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Indiana violated federal law by issuing emergency special education licenses

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Indiana issued thousands of emergency special education teaching permits in violation of federal law over the last four years — placing some of the highest need students in the state with untrained teachers. State officials say this is an oversight they’re now trying to correct by requiring special education teachers to be fully licensed or meet new requirements for provisional licensing.

But the sudden shift in policy will be a difficult change for Indiana schools, which have become increasingly reliant on emergency permits due to a shortage of special education teachers. Advocates fear this could force the licensed educators who remain to shoulder large caseloads of students with special needs, including students who may require substantial and time-intensive services.

Indiana issued 43 percent more special education emergency teaching permits in 2019-20 than it did four years before — rising to more than 1,200 from about 850 in 2016-17. That includes teachers with emergency licenses in mild intervention, intense intervention, deaf and hard of hearing, and blind and low vision. 

Federal law bars states from issuing emergency permits for special education teachers. But the federal government has not penalized Indiana for violating the rules. 

“Our federal partners have worked to provide guidance as part of this process, not punitive action,” Holly Lawson, a spokeswoman for the Indiana Department of Education, wrote in an email.

Even though Indiana hasn’t faced any sanctions for the violation, the state will stop issuing emergency permits for special education next school year. Instead, educators must be fully licensed or enroll in programs that culminate in special education licensure. 

While school administrators agree that special educators should be fully licensed, some fear this policy change will worsen the field’s teacher shortage. They worry that barriers, including cost, for teachers to get fully licensed will lead to a decrease in the number of teachers in classrooms and an increase in case loads for qualified special educators. 

“You’ve got to fill the spots — you have to have somebody in here to work with kids,” said Angela McKinney of the Indiana IEP Resource Center, an organization that helps educators teach students with disabilities. 

“When you're faced with the decision of a half-trained person — who is partway through a program but not met all the criteria yet — versus a completely untrained person who you're using to fill a full-time sub … I choose the half-trained person,” she said.

Schools turn to emergency permits when they are not able to find fully qualified teachers. Some of the teachers on emergency permits are certified in other areas, such as licensed elementary educators who now teach students with mild disabilities. But some teachers on emergency permits are not licensed in any other teaching areas and may have no teaching experience. 

‘I was scared to death’

When Susan Harrison got an emergency permit to teach special education to preschoolers in a rural district a few years ago, she felt totally unqualified.

“I was scared to death,” Harrison said. “There was no training, and you were just put in a room, and you were on your own.”

Harrison had experience with children. She had worked in a home-based day care and adopted two young children with special needs. But planning lessons and monitoring student goals was daunting, she said. 

Despite these challenges, Harrison found she loved teaching special education. In the years since, she earned her elementary education license. But she’s still on an emergency permit while she completes special education course work.

"They make it such a pain to get your special ed license that I think people just don't want to do it,” Harrison said. "It's just a lot of extra work."

Read more: Fewer Indiana students were evaluated for special education services during the pandemic

The state relies on emergency permits for special education. Of the nearly 4,500 emergency permits issued in 2019-20, more than a quarter were for special education. 

Indiana has little choice but to end its use of emergency permits, however, because experts say the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act requires states to ensure that special education teachers are fully licensed or enrolled in a training program and receiving ongoing support.

Federal requirements

Brian Murphy joined the Indiana Department of Education as chief of staff when Katie Jenner became secretary of education in January. He said he learned then that the state was not in compliance with federal law from the department’s general counsel. 

Lawson, a spokeswoman with the IDOE, wrote in an email to WFYI that it was educators in the field who informed the state that its licensing practices were not aligned with federal law.

The state notified districts in June that it will stop issuing emergency permits for special education teachers in the 2022-23 school year. Murphy said the state is easing the transition by giving districts a year to prepare. 

Indiana will also create special permits for people in teacher preparation programs. Murphy said the key difference between a special permit and an emergency permit is that a special permit will ultimately lead to full licensure in special education while an emergency permit does not. 

“Our decision is really driven by the federal requirements,” Murphy said. 

Read more: Fed dismiss investigation into Indiana special education

A spokesperson with the U.S. Department of Education confirmed that special education teachers must be fully licensed or participating in an alternative route to certification in order to comply with federal law. The spokesperson said states submit annual applications for federal special education funding that include assurances they’re meeting those requirements. 

Federal law has long mandated that special educators be fully licensed or participating in a certification program

The issue got new attention, however, in 2015 when Congress passed the Every Student Succeeds Act, which included a reference to the requirement. 

States scrambled to make sure they were following federal law, said Meg Kamman, co-director of the CEEDAR Center, which receives federal funding and helps states implement policies to improve education for students with disabilities. CEEDAR is not working with Indiana.

The goal of the federal requirement is to improve education for students with disabilities, Kamman said.

“We want to make sure that our teachers are effective,” she said. “We also want to make sure there's a teacher in front of a student who needs instruction.”

‘A never-ending catch 22’

Advocates and educators agree that students are better off with experienced, fully qualified teachers. 

But special education administrators say the teacher shortage leaves them with few good options. Without hiring teachers on emergency permits, they may be forced to increase caseloads for the licensed teachers they do have. 

“I think caseloads are high and student needs are getting more complex, especially with the increased amount of trauma due to the pandemic,” said Jenny Smithson, a member of the Indiana Council of Administrators of Special Education. 

Smithson is the director of special education for Muncie Community Schools. She said ideally special educators should be fully licensed, but she’s concerned about a lack of transition to teach programs for special education. 

Without enough alternative routes to licensure, Smithson said the elimination of emergency permits could lead to even higher caseloads for fully licensed special education teachers. 

“We don't want all of our fully licensed people to quit when we give them more kids,” Smithson said. “So, it’s just a never-ending catch 22.”

The state is relying on teacher training programs to help fill the gap left by the elimination of emergency permits. 

People with college degrees can get the required training through transition to teaching courses, although only some of those programs offer training in special education. Teachers who are fully licensed in other areas can often get their special education credentials quicker through master’s programs and other coursework, said Risa Regnier, director of educator licensing for the IDOE. 

But training can be time-consuming and expensive because even educators licensed in other areas must take additional courses in special education. 

Advocates say that one way the state and districts can help recruit more special education teachers is by paying for their training. 

Smithson, the special education administrator, said she hopes to use some of the COVID-19 relief money her district received from the federal American Rescue Plan to reimburse teachers in her district who are working toward full licensure. 

“Some school districts have a starting salary of like $34,000,” Smithson said. “How do you pay back your student loans, and pay all your bills and work on your degree in special ed at the same time, while you're trying to pay all that off?”

The state also plans to help pay for tuition. Officials with the IDOE say they’re working on a contract with a third party organization to administer a tuition assistance program for teachers who are already enrolled or plan to enroll in a special education licensure program. 

“We really think that that's going to help defray costs for a lot of individuals,” Regnier said. “I think that our goal, during the first year that we have that program in place, would be to be able to help 300 people through their programs with financial assistance.” 

Regnier could not say when that program will be established. Lawson, the spokeswoman with the IDOE, wrote in an email that the state plans to use federal COVID-19 relief money to fund the program. She said more details about the program will be announced later this year.

Contact WFYI education reporter Lee V. Gaines at lgaines@wfyi.org. Follow on Twitter: @LeeVGaines.

Contact WFYI education reporter Dylan Peers McCoy at dmccoy@wfyi.org. Follow on Twitter: @dylanpmccoy.