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CHECK THE FACTS: Debunking a Special Education Myth
By Jay P. Greene and Marcus A. Winters
Don't blame private options for rising costs
Can
spiraling special education costs explain why educational
achievement remained stagnant over the past three decades while
real education spending more than doubled? Policy makers, education
researchers, and school district officials often make this claim.
Special education students—goes the argument—are
draining resources away from regular education students.
In 1975, the federal government enacted the
Education of All Handicapped Children Act, now called the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), which requires
states to provide a “free appropriate public education”
to all students with disabilities. Parents have the right to work
with school officials to devise an individualized education plan
for their child. They also have the right to pursue legal action if
they and the district cannot agree on what services their child
will receive and whether the public school or a private provider
will deliver those services. Since the implementation of the
federal law and subsequent state laws, the percentage of students
in the nation identified as requiring special education has risen
sharply, from 8.3 percent of all students in 1977 to about 13.7
percent in 2004, according to the U.S. Department of Education.
The “Two-Step”
A popular riff on the idea that special
education students are bleeding public school budgets blames
private place
ments. A large number of mostly undeserving
disabled students and their clever parents, critics allege, have
managed to get public schools to pay for attendance at expensive
private schools. Tales of the “greedy needy”—disabled
students who receive unreasonably expensive services—appear
regularly in the media. The San Francisco
Chronicle describes the case of a student
with learning disabilities and an anxiety disorder whose parents
“enrolled him in a $30,000-a-year prep school in Maine—then
sent the bill to their local public school district.” The Chronicle declares that
similar situations are “playing out up and down California as
more parents of special education students seek extra-special education
at public expense: private day schools, boarding schools, summer camps,
aqua therapy, horseback therapy, travel costs, personal aides and
more.” The Chronicle cites a school finance consultant to the
California Department of Education to make the harm to general
education parents clear: “This is not sustainable... Special
education is a growing portion of budgets in many districts, squeezing
out services for other pupils.”
Time magazine
relates a story about an autistic child whose parents put him in an
expensive private school and then “informed Colorado’s
Thompson school district it had to pick up the bill for Boston
Higashi’s $135,000 annual tuition.” Time warns,
“Special ed costs threaten to eat into budgets for school
endeavors that are not federally mandated, like athletics or the
gifted-and-talented program. The money has to
come from somewhere, says Becky Jay, who was
president of the local school board when the [family] first asked for
tuition reimbursement, ‘and regular kids lose
out.’”
The New York Times does
a similar dance routine. The paper profiles a wealthy
community—Westport, Connecticut—where “some
[special education students] are getting as little as a few hours
of weekly speech therapy. Others get tuition for private school or
home tutoring.” The superintendent, we are told, has held the
line on special education services: “His administration has
denied many special education requests—horseback riding and
personal trainers, for instance—that it deemed
extravagant.” Again, we are warned that runaway special
education costs pose a threat: “The strain on the bottom line
can be intense, even in Westport, where in the 2002–03 school
year the $10.9 million spent on special education consumed 15.9
percent of the district’s education spending.”
It’s a two-step. First, provide colorful
anecdotes of unreasonably expensive-sounding private placement, and
then warn about how general education may suffer.
As it turns out, the evidence contradicts the
private placement myth. Only a very small fraction of disabled
students are placed in private schools at public expense. And
contrary to claims that this is increasingly common, the likelihood
that disabled students will be placed in a private school has not
grown in the last 15 years. While some of those private placements
are indeed expensive, the overall cost of private placement
nationwide constitutes a tiny portion of public school spending.
The Extent of Private Placement
The media dance would be an engaging one if the
plural of anecdote were data. But the data on private placement are
actually dancing to a very different tune. The U.S. Department of
Education’s Office of Special Education Programs tracks the
number of private placements. The information for each state and by
disability classification is posted on its web site. We have
reproduced the relevant information in Table 1.
As of 2004, private schools served, at public
expense, a total of 88,156 students with disabilities of the
5,963,129 students with disabilities nationally, which amounts to
1.48 percent. And these privately placed students amounted to 0.18
percent of the 47,917,774 students enrolled in public education.
Nor has the percentage of students who are privately placed
substantially increased in recent years. According to the Digest of Education Statistics, a similar proportion, about 1.6 percent, of students
receiving services under IDEA were educated in a private school
setting in 1989. The percentage of all students who were privately
placed has increased slightly since then, due to an increase in the
percentage of students diagnosed as disabled, but there has been no
surge in the proportion of special education students in private
settings.
The fact is that private placement is extremely
rare.
