Anonymous wrote:No exaggeration. Divide the DCPS budget by the number of students.
Meanwhile, divide any charter's budget by number of students and you get a far smaller number.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even the MAXIMUM special needs funding to charters is less than the AVERAGE per student funding in DCPS.
This isn't true.
Signed,
Special Ed coordinator in a charter school.
Oh, really? Not true?
Average spending for a normal (no disabilities) student in DCPS is $35,000 a year. There are many kids in the DCPS systems who cost the system $50,000 a year and more.
How many kids without disabilities in your charter get $35,000 a year from the system to spend on them?
How many special needs kids in your charter get $35,000 a year from the system to spend on them?
How many students in your charter get $50,000 a year from the system to spend on them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even the MAXIMUM special needs funding to charters is less than the AVERAGE per student funding in DCPS.
This isn't true.
Signed,
Special Ed coordinator in a charter school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. Seems to me that it can and is both a Rights issue Aand an unfunded mandate. The two are not mutually exclusive.
And what about the civil rights of kids who don't have a disability? They aren't covered by FAPE and don't get the same rights and protections as kids with disabilities. Whatever happened to equal rights and equal protection under the law? Doesn't that constitute a civil rights problem?
No it doesn't "constitute a civil rights problem" according to the Supreme Court. Your question has been hashed out by a whole series of constitutional law cases that whole courses have designed around.
So in other words, you are saying that over time, various incompetent Supreme Court justices have ignored and thrown away parts of the Constitution. It's pretty clear and unambiguous that the Fourteenth Amendment says "Equal protection under the law".
Anonymous wrote:Even the MAXIMUM special needs funding to charters is less than the AVERAGE per student funding in DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Per pupil funding for sped services depends on the number of hours the student requires. There is no flat rate for an "average" special ed student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. Seems to me that it can and is both a Rights issue Aand an unfunded mandate. The two are not mutually exclusive.
And what about the civil rights of kids who don't have a disability? They aren't covered by FAPE and don't get the same rights and protections as kids with disabilities. Whatever happened to equal rights and equal protection under the law? Doesn't that constitute a civil rights problem?
You are incorrect. FAPE applies to ALL children.
No. FAPE does NOT apply to all only those with disabilities.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Appropriate_Public_Education
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. Seems to me that it can and is both a Rights issue Aand an unfunded mandate. The two are not mutually exclusive.
And what about the civil rights of kids who don't have a disability? They aren't covered by FAPE and don't get the same rights and protections as kids with disabilities. Whatever happened to equal rights and equal protection under the law? Doesn't that constitute a civil rights problem?
You are incorrect. FAPE applies to ALL children.