I grew up with having a special needs brother. He was born with down syndrome and autism. My parents were new to the special needs world and IDEA helped my parents find the right tools for my brother. Because of IDEA, my parents were able to find speech therapy that was appropriate for my little brother. My parents also received help by having a bus pick up my little brother, no matter how far away he lived from the school. I have seen first hand how IDEA has helped my little brother by giving him support in school with special classes like how to brush his teeth and go to the bathroom. After doing more research on IDEA, I saw that it covers students up until high school. If IDEA was expanded to college students, how would that look like? What changes would colleges have to make? Can colleges include special education classrooms?
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Special needs child doing classwork. |
Having services and support for students in college with special needs are important. I know at the University of Tennessee, we have the FUTURE program. "FUTURE is a comprehensive program that helps young adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities make a successful transition from high school to adult life" I think something like this would be beneficial for each university to have.
ReplyDeleteSo far I have heard wonderful things about IDEA from every source that has mentioned it, and I agree with those sentiments, but I wonder whether it has faced opposition, or even critique after it was implemented. Since FUTURE is specific to UTK as well, so I wonder what a general policy at all public universities would look like.
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