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Special Report
Special Education

E-Learning Expands for Special-Needs 69传媒

August 22, 2011 11 min read
Tessa Falcetta, a rising 8th grader who lives in Grove City, Pa., has taken online classes in the past and will be taking them again when she starts school in the fall. Tessa has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, dysgraphia, and general anxiety disorder.
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When Seph Koutsioukis was in a classroom at an elementary school in Simpsonville, S.C., he floundered.

For Seph, who has autism, on-the-spot questions from teachers were a source of embarrassment. He was easily distracted by the sights and sounds in the colorful, occasionally loud room.

But for two years, 10-year-old Seph has taken online classes through the , a charter school based in Columbia, S.C. He watches lessons on his home computer and talks with his teachers by phone and email.

His mother, Kelly Koutsioukis, says Seph鈥檚 self-esteem and demeanor are so improved because of his new school arrangement that people ask if he still has autism. Seph can focus on his schoolwork because he isn鈥檛 scoping out the rest of his class when he should be concentrating, she says. He isn鈥檛 anxious about being called on by the teacher and looking dumb in class. Now when he answers a question during a live virtual class, only the teacher sees what he says.

鈥淭his was the first time somebody has ever said, 鈥榃hat can we do for your child?鈥 instead of 鈥楾his is what we鈥檙e going to offer,鈥 鈥 Ms. Koutsioukis said of the accommodations the public online school has made.

Virtual classes have been a blessing for Seph, and students such as Jasmin Floyd. Ms. Floyd, 18, just graduated from Woodstock Academy in Woodstock, Conn., but took several classes through the Maynard, Mass-based Virtual High School Global Consortium. That allowed her to stay at home without exacerbating her fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva, a painful condition that causes extra bone to form in her muscles and other connective tissues.

Yet not all online classes are welcoming to students with disabilities. The courses may not be accessible to them, or the students may never be offered the courses in the first place.

A last year by Project Forum at the National Association of State Directors of Special Education concluded as much.

鈥淥ne of the findings from the group at the Forum was that students with disabilities have been systematically denied admission in places,鈥 said Paula Burdette, Project Forum鈥檚 director, although she doesn鈥檛 believe that鈥檚 because of outright ill will.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it is a conspiracy,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think people with sometimes the best intentions don鈥檛 know what to do.鈥

However, a 2003 letter from the U.S. Department of Education is explicit on the issue of virtual classes for students with disabilities. Although there isn鈥檛 any specific federal guidance about online or virtual schools, wrote the then-director of special education programs, there also isn鈥檛 any need for special rules because online or virtual schools must abide by all the same requirements set for other schools in the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.

E-Learning: The Student Experience

Tessa Falcetta, who has dysgraphia and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and her mother, Esther Falcetta, talk about why online learning is the best fit for Tessa, its challenges, and how the lessons are tailored to her needs.

Years since that letter, obstacles between students with disabilities and online education persist, enough so that the Education Department has recognized the need for guidance and research about online courses for such students.

The department is in the process of selecting a creator for a Center on Online Learning and 69传媒 With Disabilities and is putting about $1.5 million behind the center.

鈥淭he expanded use of online learning offers potential benefits to children with disabilities but also poses significant challenges,鈥 the May 5 Federal Register notice about the project reads. The center鈥檚 goal is to research how students with disabilities participate, or don鈥檛, in online courses in kindergarten through 12th grade, what the positive and negative outcomes for online learning are for those students, and effective ways of teaching children with disabilities online.

鈥淛ust because it goes into digital format does not make it accessible,鈥 said Yvonne Domings, an instructional designer and research associate for the , or CAST, in Wakefield, Mass. She worked on a panel that was reviewing standards for online courses.

鈥淕iving somebody access to something does not mean they鈥檙e going to learn from it,鈥 she added.

Indeed, said Patti Ralabate, a universal design for learning fellow at CAST, 鈥渢oo often what鈥檚 happened is online courses end up just being what used to be in printed text, now hosted in an online format. It isn鈥檛 any more accessible in that format than it was when it was in a textbook.鈥

While features such as videos and graphics might seem to automatically bridge that gap, those enhancements may be useless to a student who has visual problems or other needs.

