[Congressional Record Volume 150, Number 135 (Saturday, November 20, 2004)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E2129]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONFERENCE REPORT ON H.R. 1350, INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES EDUCATION
IMPROVEMENT ACT OF 2004
______
speech of
HON. TIM MURPHY
of pennsylvania
in the house of representatives
Friday, November 19, 2004
Mr. MURPHY. Mr. Speaker, for many years, discussion of the
Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA) has focused on what has and
what has not worked well.
Let me draw upon my first hand experience as a psychologist who has
participated in many of these discussions regarding learning disabled
children, who were patients of mine. Many of these Individualized
Education Plan (IEP) meetings were bogged down by procedures, paperwork
and policy rather than working to help a child's reading, writing and
arithmetic.
As a result of my experiences with IDEA, I am convinced that the law
needed to be updated in order to properly refocus our efforts on to the
task of educating our nation's children. And, I believe that the
``Improving Education Results for Children With Disabilities Act of
2003,'' (H.R. 1350) provides many of the needed changes.
As the Chairman of the Congressional Mental Health Caucus, I am
particularly pleased with the bill's provisions to improve the
definition of `specific learning disabilities.' This conference report
allows alternate assessment methods, such as the Response to
Intervention Model (RTI), for measuring yearly progress to protect
against the overidentification and misidentification of disabled
children. RTI will ensure that children receive scientifically based
instruction as soon as possible instead of relying on the outdated IQ-
achievement discrepancy model as the sole measure of a student's IDEA
eligibility.
And while many children need and benefit from pharmaceutical
assistance to overcome their disabilities, far too often, people turn
to medication in lieu of creating a solid working team of parents and
educators to ensure the education of our children.
The reauthorization of IDEA establishes policies that prohibit school
personnel from requiring a child to be prescribed medication in order
to attend school or to receive IDEA services. Medications for disabled
students should only be prescribed by physicians with expertise in
treating disabled children and only when necessary.
In the area of discipline, past practices prevented school personnel
from holding children with learning disabilities responsible for their
behavior and students with learning disabilities were held to different
standards than mainstream students. For the same severe offense, a
mainstream student would be expelled while a learning disabled student
would be returned to the classroom.
To help children learn accountability, teachers must be able to hold
them responsible for their actions. To teach children that good and bad
behavior has consequences, the school must be able to enforce these
consequences.
We must also recognize that special education services are expensive
and that with these federal mandates must come increased funding. I
applaud the work of my Republican colleagues for increasing funding for
special education grants to the States by over 383 percent for a total
of $11.1 billion in the past 10 years. However, we must increase that
funding to levels that better meet the needs of our children.
While we all are concerned with the funding of our nation's special
education programs, I join the National Education Association, the
IDEA, Infant and Toddler Coordinators Association and the National
Schools Boards Association in supporting the ``Improving Education
Results for Children With Disabilities Act of 2003,'' (H.R. 1350). I am
also aware of many of the concerns raised by parents, teachers and
students regarding the implementation of IDEA, and I will work with my
colleagues to revisit these issues to ensure that teachers and parents
have the tools necessary to provide America's children with the
education they deserve.
____________________