Fraud in testing, special education found at ReNEW charter school

Disir

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Sep 30, 2011
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The special education tricks were big and blatant, intended to fill a $300,000 budget gap that Hearin and Perez knew they were creating at their 730-student school. The Recovery system doles out special education money based on the number of students who need services, their specific diagnoses and the amount of time they need help.
SciTech rushed students through special education evaluations, sometimes without parent involvement, increasing the school's budget by $137,800. Staffers also blew up the education plans of 49 students, adding an average of 1,032 minutes of extra help, which totals 2 1/2 days per week; that brought in $180,000.
These students didn't need that time, the state says. This fall, 32 of those education plans were revised way down by an average of 1,170 minutes.

Paradoxically, at the same time the principals juiced the special education funding, they ignored the special education students, telling staff they were "to be a secondary priority to students who were more likely to pass the state assessments," the report says. Some kids, the principals said, "don't count."
Seventy-seven children were supposed to have some time in a separate classroom, but there was no evidence SciTech did that for any student last year. Nineteen of 76 children received none of the services in their individual education programs, and about 42 received partial help. Federal law requires that public schools give children the services specified in their plans.
Instead, Hearin and Perez spread the money across the school to support increased staffing overall – including "special education" teachers who didn't know they were supposed to teach special education. When one administrator complained, one of the principals insulted them for "conflating law with morality," the report says. The staffer decided three days later not to return to SciTech in the fall.
Fraud in testing, special education found at ReNEW charter school

It's just money, amiright?
 
Charter schools could be a money tree. There are so many ways to manipulate and after all many think education is the road to becoming rich.
 
IEPs are a money tree, but they're not confined to charter schools. Many schools fudge these evaluations and provide no real enhancement.
 

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