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NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

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Page 1: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM

Preliminary Results

1

February 2012

Page 2: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

Part 1: Background of the Reform• Major reports on special education in NYC & goals of the reform – Slide 4• Historical trends: Graduation data – Slide 5• What the national research shows – Slide 6• NYC system-wide analysis supports the national research – Slide 7• Phase 1 and non-Phase 1 schools – Slides 8-10• Developing a group of Comparison Schools – Slides 10-11

Part 2: Phase 1 Preliminary Results • Results Summary – Slide 13• Initial referrals to special education – Slide 14-15• LRE recommendations – Slide 16-17• Program Recommendations – Slide 18-21• Attendance – Slide 22• Key attributes central to school-level reform – Slide 23

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Contents

Page 3: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

Part 1: BACKGROUND OF THE REFORM

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Page 4: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

In July 2009, the NYC DOE initiated a system-wide reform of special education. Two reports on special education reinforced the need for change.

>Least Restrictive Environment: “The placement process in NYC emphasizes the notion of placement as the availability of ‘seats’ in special education programs rather than as the services and environment that are appropriate to the individualized needs of the student . . . . Moreover, this process promotes the idea that special education is a ‘place’ rather than a service, and places priority of such placement over what should be the most important consideration – the general education placement.” (from the Hehir Report, 2005)>Access to the General Education Curriculum & Student Achievement: “In the coming years, consistent with the principles of Children First, the Department should increase its focus on long-term outcomes for students with disabilities and empower schools, parents, and DOE staff to collaborate in building successful instructional models and strengthening the culture of inclusion for students with disabilities.” (from the Harries Report, 2009)

Drawing further from those reports and our commitment to accelerating the system-wide achievement of student with disabilities, we formulated three major goals for the reform:

1. To close the achievement gap between students with disabilities and their peers without disabilities.2. To increase access to and participation in the general education curriculum for students with disabilities.3. To build school-based capacity to support the diverse needs of students with disabilities through greater curricular, instructional, and scheduling flexibility.

The need for change was also clear in the system-wide graduation data.

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Diploma Type

Notes: Graduation rate totals may not equal total of diploma types due to rounding. Totals reflect data available at the time of reporting provided by NYS; August graduate data is only available for years 2009-2010.

Local

Regents

Adv. Regents

17.1% 18.5% 18.3%

22.5%

26.6%

30.7%

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

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Although more high school graduates with disabilities earn Regents diplomas, the percentage of students with disabilities graduating from high school

in 4 years is only 30.7%.

Percent of Students With Disabilities Graduating from High School in 4 Years

Page 6: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

Also foundational to the development of the reform goals was the national research on special education which shows that the more time students with disabilities spend in a general education classroom, the…

• higher their scores are on standardized tests of reading and math;• fewer absences they have from school;• fewer referrals they have for disruptive behavior; and• better outcomes they have after high school in the areas of employment

and independent living.

This was found for all students with disabilities, regardless of: • disability label• severity of disability• gender• family’s socio-economic status

(Wagner, Newman, Cameto, Levine, & Garza, 2006)

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Page 7: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

Preliminary results from our system-wide analysis of trends in special education programming are consistent with national research findings on the relationship between LRE and student achievement.

With 19% of students with disabilities in grades 4-8 tested in 2011 who had moved to less restrictive environments within the past four years:

Source: 2010-11 Elementary/Middle School Progress Reports

Note: “Student Moved to Less Restrictive” is based on a comparison of a student’s 2010-11 program setting and level of inclusion with that of the previous four years.  The tiers, from most to least restrictive, are: self-contained  0-40%, self-contained 40-80%, self-contained/CTT/SETSS 80-100%, and decertified/related services only.

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• ELA proficiency of those students was, on average, 2.49, compared to 2.29 for students who did not move to a less restrictive environment; and,

• Math proficiency of those students was, on average, 2.79, compared to 2.55 for students who did not move to a less restrictive environment.

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Page 8: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

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Non-Phase 1 Phase 1

Enrollment Students are enrolled where there is program availability; programs are assigned to schools based on historic capacity and projected program need.

Students have same access to schools as if they did not have an IEP; school is responsible for serving the student. Students will not be transferred because of changes in the IEP. Students zoned to a Phase 1 school are offered to attend their zoned school.

