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Winter 2000 Table of Contents
Versión Español de este artículo (Spanish Version)
IDEA identifies four processes that are to occur sequentially in serving students with disabilities. First, we must identify and refer. Next, we are to conduct an individualized assessment, in collaboration with parents/guardians. Our third responsibility is to complete an individualized educational program (IEP) for each student. And, finally, we are to determine placement, based on the assessed needs and the educational goals for each child. While there have been efforts to play with this sequence in the name of inclusive education, these IDEA principles have, for the most part, stood the test of time. Of the four processes, the last, placement, is the one that most often challenges the philosophic beliefs of both parents and professionals. In this article, I will be presenting some thoughts and beliefs about placement. I invite readers to respond, and perhaps we can begin a healthy, productive dialog.
The federal regulations written for implementation of IDEA clearly state that students with disabilities are to have available to them a continuum of placement options. Supporting this concept is the Policy Guidance on Education of Students with Visual Impairments, prepared and disseminated by the U.S. Department of Education. More recently, the National Association of State Directors of Special Education (NASDSE) has published a book entitled, Blind and Visually Impaired Students: Educational Service Guidelines, intended to provide special education administrators with directions in providing educational services for blind and visually impaired students. This publication also stresses the absolute necessity of having an array of placement options in order to address the individual needs of students.
It is clear that, if blind and visually impaired students are to receive a "Free and Appropriate Public Education" (FAPE) in the "Least Restrictive Environment" (LRE), all students must have available to them several placement options. One of these options should then be able to be "customized" in order to meet the specific needs of a particular student. To provide any less would be legally, ethically, and morally wrong.
I have been stating in recent years (having no documentation or data to back it up) that probably 90% of the blind and visually impaired students in the U.S. have only two placement options: the services of an itinerant teacher or the school for the blind. (There seem to be very few resource rooms or self-contained classrooms for blind and visually impaired children left in the country.) Expansion beyond these two options seems to depend on the creativity and flexibility of both the local school district and the school for the blind. I will expand more on this later.
There is no consensus among leaders of schools for the blind in the U.S. concerning the role these schools should have as we enter into a new century. As you will see, I have rather strong opinions on this subject, and I know many of my colleagues agree with me, for they have helped me mold my beliefs. I also know that there are leaders who are my colleagues who believe that, as inclusive education begins to show cracks and fails a growing number of students, blind and visually impaired children with high academic potential will be coming back to schools for the blind in droves. I reject this latter position, primarily because inclusion, as practiced in education for the visually impaired for the past 50 years, has worked more often than not, and several generations of highly successful visually impaired adults in our communities are living and walking examples of the success of inclusive education. I also believe that parents who have the choice of keeping their children in the home, in the community, and attending a neighborhood school, will almost always opt for this over sending their children far away to a residential school.
As much as many of my colleagues would like to live in a "black and white" professional world, I'm afraid that the only way we will succeed in providing individualized instruction to children is to live in a "gray world". I find myself very comfortable in a gray world, but I know, and Myers/Briggs results verify, that there are many of us for whom gray is terribly uncomfortable. Thus, my description of what you should expect from a school for the blind is continually being adjusted, is continually shifting, and must be allowed the flexibility to answer to the needs of today and tomorrow.
I will address this to teachers, parents, and administrators in Texas. If those of you from other states and countries find value in this, I will be pleased. But my purpose is best served if I specify as my audience my fellow Texans.
The Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired (TSBVI) is committed to providing services, as needed, to all blind and visually impaired students in the state. For the more than 6,500 students in Texas that are identified as visually impaired, TSBVI must provide a wide variety of services. Colleagues in education service centers and in local school districts and parents have guided us in determining the services we need to provide.
TSBVI believes that blind and visually impaired students should be educated, to the greatest extent possible, in their local school districts. We believe that quality services at the local level require tremendous commitment from school districts, and if that commitment doesn't exist, services provided might be less than desirable.
TSBVI must be prepared to meet the needs of the following students with quality education and residential services:
Perhaps a stronger emphasis in the expanded core curriculum will mean a partial change in the TSBVI summer program. Indeed, if local districts call on us to meet curricular needs in areas such as social skills, living skills, technology, etc., we will respond to such a request. We have both the facilities and an expert staff to provide intensive instruction in the expanded core curriculum. TSBVI expects that short-term programs during the school year will also address the expanded core curriculum.
As is evident, TSBVI is capable and ready to meet the individual needs of blind and visually impaired students in Texas by providing a variety of on-campus instructional opportunities. We are ready to address specific needs for an individual student, as identified by parents and the local school district. Our promise to local schools and parents/guardians is that we will work intently on the needs that caused the referral of the student, so that the student can return home and to the neighborhood school as soon as possible.
TSBVI is responsible in some manner for the education of all blind and visually impaired students in Texas. This is a legislative mandate, and it is a responsibility we assume when we consider ourselves as the "hub" of education for blind and visually impaired students in the state. As I have described, we meet that mandate by providing a wide array of on-campus educational opportunities for Texas students. But what about the thousands of students who never set foot on our campus?
Of all the services provided by TSBVI, our Outreach Department is probably best known statewide. We have been fortunate in assembling a gifted, highly trained and experienced professional staff to serve in our Outreach Department. What began as a technical assistance program for teachers, administrators, and parents, has grown to include many other components that impact on the education of all children in the state. Among these are:
Two additional off-campus services that must be highlighted are:
Off-campus services do not exactly fit the term "placement" as it applies to schools for the blind. However, I would contend that the education of most, if not all, blind and visually impaired students in Texas is a shared responsibility between the local district and TSBVI. Thus, in a way, all students have a "joint placement" if we consider the term to mean services, and not a place.
There is no more treacherous ground on which a superintendent of a school for the blind can travel than the topic of educational placement for blind and visually impaired students. If we celebrate our accomplishments and share our expertise, some may consider us recruiting. If we build a wall around us and shut ourselves off from the rest of education and the community, we will soon die. So, what should we do? I have taken the position that blind and visually impaired students in Texas should be provided appropriate educational services in their local schools, in their home communities. They should be able to live at home with their families, and receive an education that is as good as that provided to their sighted age-mates. In the few cases where this might not be possible, the school for the blind is ready and eager to serve students. If there are areas of learning that might be better achieved at the school for the blind, we are prepared to provide intensive, specific short-term programs. Thus, the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired (TSBVI) serves in a collaborative and cooperative manner with local school districts, meeting needs as mutually determined by the local school, the parents, and TSBVI.
I have become rather glib in describing this highly desirable relationship with local districts, assuring parents, teachers, and administrators that we stand ready to help when called upon. However, when I shed my role as Superintendent of TSBVI, and consider what I really am, an educator for blind and visually impaired students, I am challenged to describe what I consider to be an appropriate education for blind and visually impaired students in their local schools. I am vain enough to believe that I can be an unbiased evaluator of educational placement, one who can keep the playing field level for all placement options. If I can keep the needs of a child as the most critical ingredient in making a placement decision, then I am able to see beyond the assets and liabilities of specific placements.
So, here we go on dangerous ground. I'm going to describe to you the conditions that must exist at the local school district level if blind and visually impaired students are to receive an appropriate education. Education of the highest quality can be available in local schools under the following conditions:
I consider these my non-negotiables in supporting local school district placements for blind and visually impaired students. Perhaps some of you will want to take issue with these. Perhaps others would like to add additional points. I welcome dialog on this topic.
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Last Revision: September 4, 2003