Special education advocates focus on funding, mental health and teacher shortages

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Special education advocates focus on funding, mental health and teacher shortages

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ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Special education advocates are visiting lawmakers on Capitol Hill this week, urging them to dedicate more funding to student mental well-being and educator shortages to improve outcomes for students with disabilities.

Many of the challenges facing special education are connected. For example, advocates say more funding and resources are needed under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act to meet the demand for special education personnel and related service providers. And without qualified staff, it is a challenge to meet students’ mental health needs, advocates said.

Those comments came during this week’s Special Education Legislative Summit, hosted by the Council for Exceptional Children and the Council of Administrators of Special Education with more than 225 participants from across the country.

According to the National Center for Education Statistics, about 70% of surveyed schools reported special education teacher vacancies in the 2023-24 school year. About 50% of special education teachers leave the profession within the first five years of teaching, according to CEC and CASE.

At the same time, more and more students are being served under IDEA. About 7.5 million students were identified with disabilities in 2022-23 — equaling about 15% of the pre-K, elementary and secondary student population, according to NCES. CEC and CASE estimate the number of students with disabilities will rise to 7.94 million during the 2024-25 school year. 

A person stands at a wooden podium with a microphone that has a sign reading "The Westin Alexandria." To the person's left is a table with a white tablecloth. on top of the table is a laptop.

Glenna Wright-Gallo, the assistant secretary in the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, speaks to Special Education Legislative Summit attendees on July 29, 2024, in Alexandria, Va.

Kara Arundel/K-12 Dive

 

On Monday, Glenna Wright-Gallo, assistant secretary of the U.S Department of Education’s Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, told summit attendees of the nonnegotiables in how she approaches her job. They include building the conditions for special education professionals to succeed and sending a message of urgency for supporting students.

“​​Because what happens today impacts those children for the rest of their lives, we do not have time to say, ‘We can’t get to that. I’ll get to that next year. That’s part of my three-year plan,’” Wright-Gallo said. “We have to do it now.”

Here are other highlights from the summit.

Mental health needs

As the 2024-25 school year gets underway, student mental well-being continues to be a high priority for the education profession. To help support students’ mental health, CASE and CEC are focusing on increasing school-based health services and recruitment and retention of high-quality professionals.

Specifically, the organizations are encouraging support for a Senate bill, the Creating Access and Resources in Education for Student Mental Health Act. The measure would authorize two mental health grants under the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act to increase the number of school-based mental health professionals. 

“We know that when we have a child who comes to school who is having a crisis, a mental health crisis, who’s upset, who is not ready to sit in the seat and engage, that learning doesn’t happen,” said Myrna Mandlawitz, a policy and legislative consultant at CASE. “So this is critically important to make sure that our students are able and prepared to learn.” 

Four adults sit in chairs that are on a stage inside a room. Behind them is a dark curtain on the

From left to right, Caden Fabbi, Myrna Mandlawitz, Lakeisha Steele and Kate Domanski discuss the importance of school-based mental health supports during a panel at the Special Education Legislative Summit on July 30, 2024 in Alexandria, Va.

Kara Arundel/K-12 Dive

 

A Tuesday panel on student mental health discussed the importance of mentorships, positive school climates and school-family relationships. 

Lakeisha Steele, vice president of policy for the nonprofit Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning, also said it’s important for schools to implement a social-emotional framework to help students build skills for success in school and in future careers.

Although the terms SEL and well-being have been criticized by some politicians and parents in recent years, Steele said, CASEL “is trying our best to protect and safeguard the term social-emotional learning as an evidence-based strategy.”

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