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President's Commission on Excellence in Special Education Holds First

Date: 01/23/2002

The President's Commission on Excellence in Special Education was

sworn in today and set out its agenda for the next four months.

U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige delivered welcoming remarks and

swore in the 19-member commission.

"He is committed to the bold proposition that every child can learn,"

Paige told the commission. "This doesn't mean that, after you siphon off the

children who have disabilities; or the children who were never properly

taught how to read; or the children who never learned English; or the

children who disrupted their classrooms, most of the rest of them can learn.

"It means that all of our kids, even the ones our system calls 'hard

to teach' can learn. This means that even students with disabilities can

learn to high standards."

Paige also called on the commission to discover what works to improve

the performance of students with disabilities.

"Your task as a commission is to discover what works to improve the

performance of students with disabilities receiving special education," he

said. "Talk to other experts. Examine research. Study preventive reading

programs, and tell us how Washington can help state and local communities

provide excellent special education services."

President Bush created the commission in October to collect

information and study issues related to federal, state and local special

education programs with the goal of recommending policies for improving the

educational performance of students with disabilities. The purpose of the

meetings is to hear from experts and members of the public who will provide

the commission with information and guidance.

The commission is charged with producing a final report to the

president by this summer that contains findings and recommendations in the

following nine areas:

a.. Cost-effectiveness: The effectiveness and cost of special

education and the appropriate role of the federal government in special

education programming and funding, including an analysis of the factors that

have contributed to the growth in costs of special education since the

enactment of the Education for All Handicapped Children Act (a predecessor

of IDEA);

b.. Improving Results: How federal resources can best be used to

improve educational results for students with disabilities;

c.. Research: A special education research agenda;

d.. Early Intervention: The impact of providing appropriate early

intervention in reading instruction on the referral and identification of

children for special education;

e.. Funding Formulae: The effect of special education funding on

decisions to serve, place, or refer children for special education services

and possible alternative funding formulae that might distribute funds to

achieve better results and eliminate any current incentives that undermine

the goals of ensuring high-quality education for children with disabilities;

f.. Teacher Quality and Student Accountability: How the federal

government can help states and local education agencies provide a

high-quality education to students with disabilities, including the

recruitment and retention of qualified personnel and the inclusion of

children with disabilities in performance and accountability systems;

g.. Regulations and Red Tape: The impact of federal and state

statutory, regulatory and administrative requirements on the cost and

effectiveness of special education services, and how these requirements

support or hinder the educational achievement of students with disabilities;

h.. What Models Work in the States: How differences in local

education agency size, location, demographics and wealth, and in-state law

and practice affect which children are referred to special education and the

cost of special education; and

i.. Federal v. Local Funding: A review of the experiences of state

and local governments in financing special education, and an analysis of

whether changes to the federal "supplement not supplant" and "maintenance of

effort" requirements are appropriate.

Commission members approved the following meeting schedule: Feb.

25-27, Houston, Texas; March 6, Denver, Colo.; March 13, Des Moines, Iowa;

March 20, San Diego, Calif.; March 21, Los Angeles, Calif.; April 9-10,

Miami, Fla.; April 16, New York City, N.Y.; April 18, Nashville, Tenn.; and

May 30-31, Washington, D.C. Meeting times and locations will be available at

a later date, and additional meetings may be added by the commission, if

necessary.

The commission members are: Terry Edward Branstad of Iowa, chairman;

Adela Acosta, Maryland; Steve Bartlett, Texas; William Berdine, Kentucky;

Paula Butterfield, Pennsylvania; Jay G. Chambers, California; W. Alan

Coulter, Louisiana; Floyd Flake, New York; Thomas Albert Fleming, Michigan;

Jack M. Fletcher, Texas; Douglas H. Gill, Washington; David W. Gordon,

California; Nancy Grasmick, Maryland; Steve Hammerman, New York; Bryan

Hassel, North Carolina; Douglas Carl Huntt, Ohio; Michael J. Rivas, Texas;

Cheryl Rei Takemoto, Virginia; and Katie Wright, Illinois.


ASA, ASC,or ASACCC do not endorse any individuals, groups or programs. References regarding programs, meetings, resources, research, opinions, treatment, etc., should not be interpreted as an indication of endorsement. They are provided for informational purposes only.

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