Israel Sees 12 Fold Increase in Autistic Children in Sp-Ed

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03 Jan 2019, 2:46 am

Israel Sees 12 Fold Increase in Autistic Children in Special Ed Since 2000

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The number of autistic children in special education has grown more than 12-fold in less than two decades, from 894 in 2000 to 11,145 in 2018, a new report said.

The number of children with severe behavioral problems increased more than seven-fold during this period, from 2,347 to 17,483.

Overall, the number of children in special education has jumped 127 percent since 2005, while the total number of schoolchildren climbed only 33 percent, the study said. During this same period, the Education Ministry’s budget for special education rose 138 percent, while its budget for ordinary education climbed 71 percent.

Nachum Blass, who wrote the study for the Taub Center for Social Policy Studies, said the rise in special education students is a global phenomenon. Nevertheless, Israel’s increase is exceptional, he said, which suggests that “we need to examine the Education Ministry’s definitions. It’s not reasonable that there should be such a large gap between the increase in special-needs students and that of other students.”

The proportion of special-needs children who were enrolled in regular classes, or mainstreamed, changed little over the last two decades, fluctuating between 38 and 44 percent.

Attorney Avivit Barkay Aharonof of Bizchut, the Israel Human Rights Center for People with Disabilities, said the increase in the number of special-education students stems partly from the structure of the education system. The Education Ministry provides little support for students with disabilities defined as minor, with the result that their functioning sometimes deteriorates. In other cases, parents actually ask for a worse diagnosis so their children will be entitled to support.

The ministry “is aware of this and has heard it explicitly from parents,” but hasn’t done anything about it, she charged.

This past summer, the Knesset approved a reform of the special education system that is meant to significantly increase the number of special-needs children who are mainstreamed. It will be implemented in the north in the 2019-20 school year and in the rest of the country the following year.

As part of this reform, responsibility for the panels that evaluate children to see if they should be mainstreamed or put in special education will be transferred from municipalities to the Education Ministry. But other than in exceptional cases, parents will now make the final decision.

The ministry has budgeted 240 million shekels ($64 million) to help regular schools build therapy rooms and provide more hours of therapy and individual instruction to special-needs children. But many experts harshly criticized the reform. They charged that its real goal is to reduce the costs of special education, noting that mainstreamed children will still receive significantly less help than children in special education schools.


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“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman