Does Your School
Have A Secret Seclusion Room That They Forgot To Tell You About?
Last year the Huffington Post reported that families across the country
are challenging a system they say has not only failed to educate and protect
their children, but also endangered their lives. According to the Huffington
Post, dozens of lawsuits have been filed against schools and districts as
parents speak out against physical disciplinary methods that have injured or
killed their children, ABC News reports. The families claim that an extensive
abuse of harsh methods to restrain misbehaving students -- many with special
needs -- has become a chronic problem in U.S. schools. ABC's family interviews reflect the findings
of a federal report released in March. The Huffington Post further reports that Education Department officials
found that schools physically restrained students 39,000 times during the
2009-2010 school year, and about 70 percent of cases involved students with
special needs. Schools also are reducing
nonviolent intervention training, according to a survey by the American
Association of School Administrators, as states lose grants and face budget
cuts. There are currently no federal
standards for the use of seclusion and restraint in schools, and only 17 states
have explicit laws that limit the use of such punitive measures. Read more: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/30/school-seclusion-restraint_n_2219091.html On November 20, 2013, NBC Connecticut Troubleshooters, Sabrina Kuriakose,
in her report, “Seclusion Rooms Used 23,000 Times in Connecticut Schools,” reported
that numbers from the State Department of Education show it's happening much
more than experts and advocates thought. James McGaughey is the head of the
Office of Protection and Advocacy for Persons with Disabilities. "That's
just a huge number. So it ought to be high on everybody's agenda to deal with
it,” said McGaughey. Records show in the
2011-2012 school year, Connecticut children were put in isolation rooms more
than 23,000 times. “It's happening in
almost every school district,” said Dr. Melissa Olive, an autism expert and
founder of Applied Behavioral Strategies.
That number includes both emergency seclusions and seclusions in which
staff is following an individualized educational program signed off on by
parents for their kids with special needs, known as an IEP. But state investigations
reveal that at Farm Hill School in Middletown, where a scream room controversy
erupted last year, parents of only four of the fifteen children put in scream
rooms agreed to the technique, and investigators said “Children who were
secluded were both special education and regular education students." Skeptics argue there is no evidence seclusion
is effective, and they worry the rooms may do more harm than good. "Not a good strategy. Not only does it
have human rights implications, there's always a possibility of somebody being
injured in the process of putting them into restraint or seclusion and there's
also a psychological trauma that accompanies that,” said McGaughey. To look up the use of seclusion rooms in schools across the state and to Read Full Story, click
on http://www.nbcconnecticut.com/investigations/LWRD-Seclusion-Rooms-Used-23000-Times-in-Connecticut-Schools-232611351.html See video below:
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