Instances of private placement that occur as a
result of parental requests rather than at the initiative of school
districts appear to be even more rare. In many cases, public
schools simply do not have the facilities or staff to accommodate
students with certain disabilities, and those students are sent by
the public schools to specialized private schools. For example,
some public schools are incapable of serving blind and deaf students, who constituted 3,022 of the
88,156 privately placed students in 2004. Another 19,876 students
in private placements are mentally retarded, have multiple
disabilities, or have suffered a traumatic brain injury. The
lion’s share of the 38,510 emotionally disturbed students
attending private school at public expense were also likely sent
because public school officials believed that they were unable to
handle the students’ needs. The number of private placements
for students with mild disabilities that resulted from parental
action is likely to be a very small portion of the 88,156 students
in private placements. (See Figure 1 for a breakout of private
placements by disability.) Media reports are often just the tip of
the iceberg, but in this case there may not be much more beneath
the waterline.
Evidence on Cost
Perhaps the private placement of disabled
students is so expensive that it still diverts significant
resources from general education. To estimate the additional cost
involved in placing disabled students in private schools, we relied
on a study sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education. According
to the Special Education Expenditure Project, the average cost of a
private placement in 2000 was $25,580. The project report also
provides the average cost of serving students in a public school
setting, broken out by disability type (e.g., specific learning disability, mental retardation, autism,
etc.). Weighting the costs by the type of disabilities among
students placed in private schools, we can estimate that the
average privately placed student would have cost $15,117 if he had
instead been served in a public school. That is, we estimate that
private placement cost an additional $10,463 per student.
This estimate likely overstates by a fair
margin the additional cost of serving disabled students in private
schools. It assumes that the cost of serving a privately placed
student would be the same as the cost of serving the average
student with the same disability. But we have good reason to
believe that most privately placed students are more severely
disabled and therefore more expensive to educate than the average
student in the same disability classification. An emotionally
disturbed student who requires private placement, for example, is
likely to be more challenging and expensive to educate than the
average emotionally disturbed student who remains in public
schools. With the law’s emphasis on providing services in the
least restrictive environment, the severity of the disability is
likely to increase the probability of private placement.
Given the conservative estimate of $10,463 per
pupil as the additional cost of private placement and given 88,156
privately placed students, the total additional cost of placing
disabled students in private schools may be as high as $922
million. This sounds like a lot of money, but to public schools it
is almost a rounding error. In the school year ending in 2000, the
same year as our cost estimates, public schools spent $382 billion.
The $922 million for private placement amounts to just 0.24 percent
of the total budget. The cost of family-driven private placement is
certainly less.
The Exceptions Do Not Make the Rule
There are some school districts and states
where private placement is more burdensome. In Washington, D.C.,
for example, privately placed students constitute 3.03 percent of
enrollment as of 2004. According to the Washington Post, the cost of
private placements represents 15 percent of the school
district’s budget.
But Washington, D.C., is the exception, not the
rule. No state has more than 1 percent of its students privately
placed. Only four states (Connecticut, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, and New Jersey) have more than 0.5 percent of their
students attending private schools at public expense. And to
repeat, nationwide only 0.18 percent of all students are privately
placed. Nor is D.C. typical for a large urban school district.
According to the New York Times, New York City schools have 2,000 privately placed
students at a cost of $24 million. That amounts to only 0.19
percent of student enrollment and only 0.17 percent of the budget.
Why do some places have an unusually large
proportion of privately placed students? In Washington, D.C., the
explanation might be found in the dysfunction of the school
district (see “Old Wine, New Bottles,” forum, Fall 2001, and
“How Vouchers Came to D.C.,” features, Fall 2004). The D.C.
schools struggle to provide an adequate education to any of their
students. Disabled students are entitled under federal law to
demand an adequate education and to obtain one in a private school
if the public schools are unable to provide it. The nondisabled
students who remain in D.C. public schools lack the same mechanism
for exiting failing schools. That is, the high rate of private
placement in D.C. may be more a function of the quality of D.C.
public schools than a function of special education per se.
The higher rate of private placement found in
D.C. and a handful of northeastern states could also be explained
by a self-reinforcing process. Once some students obtain private
placements, it is easier for others to do so. A network of parents
and lawyers develops as private placements become more common,
spreading information about options and strategies. So private
placement may beget more private placement.
If obtaining a private placement requires a
battle with school officials, parents with greater awareness of
their legal rights and greater resources to engage in the fight are
more likely to win. Washington, D.C., and northeastern states have
a high concentration of wealthy and well-educated parents. Because
it is the nation’s capital, D.C. has an unusually high number
of lawyers, disability advocates, and policy-savvy parents.
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Blaming Special Education
Following anecdotes about expensive and
unreasonable-sounding private placements, news stories often segue into
reports of the total cost of special education—not private placement
costs per se. Perhaps special education as a whole is the legitimate target
of complaint.
