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Home » Our View » Sense and Disability: A Second Reply to Rotherham (Matthew Ladner)

Sense and Disability: A Second Reply to Rotherham (Matthew Ladner)

Andrew Rotherham and I are out to prove everyone wrong by demonstrating that it is possible to have a civil debate about school vouchers, in this case, school vouchers for children with disabilities.

In an earlier post I explained why I thought Florida’s McKay Scholarship program was, despite Andy’s misgivings, the best school voucher program in the country. Unconvinced, Eduwonk replied, raising 4 main objections.  As it turns out, I completely disagree with each of these contentions. Let’s take them in turn:

1.  McKay creates an incentive for parents to seek disability labels, possibly creating a disincentive for districts to provide special education services to anyone. 

This is an empirical question. Andy has conceded the over-enrollment problem, while theorizing that McKay will dissuade districts from enrolling special education. All of the other perverse incentives still exist to over-enroll students into special education, however, and a quick check of the data reveals that the special education rate in Florida moved from 14.9% in 2000 (first year of McKay) to 15.7% in 2005. Is this evidence of parents seeking labels for McKay? No, these figures are exclusive of McKay. If McKay has influenced special education rates at all, it has only done so at the margin thus far, and (if so) only perhaps slowed the rate of growth a tiny bit.

2. McKay is not really needed because it is already possible for children with disabilities to attend private schools under IDEA.

Andy is correct that IDEA gives some access to private schools, but neglects to mention that this access is highly skewed to the wealthy. Nationwide, nearly 2 percent of all special education students attend private schools paid for by public school districts that fail to provide an adequate education. Such placements are sometimes the result of a consensual agreement between a school district and a parent, but more often the result of a lawsuit or the threat of a lawsuit. Low-income parents typically lack access to the services of an attorney with specialized knowledge of special education law, making such placements primarily the province of the well to do. The McKay program serves the interests of parents by equalizing access to a private placement without the need to fight a legal battle. The parent simply must express dissatisfaction with the services provided at the public school. The McKay program protects the interests of districts by capping the total amount of a voucher to be equal to the amount provided for the education of the child, while adverse court decisions sometimes result in “Cadillac placements” costing hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Andy references the special education train wreck in Washington DC. Similar to the rest of the district, the special education services in DCPS can be politely described as “troubled.” Opportunistic lawyers have made themselves a fortune by winning large judgments and Cadillac private school placements for DCPS children in private schools. A McKay system in the District would short-circuit this entire process by allowing dissatisfied parents to seek better services in private schools without the need to sue, and simultaneously protect the financial interests of the district by limiting the maximum amount of the scholarship to the amount that would have been spent on the child’s education anyway. The kids win, DCPS wins, and the only “cost” is that a few lawyers have to find someone else to sue.

My conversations with those advocating for children with special needs and the parents of special needs children over the last few years have a common theme: school districts are skilled at figuring out who they can push around. The opening interview of this study on race and special education in Arizona is a repulsive example, and it was not hard to find. McKay equalizes access to private schools among the rich and poor and gives leverage to parents who cannot access specialized special education attorneys. 

3. Since McKay is designed to help those being poorly served by public schools, we should see a skew towards severe disabilities in the McKay population, but we do not. 

4. The learning disability category is murky and inaccurate, making an LD designation a poor basis for eligibility for a voucher. “Singling out just special education students for vouchers like this is not the way to expand educational choice. It creates more problems than it solves.”

Andy implicitly assumes that the parents with the children with the more profound disabilities will naturally be the least well served by their public schools and therefore argues that we ought to see McKay students skew towards the higher end of the disability scale. I believe this assumption is unjustified. Parents with mild disabilities may very rationally expect their children to succeed academically with some extra help and may become the most dissatisfied when that in fact does not occur.

John Stossel’s recent special (I know I’m running the risk of having Andy’s head explode in rage by citing Stossel, but stick with me Andy) taped an IEP meeting in South Carolina for a high school student. The principle stated that she saw progress with the student and was not concerned. The child’s mother returned repeatedly to the fact that her son was reading at a fourth grade level as a 15-year-old and was very frustrated. As it turned out, she had good reason to be frustrated. ABC footed the bill for private tutors and the student’s reading level increased by two grade levels after a mere 72 hours of tutoring. 

Therefore, I am not the least bit surprised that parents of LD kids have taken their fair share of McKay Scholarships. Andy is uncomfortable with them being eligible, I am not. I’m uncomfortable with them needlessly academically rotting like the kid above while the school collects extra money. Andy is as well, but is suffering apparent cognitive dissonance at the thought that voucher program might be helpful in solving the problem.

As I said in the previous post, I’m all for vigorously reforming the process of SLD identification, improved reading instruction, universal screening and remediation, etc.  Nor do I argue that McKay will solve all the problems of special education. I’m simply arguing that the McKay scholarship program represents a substantial improvement in the delivery of educational services for disabled children.

Having addressed the objections raised in Eduwonk, I will empirically test a theory of my own. I believe that Andy’s opposition to McKay, perhaps as a matter of reflex, has more to do with his general opposition to vouchers than to his opposition to McKay. “Of course, in the end McKay really isn’t about IDEA or special education anyway. It’s about vouchers,” Andy wrote. Ah, well, no. I believe McKay stands on its own merits as a valuable reform of special education regardless of the broader school choice debate.

Here is the test: Ohio has a voucher program which is like McKay, but limited to children with autism. It would be quite simple to design a McKay program that would be limited to
“non-murky” special needs designations. Although I view the exclusion of SLD children as unwise, as they have been victimized and are, as Andy admits, “teaching disabled”, I would support the Ohio program as an improvement over the current system. How about you, Andy? There are plenty of children with autism whose parents lack the resources to pay private school tuition and/or hire a special ed attorney to get them a school setting that they are comfortable is serving their needs. There are other families being financially crushed by the expense of keeping a child with autism in a private school, sometimes after having had a horrible experience in a public school. Can you support this program, or does the “v" word scare you away?

P.S. Andy had a couple of interesting comments in his post, most notably that I can make a bundle selling my copies of Rethinking Special Education my contention that school choice represents a solid Rawlsian reform is “debatable.” I must confess that I am an odd person to debate Rawls, but no less a source than Andy’s fellow Clintonite Matthew Miller quotes Rawls directly (page 83 of the Two Percent Solution):

“To Rawls, fair equality of opportunity primarily means that ‘the government tries to insure equal chances of education and culture for persons similarly endowed and motivated, either by subsidizing private schools or establishing a public school system.’”

I think that the public school system in America has been such a dreadful, tragic failure at providing this kind of equality of opportunity, steering the best teachers to the rich kids, keeping the poor kids in the most corrupt and dysfunctional schools etc.  

Debatable? Indeed, but a debate that I will welcome. Bring it on. 

Dr. Matthew Ladner is director of state projects at the Alliance for School Choice and is a senior fellow at the Goldwater Institute.