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Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Analysis Criticizes Ohio Vouchers
Targeting Students With Autism
By Christina A. Samuels
Education Weekly
The 4-year-old voucher program in Ohio that gives parents
of children with autism up to $20,000 to shop around for educational
services is often used in schools that do not accept students with severe
needs, by agencies that do not offer a school setting, and by residents of
relatively affluent areas, according to an analysis by a public-policy
group.
Policy Matters Ohio’s review of the program concludes that the Autism
Scholarship Program is a poor model for other states, as well as a bad
foundation on which to build a broader disability voucher program, said the
report’s author, Piet van Lier. The Cleveland-based policy group suggests
that the money would be better spent on strengthening services for all
students.
During the 2006-07 school year, 734 children used the program, at a cost to
the state of about $10.8 million.
“There’s no question that not many school districts are up on” the best ways
to educate children with autism, Mr. van Lier said. The report, released
March 19, does point to a partnership of three school districts, a college,
and a state agency in a rural section of Ohio as an example of how districts
can improve their professional capacity to educate students with autism.
“We just think there should be some oversight to make sure these dollars are
well-spent,” he said.
Few Barriers
Those who run the voucher program at the state level say it was created
expressly to have few bureaucratic barriers between parents and the money.
The state ensures that providers have been in business for at least one
year, and that people who work directly with children have
criminal-background checks. The state-approved providers submit claims for
reimbursement from the program.
All the children in the program must have an individualized education
program, or IEP, from their home districts, indicating that they have a
disability on the autism spectrum. Autism spectrum disorders are
characterized by impairments in communication, repetitive behavior, and
social withdrawal.
“A lot of our oversight is paperwork,” said Paul Sogan, one of two
educational consultants with the Ohio Department of Education’s office of
exceptional children who oversee the program. Parents are free to shop
around and “vote with their feet,” he said.
And parents whose children are in the program say that without the vouchers,
they would not have been able to create appropriate educational programs for
their children.
“I think this is a great model,” said Lori Peacock, whose 12-year-old son
receives help from an array of instructional aides paid by state funds to
supplement home schooling. She felt that her home district in Columbus did
not offer the structure her child needed to succeed.
On the Rise
The number of K-12 students in Ohio schools with an individualized education
program that includes autism has increased dramatically in the past decade.
Figures include students in charter schools.

Source: Ohio Department of Education
“I’ve been in touch with parents in other states who are
desperate for something like this,” Ms. Peacock said.
Erica Thomas, who also lives in Columbus, is not using the voucher for her
7-year-old son, but she has in previous years.
“So many of our kids were getting lousy services and just falling through
the cracks,” she said. She believes that the voucher program, however, has
prompted her home district to improve the services it offers. “They
started seeing this as something they needed to compete against,” Ms.
Thomas said.
Policy Matters Ohio is the only group so far to take an in-depth look at
the program, state officials said.
The Ohio office of legislative oversight examined the program in its first
year, but there were few children enrolled, and it was more of an
examination of implementation issues, Mr. van Lier said. The office of
legislative oversight is now defunct, he said, and “we felt it was time to
look at this again.”
District Involvement
Under the program, the family of a 3- to 21-year-old with a diagnosis of
autism is eligible for a voucher. In return, the family waives the
guarantee of a free, appropriate public education from the local school
district, a foundation of the federal Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act.
School district staff members are responsible, though, for interacting
with private providers in each jurisdiction to write a student’s IEP. The
IEPs are not reviewed by the state; it is the parents’ responsibility to
make sure the program is implemented properly.
Policy Matters Ohio found what it describes as geographic and wealth
inequities in the program. Students who participate tend to be clustered
in suburban areas, the analysis says, and most of the approved providers
are also located in those areas.
Many of the schools that are approved providers are religious schools, but
some approved providers are tutoring and therapy programs that are not
comparable to classroom programs, the group found. Further, a few schools
charged $20,000 for students with autism, while charging a lower tuition
rate to students without disabilities.
The analysis reviewed all 127 providers that submitted claims for the
first quarter of fiscal 2008, 40 of which offered a classroom setting.
Only 15 of the 40 had a school-like setting for children with the most
severe needs.
The financial impact to districts from the voucher program is unclear, the
report notes. Ohio’s complex student-funding formula means that while some
districts may lose some state money under the program, other districts may
end up retaining some state aid for a student, even if the student is a
voucher recipient. Federal funding for special education is unaffected by
the program.
The review also includes responses from 21 families who participate in the
program, reporting uniform support for it.
Their sentiments reflect the experience of Barbara Yavorcik, the
co-president of the Autism Society of Ohio. The society has no position on
the voucher program, but Ms. Yavorcik said she knows that parents are
pleased with it. She said she would have liked to see the report from the
policy group dive into why parents who use the program like it so much,
and what public schools can learn from such responses to improve their own
programs.
“Our position is that parents need choice, and choice is good,” Ms.
Yavorcik said. “But we also need to find a way to strengthen public
schools.”
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