Opinion

Flemming: Vermont’s failing special ed

By David Flemming
The U.S. Department of Education recently found Vermont is one of only two states which “needs intervention in implementing the requirements of Part B Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.” This shatters the myth that Vermont offers disabled students a superior education.

According to the USDE, “if a state needs intervention for three consecutive years, the department must take one or more enforcement actions, including among others, requiring a corrective action plan or compliance agreement, or withholding further payments to the state.” One year down, two to go. If the feds took any of the $100-or-so million they have given Vermont annually in the past few years, that could be fiscally disastrous, since Vermont spends double the national average per student on special education.

The structure of IDEA was federally inaugurated in 1975 to provide “educational benefit to the child.” Part B of IDEA “serves students with disabilities, ages 3 through 21.” According to the USDE, Vermont is failing to provide this benefit.

Twenty-one states “meet the requirements” of the IDEA Part B, including half of New England: New Hampshire, Maine and Massachusetts. The USDE classified 27 states, including Connecticut and Rhode Island, as “needing assistance.” The federal government has no mandate to act on states needing assistance. But states receiving the worst designation, “needs intervention,” better be on their toes.

Only Vermont and New York appeared on this ‘Intervention List’ for the first time. Though this should not come entirely as a surprise. Vermont and New York “needed assistance” according to the 2019 determinations. “Needing intervention” was the next step backward.

In the USDE’s 2020 IDEA annual report, the USDE assigned “Intervention” and “Assistance” designations using equally weighted “Results” and “Compliance” matrices.

The USDE Compliance Matrix for the 2021 annual report, rates the 50 states with the following data:

— Whether the state reported valid and reliable data to the federal government for Fiscal Year 2018.

— The state’s timeliness and accuracy of complaint and due process decisions for disabled students.

— Whether the state corrected “findings of noncompliance” from FY 2018 and prior years.

The USDE Results Matrix similarly rates the 50 states on disabled children’s academic performance in 2019:

— Percent of fourth- and eighth-grade “disabled children” taking NAEP and statewide tests.

— Percent of fourth and eighth grade “disabled children” scoring at “basic or above” on NAEP math and reading tests.

— Percent of disabled children exiting school by dropping out, and percent graduating with a high school diploma.

The USDE doesn’t inform us how states did on each matrix, but our Results Matrix is likely poor. In 2019, Vermont sat in the middle of the pack for eighth-grade NAEP math and reading tests. And were far below average for fourth-grade NAEP math and reading tests.

Sadly, Vermont’s poor NAEP scores are even worse than what the USDE IDEA determination would indicate, because the USDE doesn’t look at student demographic differences in its determinations. Nationally, white students score higher on NAEP tests than minority students. As one of the whitest states in the country, you would expect Vermont’s scores to be high. Instead, states like West Virginia, Kentucky and Georgia all received much higher USDE determinations than Vermont did for 2020. Their white students score better than Vermont’s white students. Their minority students score better than Vermont’s minority students.

We’ve heard of families moving to Vermont to get their disabled child the attention the child needs to succeed. If this trend continues, perhaps families will leave Vermont so their disabled student can escape an education system that doesn’t give them life skills.

Nationwide surveys consistently rank Vermont within the top 10 states on K-12 education in the country because our education spending dwarfs most other states. But many of those studies confuse inputs (money spent) with outputs (student achievement). It doesn’t matter how much you spend on education if Vermont students are failing to learn how to do math as well as their peers.

A 2016 UVM study signified the “need to reform the state’s special education funding formula.” That is one suggestion. Studying states that get better results for less money is another. But something must be done now that our rate of failure is bad enough to draw federal attention. The status quo is to ignore the needs of Vermont’s disabled students.

David Flemming is a policy analyst at the Ethan Allen Institute.

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