TY - JOUR
T1 - The Effects of Special Education on the Academic Performance of Students with Learning Disabilities
AU - Schwartz, Amy Ellen
AU - Hopkins, Bryant Gregory
AU - Stiefel, Leanna
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the New York City Department of Education for access to data and technical support, and three anonymous reviewers, Agustina Laurito, Joydeep Roy, and participants at the 2018 Association for Education Finance and Policy conference, the 2018 Association for Policy Analysis and Management conference, the 2019 American Economic Association Conference, the NYU-PRIISM summer seminar series, and the Syracuse University Education and Social Policy workshop for helpful comments. Generous support from the Spencer Foundation (grant 201500141) and Institute for Education Sciences sponsored PIRT fellowship program are gratefully acknowledged. Authors alone are responsible for all results.
Funding Information:
We thank the New York City Department of Education for access to data and technical support, and three anonymous reviewers, Agustina Laurito, Joydeep Roy, and participants at the 2018 Association for Education Finance and Policy conference, the 2018 Association for Policy Analysis and Management conference, the 2019 American Economic Association Conference, the NYU‐PRIISM summer seminar series, and the Syracuse University Education and Social Policy workshop for helpful comments. Generous support from the Spencer Foundation (grant 201500141) and Institute for Education Sciences sponsored PIRT fellowship program are gratefully acknowledged. Authors alone are responsible for all results.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 by the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management
PY - 2021/3/1
Y1 - 2021/3/1
N2 - In the 40-plus years since the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, special education has grown in the number of students and amount spent on services. Despite this growth, academic performance of students with disabilities remains troublingly low compared to general education students. To some extent, these differences reflect persistent underlying disabilities, but they also may reflect ineffective services. Does special education improve academic outcomes for students with disabilities? There is surprisingly little evidence to guide policy and answer this question. This paper provides an answer for the largest disability group, students with specific learning disabilities (LDs), using rich New York City public school data. Because the majority of LDs are classified after school entry, we observe outcomes before and after classification, allowing us to estimate impacts using within-student pre/post comparisons (student fixed effects) and an intent-to-treat specification. We find that academic outcomes improve for LDs following classification into special education and impacts are largest for those entering special education in earlier grades. Attendance, however, shows little change after classification. Results are robust to alternative specifications and falsification tests bolster confidence in a causal interpretation. Differences in impacts by gender, race/ethnicity, grade of classification, and settings illuminate possible mechanisms.
AB - In the 40-plus years since the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, special education has grown in the number of students and amount spent on services. Despite this growth, academic performance of students with disabilities remains troublingly low compared to general education students. To some extent, these differences reflect persistent underlying disabilities, but they also may reflect ineffective services. Does special education improve academic outcomes for students with disabilities? There is surprisingly little evidence to guide policy and answer this question. This paper provides an answer for the largest disability group, students with specific learning disabilities (LDs), using rich New York City public school data. Because the majority of LDs are classified after school entry, we observe outcomes before and after classification, allowing us to estimate impacts using within-student pre/post comparisons (student fixed effects) and an intent-to-treat specification. We find that academic outcomes improve for LDs following classification into special education and impacts are largest for those entering special education in earlier grades. Attendance, however, shows little change after classification. Results are robust to alternative specifications and falsification tests bolster confidence in a causal interpretation. Differences in impacts by gender, race/ethnicity, grade of classification, and settings illuminate possible mechanisms.
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U2 - 10.1002/pam.22282
DO - 10.1002/pam.22282
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85099288663
SN - 0276-8739
VL - 40
SP - 480
EP - 520
JO - Journal of Policy Analysis and Management
JF - Journal of Policy Analysis and Management
IS - 2
ER -