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Report Evaluation Report

National Assessment of IDEA Overview IDEA National Assessment Implementation Study Executive Summary and Report

NCEE
Author(s):
M.C. Bradley, Marjorie Levin, Fran O'Reilly, Amanda Parsad, Anne Robertson, and Alan Werner: Abt Associates. Tamara Daley, Westat.
Publication date:
July 2011
Publication number:
NCEE 20114026

Summary

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), reauthorized in 2004, supports states in the provision of early intervention and special education and related services for 7 million children and youth with disabilities. In fiscal year 2010, federal funding for IDEA was $12.6 billion.

The congressionally mandated study provides a national picture of state agency implementation of early intervention programs for infants and toddlers (IDEA Part C) and both state and school district implementation of special education programs for preschool- and school-age children (IDEA Part B). The study is based on surveys of state agency directors and a nationally representative sample of district special education directors conducted in 2009. The key findings include:

  • State Part C agencies support the transition of toddlers with disabilities to Part B preschool-age special education programs, but Part C has not expanded to serve children until kindergarten. At age 3, toddlers receiving Part C services transition to Part B services (if eligible), typically involving a change in lead agency (in 46 states) and often a change in support staff, service settings, and services.
  • Most school districts (85 percent) do not use IDEA Part B funds to provide Coordinated Early Intervening Services (CEIS). IDEA 2004 permits, and in some cases requires, school districts to use some of their Part B funds to provide CEIS, services for students not yet identified as needing special education. These services are meant to address the overrepresentation of racial/ethnic minority students in special education.
  • Most school districts implement Response to Intervention (RtI), use RtI data when determining specific learning disability (SLD) eligibility, and support RtI with district general funds. RtI, a range of practices for monitoring student academic and behavioral progress and providing targeted interventions, was added to IDEA in 2004 as a way to inform the determination of SLD and implement CEIS.

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Evaluation Report
NCEE

National Assessment of IDEA Overview IDEA National Assessment Implementation Study Executive Summary and Report

By: M.C. Bradley, Marjorie Levin, Fran O'Reilly, Amanda Parsad, Anne Robertson, and Alan Werner: Abt Associates. Tamara Daley, Westat.
Download and view this document 20114027.pdf

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