In new guidance sent to educators across the country,
federal education officials say that schools may be liable if they don’t
properly address bullying of students with disabilities.
The guidance
issued Tuesday in a four-page “Dear Colleague” letter details the unique
obligations that schools have under the Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act to ensure that children with disabilities are not victimized.
Specifically, officials from the U.S. Department of
Education’s Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services said that
bullying can lead to a denial of a student’s right to a free and appropriate
public education, or FAPE, if it “results in the student not receiving
meaningful educational benefit.”
What’s more, they warned schools not to automatically move a
student with a disability who is being bullied to a more segregated environment.
Such a change could be considered a denial of a student’s right to be educated
in the least restrictive environment, the guidance said.
“We know that students with disabilities are
disproportionately affected by bullying,” said Melody Musgrove, director of the
Education Department’s Office of Special Education Programs. “Schools have a
responsibility to ensure that FAPE and the least restrictive environment is
available to students with disabilities.”
In cases where bullying occurs, educators should intervene
immediately and respond “quickly and consistently,” according to the letter
signed by Musgrove and Michael Yudin, acting assistant secretary for the Office
of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services.
Additionally, a meeting of the student’s individualized
education program team should be called to address any changes in a student’s
services or program that might be needed as a result of bullying, officials
said. However, the letter indicates that any student who experiences bullying
should remain in his or her original placement unless they are no longer able
to receive FAPE in that environment.
Musgrove said that the move to issue guidance is part of the
Department of Education’s ongoing effort to address bullying within the
nation’s schools. While the letter does not detail any new legal obligations,
federal officials are encouraging schools to re-evaluate their policies and
practices.
Several studies in recent years have suggested that children
with disabilities more frequently encounter bullying. Findings
released in 2012 from a nationwide poll indicated that 63 percent of kids with
autism have been bullied. Another study
published the same year found that about half of adolescents with autism,
intellectual disability, speech impairments and learning disabilities were
bullied at school.
Ari Ne’eman, president of the Autistic Self Advocacy
Network, called the Education Department’s move a “significant step forward.”
“Right now, many autistic students experiencing bullying are
sent to segregated settings,” Ne’eman said. “We believe this clarification of
obligations emerging under IDEA’s (least restrictive environment) provision may
have a significant impact on the inclusion of autistic students as well as
those with other disabilities.”
Written by: Michelle Diament (disabilityscoop.com)
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