This claim also appears at odds with the facts. It is
true that special education enrollments have been increasing at a rapid
rate, but that doesn’t mean special education costs are rising
faster than the resources available for regular education. To estimate the
relative burden of providing special education services over time, we use
information on the cost of these services by disability type reported by
the Special Education Expenditure Project. We know the number of students
in each disability classification over time from the U.S. Department of
Education’s Digest of Education
Statistics. If we multiply the number of
students in each disability category by the cost of services in each
disability, we can estimate the total cost of special education
services.
Of course, we only have information on the costs per
disabled student from a recent study, and it is possible that the cost of
serving students in each disability classification has increased in real
terms over time. To adjust for this, we assume that the change in the real
cost of special education services is commensurate with the change in
student-teacher ratios. Making that adjustment, special education services
cost roughly $17.7 billion in 1977, when federal protection for special
education began; spending almost doubled to $34.3 billion by 2003 as the
number of students in special education increased by 76 percent.
The near doubling in special education costs is not
attributable to a rise in rare and expensive disabilities. Media reports
often emphasize the growth in students with autism but their numbers remain
very small, less than 0.3 percent of enrollment. The total cost of special
education services for autism does not exceed 0.45 percent of all spending.
Severe disability categories like mental retardation, which are costly to
serve, have actually experienced a decline in enrollment. The bulk of
special education cost increases comes from explosive growth in the
specific learning disability (SLD) category, which is among the least
costly to serve. Students in this category grew from 796,000 in 1977 to
2,848,000 in 2003.
Still, the large cost increase doesn’t mean that
special education is taking away more resources from general education.
Total revenue for public education also nearly doubled between 1977 and
2003, adjusted for inflation. Special education costs constituted roughly
the same share of total public school revenue (8.3 percent) in 2003 as in
1977. While special education does consume more money over time, the
relative financial burden of special education on public education has not
increased because public schools are also receiving significantly more
money.
— Jay P. Greene and Marcus A. Winters
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Why So Few?
Recent evidence from Florida’s McKay
Scholarship Program for Students with Disabilities seems to
indicate that the real question is why private placements are so
rare. This program provides all students in special education with
a generous voucher that they can use to attend a private school,
eliminating the need for dissatisfied parents to sue their school.
According to the Florida Department of Education, 16,144 students
currently use a McKay Scholarship, about 4 percent of the students
receiving services under IDEA. Given that only 1.48 percent of
special education students are privately placed nationally, the
experience with McKay suggests a pent-up demand for private
schooling among the disabled.
In a phone survey, only one-third of parents
who participated in the McKay program reported that they were
satisfied with their child’s previous public school. If these
results can be generalized to other states, then why don’t
more parents pursue private placements? The simple answer is that
it is not always easy for parents to secure their preferences if
those preferences differ from the judgments of school authorities.
IDEA regulations require school districts to provide services in
the “least restrictive environment” possible for the
child to reach full educational potential. Typically, officials
consider the least restrictive environment to be the local public
school.
Litigating against a school district costs time
and money that many parents don’t have, and school districts
are increasingly willing to spend. Determined public schools can
outspend and outlast almost any family. In California, school
officials “fought so hard to block the claims of a student
that Judge Oliver W. Wanger of United States District Court took 83
pages to berate the district’s ‘hard-line
position’ and its law firm for ‘willfully and
vexatiously’ dragging out the case so long that the former
student is now 24.” Litigated cases are extremely rare; media
reports of a tidal wave of special education lawsuits are
contradicted by an examination of the data. In California, only 0.6
percent of students with a disability file a formal complaint over
their educational services. Far fewer ever reach the courts.
McKay as an Alternative
The McKay program offers a number of benefits.
First, our evaluation found that families reported obtaining
higher-quality services in a private setting with a McKay voucher
than they had received in public schools. Second, McKay offers the
promise of slowing growth in the percentage of students identified
as disabled. It provides schools with a disincentive for
overdiagnosis, as each student identified as disabled becomes a
voucher-eligible student who could leave public schools and take
all of the money devoted to her education with her. Third, the
McKay program should help contain legal costs, both for school
districts and families. And, by allowing private placement without
the cost of a legal struggle, it increases access to private
placement for lower-income families. We found that lower-income
families used McKay vouchers to gain access to private placement at
about the same rate as higher-income families.
Programs like Florida’s McKay voucher for
disabled students would also address the concerns that people have
with the cost of private placement. The amount of the voucher is
equal to what would be spent by a public school to educate a
student with the same type and severity of disability. This would
guarantee that private placement costs the public no more than
serving the student in the public school.
Jay P. Greene is professor of education
reform, University of Arkansas, and a senior fellow at the
Manhattan Institute for Policy Research. Marcus A. Winters is
senior research associate at the Manhattan Institute for Policy
Research and doctoral fellow at the University of Arkansas.
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