How KIPP charter school handles special ed/IEP students
Leonie Haimson posted this in 2012 and I have linked to it several times over the last few years.
Because I seem to be on a roll about KIPP charter schools, I decided this is an appropriate time to post this on Seattle Ed.
At KIPP, I would wake up sick, every single day. Except on Sunday, ’cause that day I didn’t have to go to school. All the students called KIPP the “Kids in Prison Program.”
A few months ago, Class Size Matters met with a former KIPP student who lives in the Bronx and her mother to hear about their experiences at the celebrated charter school. What follows are excerpts from this interview. The girl’s name has been changed to protect her privacy.
Mom: Students who are accepted to KIPP and who have IEP’s [individualized education plans] do not get the correct services or help to be successful. The school would rather make it difficult, leaving the parent frustrated and forcing her to remove her child. The principal always invited me to take my child out if I did not like the way she was being treated.
My response was always, “She has a right to be here just like any other child who went through the lottery system. She will stay until she finishes.” My reasons for her to continue were because the curriculum was good and I knew that she could benefit academically from the rigorous demands, but sometimes they went to the extreme and she suffered for it.
At the very first, I saw the way they were talking to some kids in the line as they’re going in. They’re like (shouting) “Oh you know you’re not supposed to come in here with How KIPP charter school handles special ed/IEP students | Seattle Education: