Why incarcerated D.C. youth keep calling for special education in federal prisons - WAMU

For those with disabilities, those educational resources can be even more limited.

Jessica Giles, executive director of Education Reform Now D.C., said the lack of special education in prisons reflects a larger citywide inequity. Whether or not they’re incarcerated, students with disabilities in D.C. have limited access to education. That’s due in part due to growing vacancies in special education roles, which factor into growing teacher turnover rates overall. “The failures of education start from a very young age,” she said

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D.C. Needs More Than Phonics to Lift its Students’ Reading Scores - The 74 Million