiratorial black
helicopter school of sociological understanding, which is formally
known by the scientific name of “gobbledygook.” This school of thought
has yet to explain why cogs in the system like me do not extend our
prejudice to Asian-Americans as they clearly outperform all other
groups. Perhaps our benevolent disposition results from a love for
Thai food or maybe it’s just that we haven’t gotten around to “keeping
them down” yet.
The reason that I am so cavalier about this issue is that my congressman’s
assertion belies all the experiences I’ve had over the last decade
as a public school educrat. There is no cause for affirmative action
regarding his comments, as his words merely showcase that he has no
idea what he is talking about.
Now this may come as a surprise to some of our readers, but school
districts do not attempt to intentionally increase the number of special
education students on their rolls. First, money is not an incentive.
It’s a disincentive. Eligible students cost far more to educate than
regular education students do and districts are refunded only partially
for the extravagant sums of money they spend on each special needs
child. As any taxpayer knows, getting a refund is not the same as
never having to pay in the first place.
The mythic strategy of placing a high number of students in special
education to manufacture funds is the same as Joe Citizen intentionally
making a losing investment just so he can write it off on his taxes.
Such an investment strategy amounts to spending five bucks to get
two in return. This strategy could never be confused with “profit.”
It is synonymous with “federal shell game.”
In one case last year, we were actually asked by an outside agency
to foot the $150,000 bill that it cost to educate a child (that they
placed) at a residential facility. To put this in perspective, 150
grand is 15 times the rate of expenditure for the average student
in the sieve-like Washington DC schools. Expenditures like that one
do not enrich a district; they bankrupt it.
The only exception to our budgetary bleeding concerns those children
covered by the Orphanage Act. With them we get 100 percent reimbursement
but the checks come long after the outlays are made. However, the
great majority of pupils are not wards of the state, which means that
what we pay is gone forever. So, please believe me when I state that
it is not financially advantageous for a district to inflate its number
of special education students.
A second justification for why the congressman’s statement is misguided
lies in the amount of obsessive and compulsive rules and regulations
we must follow for every non-general education student. The old German
saying, “Governments come and go but bureaucracy is forever” is quite
apt when discussing the legal morass that is disability management.
After we meet as a team, declare a child eligible for special services,
and write his or her Individual Education Program (IEP), we vicariously
invite the trial lawyers guild into our establishment. From that
point on, the child’s “bureaucratic needs” are never far from our
minds and “not getting sued” outweighs many practical considerations.
Hours and riches are spent making sure that paperwork exists and
is regularly updated. At the school in which I work, I already have
had over three formal meetings on a few of our children with five
full months remaining in the school year. One commentator estimated
that it costs Baltimore 28 million dollars annually just to achieve
compliance with the complexities of special education law [Wolf, “Sisyphean
Tasks,” Education Next, Winter 2003, p.24] and this will not
surprise anyone who works in the field.
So far, the district mindset I describe has been that of an educrat,
but every employee is in some way affected by the vagaries of special
education law. For deans and principals, a student’s eligibility
has everything to do with the way in which he or she is handled.
In general, exceptional pupils are never suspended for more than ten
days a year. I recall one dean calling me on the intercom to ask
about a child he just put out of the building. He asked, “Hey, it’s
his twelfth day out this year. I was wondering, he’s not special
ed is he?”
“Yes he is.” I said. “You should have called me beforehand.”
He answered, “Oh God no” as if his head was in the trajectory of
a catapult.
A third explanation for Danny Davis’s implication that there may
be discrimination involved in the number of African-American children
in special education can be found in the demographics of those who
solicit referrals for the program. When I assess a regular education
student for special education eligibility it is usually the result
of a parent or case worker making a request. Many of these parents
and caseworkers are African-American (as are 90 percent of our students)
and I do not believe that they are in any way trying to disproportionately
segregate their offspring or wards on the basis of race.
Parents, case workers, therapists, and educational liaison officials
often feel that initiating a referral is in the best interests of
the child. Their motivation for initiating a case study is not a
result of racial self-hatred. Sometimes it is due to failing grades
or a desire for therapeutic services. They also cannot help but be
aware of the dazzling list of protections and exemptions that await
individuals who are certified as having an educational disability.
Even in the case of expulsion for drugs or a firearm, our district
still goes to great pains to ensure that the student receives some
form of instruction during their period of banishment.
The full extent of the bureaucratic protections for children of special
needs would shock most outsiders. I even know of one student whose
personal government-funded lawyer attends all of his staffings. She
notified us that she does not represent his foster parents or anybody
else present other than the student. Think about her the next time
you hear that social services are under-funded. Once she told me
when I called to schedule a meeting that “anytime was good for her.”
I answered, “I bet.” She’s got all day.
The irony of know nothing politicians confusing speculation with
reality is that they usually consider themselves “progressive,” yet
the same progressives who promote the lie of institutional racism
are the same ones whose intellectual neglect ends up cheating children
out of the opportunity to learn anything meaningful in school. I
am chiefly referring here to the bogus argument that minority children
somehow learn differently from Caucasian children. This misconstruction
always seems to be advanced by “liberal” progressives. I hold that
there is nothing liberal at all about such a belief. Indeed, it is
the epitome of racism and no more forward looking than phrenology
or palm reading.
What the progressive denigration of facts, figures, dates, phonics,
homework, individual responsibility, and hard work has accomplished
is to make the public schools a profoundly unserious place in which
to spend 13 years. If not formal knowledge, then what do we wish
to impart to those we’ve been given a fortune to educate?
An abhorrence of direct instruction has produced 16 year-olds with
second grade equivalents in reading and mathematics, and graduates
who can’t balance their own check books. They don’t understand interest
rates, read restaurant menus or comprehend the terms of the lease
they just signed. But why should the Danny Davis’s of government
care about these children? Their continued ignorance is the best
guarantor of their vote.
Bernard Chapin
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Bernard Chapin
is a writer in Chicago.