HOW THE LAWYERS TOOK OVER SPECIAL EDUCATION



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HOW THE LAWYERS TOOK OVER SPECIAL EDUCATION Jim Walsh PUBLIC EDUCATION: THE EARLY, EARLY DAYS In colonial days, private schooling was the norm. Thomas Jefferson called for a system of public schooling for 20 young boys who could not afford private schooling. He advocated this plan by saying that it would enable them to rake from the rubbish 20 promising scholars. RAKED FROM THE RUBBISH??? Education has been raking them from the rubbish ever since. We are a country of immigrants. Just about every immigrant group was considered rubbish when they first got here. Walsh Anderson 2013 1

HORACE MANN In the 19 th Century, public education became compulsory. Education was viewed as a moral enterprise. Horace Mann called for school board members to be sentinels who should ensure that every teacher is clothed in garments of virtue. WE DIVERSIFY In the late 19 th and early 20 th Century America became considerably more diverse in ethnicity, religion, language and culture. Most of the newcomers crowded into the public schools. Some groups set up their own school system. HERE S WHERE I COME IN I attended Catholic school for 13 years first grade through first year of college. Very little law applies to Catholic schools. U.S. Constitution does not apply. Catholic school is an institution based on TRUST not law. Where there is trust, you don t need legal rules and regulations. Walsh Anderson 2013 2

THE TIMES THEY ARE A-CHANGIN 1954: Brown v. Board of Education. 1955: Rosa Parks boards the bus. 1957?: Mrs. Gump enrolls Forrest in school. MORE DEVELOPMENTS 1964: Congress enacts Civil Rights Act. 1972: Congress enacts Title IX. 1972: First federal court cases to mandate special education services for all children. 1973: Congress enacts Section 504. 1975: Congress enacts P.L. 94-142, calling for FAPE for all children with disabilities. Walsh Anderson 2013 3

MEANWHILE, THE COURTS ENTER THE SCHOOLHOUSE Tinker v. Des Moines kids acquire 1st Amendment rights in school 1969. Goss v. Lopez kids acquire the right to due process, 14 th Amendment rights in school 1975. New Jersey v. T.L.O. kids acquire 4 th Amendment rights in school 1985. The notion that educators can be trusted to do the right thing slowly erodes. We believe we need the law. THE LAW: STRENGTHS, WEAKNESSES The law is good at answering big questions. The law is bad at answering small questions. The big questions in special education were answered long ago. Now we spend precious resources fighting over the small questions. EXAMPLE: THE BIG QUESTIONS Does the public school have to serve everyone? Should SWD be served with the other kids? Should we teach them the same curriculum? Should we hold them to the same standards? Should we take their disabilities into account before excluding them from school? Should we provide necessary related services? Walsh Anderson 2013 4

SMALL QUESTIONS Who has to be at the IEP Team meeting? Under what circumstances can school personnel discuss the child without inviting the parent? What is meaningful participation in an IEP Team meeting? What disability label should we use with the child? THE PREDICTION President Ford signed the bill in 1975 but predicted that it would falsely raise the expectations of the parents of children with disabilities. He also predicted a vast array of detailed, complex, and costly administrative requirements. Taxes will be used to support administrative paperwork and not educational programs. SPECIAL ED Our special ed laws epitomize the movement from trust-based education to law-based education. Every aspect of special education is constrained by legal requirements, process and paperwork. Schools are held accountable through a legalistic system of dispute resolution. Walsh Anderson 2013 5

WHAT WE NEED IS BALANCE A system that is based ENTIRELY on trust will facilitate abuse of that trust. It will work well for some, but not for all. A system that is based ENTIRELY on law will lead to paralysis, conflict, bureaucracy, and resources spent on legal disputes rather than education. We need a SENSIBLE BALANCE. WHAT NOW? We are not going back to the good old days. Nor should we. Trust will not be given automatically it must be earned. We are trusted when we show ourselves to be trustworthy. We must cultivate virtue in the profession. We must restore the idea that education is a MORAL ENTERPRISE. IT STARTS WITH YOU But if you want to cultivate virtue in the kids, you have to demonstrate it yourself. We must all be CLOTHED IN GARMENTS OF VIRTUE. Horace Mann was right about that. Walsh Anderson 2013 6

CONTACT Jim Walsh Walsh, Anderson, Gallegos, Green and Treviño, P.C. P.O. Box 2156 Austin, Texas 78768 Phone: (512) 454-6864 Fax: (512) 467-9318 Email: jwalsh@wabsa.com Web: www.walshanderson.com Twitter: twitter.com/jwalshtxlawdawg The information in this handout was created by Walsh, Anderson, Gallegos, Green and Treviño, P.C. It is intended to be used for general information only and is not to be considered specific legal advice. If specific legal advice is sought, consult an attorney. Walsh Anderson 2013 7

Jim Walsh Walsh, Anderson, Gallegos, Green, and Treviño, P.C. 505 E. Huntland Dr., Ste. 600 Austin, Texas 78752 Jwalsh@wabsa.com http://www.wabsa.com Jim Walsh graduated from the University of Texas School of Law in 1975 and began his career in Texas school law by serving as the attorney for the Region XIII Legal Service Program, beginning in 1979. In 1983, Mr. Walsh, Joe Hairston and Tom Doyal (now retired from the firm) founded the firm, now known as Walsh, Anderson, Gallegos, Green and Treviño, P.C., to focus on representing Texas public schools. He is the co-author of The Educator's Guide to Texas School Law and the author of The Common Sense Guide to Special Education Law. He is publisher and managing editor of the Texas School Administrators' Legal Digest, for which he writes the popular "Law Dawg" column. He is the author of a monthly newsletter on special education, This Just In..., the monthly Walsh s Word column in the IEP Team Trainer publication, and is editor in chief and a regular columnist for Texas School Business magazine. He serves on the Advisory Board for LRP Publications. Mr. Walsh has taught school law at the graduate level. He has conducted inservice training sessions at every Education Service Center in the state and at hundreds of school districts. Mr. Walsh is a highly sought-after speaker in Texas and throughout the nation.