Funding Elementary and middle schools are funded for classes; schools receive “empty seat” funding to make class allocations whole.

Schools are funded per capita; schools utilize their resources to best serve student need instead of maintaining specific programs.

Programming Students are programmed with limited variability for either SETSS, ICT, or self-contained.

Flexible programming is encouraged and allows varied services, as appropriate, leading to increased LRE and access to the general education curriculum.

In April 2010, ten networks (260 schools) agreed to begin the work of the special education reform as the “Phase 1 Schools.”

During the first year of Phase 1, consistent with the research previously cited, we began to change operational practices on how we enrolled and placed students with disabilities, and explore how flexibility within the Continuum of Services allowed schools to create more varied programs of instruction for students with disabilities.

Comparing Phase 1 and non-Phase 1 Schools

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The Phase 1 Schools served higher proportions of Hispanic students, English Language Learners, and Students with Disabilities.

Student Demographics in Phase 1 Schools Compared to Citywide Averages *

Phase 1 Citywide

* Demographic data are based on the Audited Register as of 10.31.2010. ELL=English Language Learners; SwD=Students with Disabilities

Page 10: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

Because the Phase 1 Schools had different demographics than the rest of the city, we established a set of comparison schools for our analyses.

We used the following methodology to identify a set of comparison schools that served a similar group of students as those in Phase 1.

We used Propensity Score Matching (PSM) to identify comparison schools that were similar to Phase 1 Schools in 2009-10 (the year before Phase 1 started).

Separate models were examined for schools with grades 3-8, grades 9-

12, grades pk-2 only, and for new schools that opened in 2010-2011.

The result was an overall sample of 270 Comparison Schools that would be compared to the 260 Phase 1 Schools for all subsequent analyses.

These two groups of schools did not differ in terms of total enrollment, school borough, whether the school was a new school, and school demographics including free/reduced lunch, student ethnicity, % English Language Learners, % students with disabilities, and Math and ELA proficiency for students with disabilities.

* Variables included in the PSM model: total enrollment, dummy codes for borough, %ELL, %SwD, % Asian, % White, % Hispanic, % Black, and an indicator for whether the school was new since 2002. 10

Page 11: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

When Phase 1 Schools were compared to Comparison Schools by borough and school level, Elementary and Middle Schools tended to be located in the Bronx;

High Schools were more evenly distributed, with a larger number located in Manhattan.

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*

* ‘Other’ schools include, Early Childhood, K-12, K-8, and 6-12 schools; Across both groups, 69% of High schools are new schools

MiddleElementary High School Other

PHASE 1N=260

COMPARISONN=270

55

123

53

22

7

60

122

57

22

9

Number of Phase 1 and Comparison Schools by Borough and School Level

Page 12: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

Part 2: PRELIMINARY DATA FROM PHASE 1 OF THE REFORM

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Page 13: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

• Phase 1 Schools showed greater decreases in initial referral rates than Comparison Schools since 2009-10.

• Phase 1 Schools had higher rates of recommendations to LRE and showed greater increases than Comparison Schools since 2009-10.

• Phase 1 and Comparison Schools did not have a significant difference in attendance rates.

• A preliminary look at the student outcomes showed no statistically significant differences on Math & ELA proficiency between Phase 1 and Comparison Schools.

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RESULTS SUMMARY:

Following are preliminary results for the implementation of the reform during September 2010 to December 2011.

Page 14: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

PRELIMINARY TREND:

Between 2010 and 2011, initial referral rates decreased twice as much in Phase 1 Schools as they did in Comparison Schools.

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2010 2011

Note: SESIS, the DOE’s new data system for collecting information about students with disabilities was implemented in the 10-11 school year. This resulted in updates to data initially reported. Initial referral rates are based on the number of initial referrals divided by the total number of students without IEPs as of June of each year.

Initial Referrals

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PRELIMINARY TREND: Across all grade levels, Phase 1 Schools have shown greater decreases in

initial referral rates since 2009-10 than Comparison Schools.

