Zaune wrote:And what do you think the odds are of that happening? Especially where it's a mental health issue rather than something physical, and you've got every reactionary old fool who hasn't had a new idea since the Seventies saying this could all be solved with a few whippings so why waste money on the 'disruptive' kids. At best the 5% of nigh-unteachables would just end up getting warehoused somewhere until they were old enough to drop out.
Maybe that's no worse for them than what they're already getting in mainstream education, and better for the 95% who aren't beyond salvage. But let's not kid ourselves about that 5%'s prospects in 'special schools'.
For one, it isn't going to be that long until said reactionary old fools are
dead or retired at least, and the dominant trends in education are people who were trained in the '80s and later.
For another, I'm not bothering to talk about what is politically realistic. I'm talking about what should happen. Now, if you want me to acknowledge political realities I will- but the reality is we NEED functioning schools, it is a vital thing that we cannot afford to do without. And children who have behavioral problems (some caused by disabilities, some not) which do not have a straightforward 'cure' are not something we can put in a functioning school,
unless that school is quite different from a normal school.
Since we have to have functioning schools, and putting people with serious behavior problems into such a school
breaks them, we cannot do that. Not if we actually want anyone to learn anything.
Starglider wrote:I appreciate the distinction you are trying to make, but it is fundamentally at odds with both diagnostics and social trends. You are trying to say 'bad behaviour and mental disabilities are completely separate things'...
Actually, no, not so much.
A lot of the worst-behaved children behave badly
because they are mentally ill. The point is that there's a fundamental difference between a mental illness that makes you behave badly, a learning disability that makes it harder for you to learn, and a physical disability that doesn't do anything to your brain directly but cuts off some of your options for physical or sensory activity.
A learning disability or a physical disability we can work around in a mainstream school, with a few exceptions (like deaf kids who need a sign language interpreter and who MAY well do better in a dedicated school with a teacher who knows sign themselves).
A disability that
seriously affects behavior is a whole different ball game. Unless it can be treated in such a way that the symptoms are relieved, such a disability has negative consequences not only for the education of that one child, but for the education of other children in the same area. At least, it has this result
unless specific measures are taken. And it is not practical to take those measures in the same building where the generic kids are being educated.
Some of the children who behave badly are mentally ill. Some of them are
NOT mentally ill, they've just made a conscious decision (which
they consider informed) to do things that are incompatible with functioning in mainstream society. Either way, if the problem with their behavior cannot be 'abated' or 'neutralized' or otherwise prevented from causing trouble in a mainstream school, the only way to keep them in a mainstream school is to resign yourself to never actually producing
good educational outcomes in that school.
There are a lot of ways to 'abate' or 'neutralize' or whatever. But one unifying feature is that they all involve using up a lot of man-hours (which means hiring more staff, or accepting reduced man-hours devoted to the large majority of children, which is how you end up never producing good outcomes).
Now, all this I've already said, but I'm trying to spell out my position explicitly here.
However the trend is to increasingly attribute bad behaviour to 'emotional disabilities', direct racial discrimination, bad home environment due to indirect racial discrimination, bad home environment due to economic inequality, really anything other than personal responsibility of the child or the parents. Parents are unwilling to be told otherwise and are empowered to sue if the school tries to tell them anyway. Naturally the result of that is requiring a huge paper trail to stave off the possible social objections and legal challenges to expelling a student, and even when that works in individual cases schools are still pressured to do it less often.
I am quite aware of this. I am
intimately aware of this, because I am living smack dab in the middle of it. I can
name the forms on that paper trail and the acronyms of the staff who navigate it.
I'm not talking about the politics, I'm talking about the reality; figuring out how to compromise between the reality and the politics is a separate conversation.
Imagine that you and all your fellow teachers did have complete personal discretion to expel any student you judged too disruptive. Would you do so in a perfectly representative fashion across disability, race, gender, sexual orientation, body type, family type, parent's economic status, political views and so on? If the answer is no...
I'm not saying there shouldn't be a paper trail... what I'm saying is that it needs to be
used, and to be usable.
Perhaps there should be some district-level official from outside the school who wanders around doing literally nothing but evaluating expulsion cases. Perhaps we should have everything that takes place in the schools on closed-circuit video camera so said official can watch what the child actually does all day. I don't know. I'm throwing ideas at a wall here.
The key point is that, bluntly and simply, if you do not weed your garden, it will not produce good fruit. If a child is bound to act like a weed, they need to be, ideally, transplanted to a place where they can make
something of themselves... but they definitely need to be removed from the garden they now occupy.