鈥淵ou have to do a lot of proactive thinking,鈥 Ms. Ralabate said.

On the flip side, warns one advocate, is the use of online classes as a substitute for teaching students with disabilities in other ways.

鈥淲e do not want to see technology used in place of best practice ... or to see technology compensate for shortages or to save on budgets鈥攎otivations that are less than addressing the best interests of students,鈥 said Kim Hymes, the director of policy and advocacy for the Council for Exceptional Children in Arlington, Va.

Low Participation

Online classes have grown rapidly into an entire industry, with for-profit companies and nonprofits offering courses for entire schools and individual families. In addition, school districts and states have their own virtual schools.

17%
Conservatively, the proportion of Florida Virtual School students with disabilities

3,363
69传媒 with disabilities in Pennsylvania cyber charter schools (13.7 percent of total enrollment)

2,400
69传媒 with intellectual disabilities who took new blended courses last year at the North Carolina Virtual Public School (9.6 percent of total enrollment)

ZERO
Known students with disabilities to have taken online classes with the Kentucky Virtual School

Sources: Florida Virtual School; Pennsylvania Department of Education; North Carolina Virtual Public School; Kentucky Department of Education

Despite the proliferation, students with disabilities often don鈥檛 take the courses, because in many cases, the classes themselves or the types of classes offered weren鈥檛 designed with those students in mind.

For example, in Alabama, which has one of the largest state-run virtual schools in the country, just 217 students with disabilities took at least one online course last school year, although Alabama, through the Montgomery-based, state-run , or ACCESS, delivered 34,000 online courses to students. The school was created to offer foreign language and Advanced Placement courses to students in rural parts of the state.

If little or no access is a problem in some places, too much access, with little teaching, is a problem elsewhere, said Marcie Lipsitt, a parent advocate in Michigan for the National Center for Learning Disabilities, which is based in New York City.

鈥淲hile I absolutely believe that high-quality and rigorous online learning can offer children new opportunities, I have pretty serious concerns about online education being used to supplant direct teacher instruction,鈥 she said, especially in self-contained classrooms for some children with disabilities.

鈥淚f done right, online learning can afford students with learning disabilities new opportunities,鈥 Ms. Lipsitt continued. 鈥淏ut with all things in education and children who have learning disabilities and [individualized education programs], there are schools that will look to shortchange students with disabilities.鈥

Getting a solid grasp of how many students take online courses is its own challenge. While Alabama tracks how many students with disabilities take online courses, some states and virtual schools don鈥檛, even though the programs are years old. When Project Forum asked states how many students with disabilities enrolled in online courses two years ago, one state chose not to respond because the topic was 鈥渢oo controversial.鈥

And in Kentucky, the that opened in 2000 will, for the first time, collect information about a child鈥檚 disability status starting with the 2011-12 school year.

Other schools gather data on students with disabilities but know it is incomplete. Florida鈥檚 state-run online school, the largest state-sponsored virtual school in the country, collects information about whether students have disabilities鈥攂ut only if the students volunteer it.

Because it is a school of choice, students decide whether to disclose their disabilities, and last year, 17 percent of the more than 90,000 students did so, said Jeffrey Jacobson, who oversees special education for the school.

鈥淲e have a pretty good inkling that that number is more around 40 percent. That鈥檚 what we鈥檙e getting from kids that identify themselves later and [from] talks with teachers,鈥 he said.

What the numbers do tell the Orlando-based Florida Virtual School is that students with disabilities are struggling with their online classes. Of those students, only 30 percent successfully completed their courses, Mr. Jacobson said.

This fall, the school will launch a pilot program in which six teachers certified in special education will work more closely with students who have identified themselves as having disabilities. Their teaching loads will be smaller than for other Florida Virtual School teachers, Mr. Jacobson said, to foster stronger relationships between the teachers and their students.

鈥淭hey can now spend the time to do direct instruction. Let鈥檚 say [the students] need help every day. If you have 120 students you can鈥檛 do that,鈥 he said, adding that the total for those teachers will probably be about 75 students.