2010 2011

K-5 6-8 9-12

15Note: SESIS, the DOE’s new data system for collecting information about students with disabilities was implemented in the 10-11 school year. This resulted in updates to data initially reported. Initial referral rates are based on the number of initial referrals divided by the total number of students without IEPs as of June of each year.

Initial Referrals

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PRELIMINARY TREND: Phase 1 Schools showed a greater increase in recommendations to less

restrictive settings. Between 2010 and 2011, Comparison Schools increased their LRE recommendations* by 1.9%, while Phase 1 Schools increased their

LRE recommendations* by 11.3%.

2010 2011

Note: SESIS, the DOE’s new data system for collecting information about students with disabilities was implemented in the 10-11 school year. This resulted in updates to data initially reported. LRE=Less Restrictive Environment. * Includes all recommendations from re-evaluations and triennial conferences.

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LRE Recommendations

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PRELIMINARY TREND: Across all grade levels, Phase 1 Schools had higher rates of

recommendations to LRE than Comparison Schools.

2010 2011

K-5 6-8 9-12

17Note: SESIS, the DOE’s new data system for collecting information about students with disabilities was implemented in the 10-11 school year. This resulted in updates to data initially reported. LRE=Less Restrictive Environment. * Includes all recommendations from re-evaluations and triennial conferences.

LRE Recommendations

Page 18: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

Related Services Only SETSS Integrated Co-Teaching SELF-CONTAINED

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LRE Placement Continuum

OVERALL TRENDS

PRELIMINARY TREND:

Phase 1 Schools showed a greater decrease in self-contained classes than Comparison Schools. Both Phase 1 and Comparison Schools showed increases in team teaching classes. Both also showed decreases in special education teacher

support services (SETSS).

Phase 1 June 2010

Phase 1 June 2011

Comparison June 2010

Comparison June 2011

18Note: SESIS, the DOE’s new data system for collecting information about students with disabilities was implemented in the 10-11 school year. This resulted in updates to data initially reported.

Program Recommendations

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Related Services Only SETSS Integrated Co-Teaching SELF-CONTAINED

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LRE Placement Continuum

Grades K-5

PRELIMINARY TREND:

Phase 1 Schools showed a greater decrease in self-contained classes than Comparison Schools. Both Phase 1 and Comparison Schools showed increases in team teaching. Both also showed decreases in special education teacher support

services (SETSS).

Phase 1 June 2010

Phase 1 June 2011

Comparison June 2010

Comparison June 2011

19Note: SESIS, the DOE’s new data system for collecting information about students with disabilities was implemented in the 10-11 school year. This resulted in updates to data initially reported.

Program Recommendations

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Grades 6-8

PRELIMINARY TREND:

Phase 1 Schools showed a greater decrease in self-contained classes than Comparison Schools. Both Phase 1 and Comparison Schools showed increases in team teaching classes and in related services only. Both also showed decreases in

special education teacher support services (SETSS).

20Note: SESIS, the DOE’s new data system for collecting information about students with disabilities was implemented in the 10-11 school year. This resulted in updates to data initially reported.

Related Services Only SETSS Integrated Co-Teaching SELF-CONTAINED

LRE Placement ContinuumPhase 1 June 2010

Phase 1 June 2011

Comparison June 2010

Comparison June 2011

Program Recommendations

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Grades 9-12

PRELIMINARY TREND:

Phase 1 Schools showed a greater decrease in self-contained classes than Comparison Schools. Both Phase 1 and Comparison Schools showed increases in team teaching. Both also showed decreases in special education teacher support

services (SETSS).

21Note: SESIS, the DOE’s new data system for collecting information about students with disabilities was implemented in the 10-11 school year. This resulted in updates to data initially reported.

Related Services Only SETSS Integrated Co-Teaching SELF-CONTAINED

LRE Placement ContinuumPhase 1 June 2010

Phase 1 June 2011

Comparison June 2010

Comparison June 2011

Program Recommendations

Page 22: NYC SPECIAL EDUCATION REFORM Preliminary Results 1 February 2012

PRELIMINARY TREND: Phase 1 and Comparison Schools did not have a

significant difference in attendance rates.

2010 2011

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Attendance Rates

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PRELIMINARY TREND:

Key attributes identified as considered central to reform at the school level*.

* data compiled from surveys, interviews, and schools visits.