鈥淚f the student鈥檚 not calling you,鈥 he said, 鈥測ou can call the student every week.鈥

Blended Approaches Grow

In other states, the era of virtual learning has spawned distinctive courses and teaching methods for students with disabilities.

During the 2010-11 school year, North Carolina launched a new method of teaching life-skills courses for students with significant cognitive disabilities. The classes combine in-person teaching and online instruction.

For more than 2,000 students statewide, their special education teachers were paired with teachers from the 25,000-student , based in Raleigh. The virtual school teachers delivered much of the core content of a subject鈥攖his past year, it was Algebra 1, biology, and English鈥攁nd classroom teachers helped ensure the lessons were as accessible as possible for the students, said Michelle Lourcey, the curriculum and instruction division director for the school.

The course content and design were a big shift away from the traditional lessons in those classes, she said. While students still learned how to count money, which chemicals may be poisonous, and how to grocery shop, they also did science experiments and studied 鈥淩omeo and Juliet鈥 via online lessons created with the principles of universal design for learning, or UDL. Those principles call for developing curriculum in a way that gives all students an equal opportunity to learn.

If there was a chunk of text for students to read, they could click on it and it would be read to them, for example, said Freda Lee, a state consultant for students with intellectual disabilities.

Although recorded or live lessons from the NCVPS teachers were delivered online, there were many days students weren鈥檛 sitting at computers, said Casey Peeler, who taught some blended courses at Shelby High School, about 40 miles west of Charlotte. Lessons might have been delivered on smartboards, for example.

When the class was studying osmosis, they soaked gummy bears in salt water and tap water, remembered Jamar Petty, 18, one of Ms. Peeler鈥檚 students.

鈥淲e were trying to see what was going to happen and what was the effect,鈥 said Mr. Petty, who has learning disabilities. 鈥淥ne of them got bigger than the other.鈥 He said he had never done experiments like that before.

The , based in Norristown, Pa., has developed its own method for teaching life skills virtually, special education teacher Stacy McGowan said. Overall, about 15 percent of the students at the 3,500-student school have disabilities.

For several hours a day, Ms. McGowan teaches her students live from her home. They have webcams to see her, and she can see them鈥攁nd everything they鈥檙e doing.

鈥淲hen we鈥檙e working on counting money, I like them to use real money. Their mom or dad, or whomever, moves the webcam so I can see the money,鈥 said Ms. McGowan, whose classes are typically no larger than 15 students. 鈥淥ne time we were working on tying shoes. We put our foot in front of the webcam.鈥

The idea to teach classes this way was Ms. McGowan鈥檚, said the virtual school鈥檚 chief executive officer, Joanne Jones Barnett.

鈥淪he developed that model by asking the question, 鈥楬ow do I do life skills in a virtual environment?鈥 鈥 Ms. Jones Barnett said.

Meeting Special Needs

While online classes could be larger, even when they are for students with disabilities, Ms. Jones Barnett said that isn鈥檛 her school鈥檚 approach.

Because virtual schools are still in their relative infancy, she said, the teaching requires innovation, 鈥渁nd not being afraid to meet the needs of your students.鈥

The Pennsylvania Virtual Charter School seems ideal for Tessa Falcetta, 13, whose disabilities are very different from those of the students Ms. McGowan teaches.

Tessa has a limited short-term memory, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and , which affects her ability to write, form letters, and spell, said her mother, Esther Falcetta.

In rural Grove City, Pa., Ms. Falcetta said, traditional brick-and-mortar schools haven鈥檛 been able to address all of Tessa鈥檚 needs. After two years of that situation, Tessa, for 8th grade, will go back to online schooling, which she did as an elementary school student.

While Tessa has the option of attending live classes, that can be a challenge because it鈥檚 often difficult for her to stay on task, Ms. Falcetta said.

With the virtual school, which helped accommodate Tessa鈥檚 difficulty with writing, 鈥渟he鈥檒l read her book, and do her work,鈥 her mother said, 鈥渁nd if she has a question, she鈥檒l call the teacher.鈥

Nirvi Shah, Writer contributed to this article.
A version of this article appeared in the August 24, 2011 edition of Education Week as E-Learning Access for Special Needs

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