In My Own Words

In My Own Words

Share

In My Own Words is dedicated to interviewing people with Down syndrome and sharing their stories.

11/13/2025

“It matters to our whole society that kids with disabilities continue to receive the supports and services they deserve.”

I’m alarmed by what is happening to special education right now. Many Americans have no idea that the current administration is systematically dismantling the Department of Education, with profound consequences for students with disabilities.

I know this is a long post, but in light of how much it matters to our whole society that kids with disabilities continue to receive the supports and services they deserve, I wanted to let you know...
__
1. Historically speaking, and even before this second Trump term, students with disabilities often did not receive the supports they are guaranteed by law.

The most recent annual review of states from the Department of Education concluded that only 19 of the 50 states met the requirements for serving kids with disabilities. Let’s pause on this for just a minute—that’s fewer than half of the states that meet the requirements.

In general, when parents recognize that their state isn’t following federal special education law, they can ask the federal government to step in and make sure those laws are enforced locally. Right now, the agency that should be responding to these civil rights’ violation has been decimated of its staff and cannot respond to these needs.
__
2. Just ten percent (you read that right - just ten percent!) of the original staff remain in the Office of Special Education Programs.

This office is intended, among other things, to create and disseminate federal policy information, fund research and innovation in special education, and promote training for parents, teachers, and professionals in the field.
__
3. Federal funds provide around ten percent of the funding states use to educate students with disabilities (even though the original IDEA act authorized up to 40% of funding).

Cutting that funding limits the ways states can support teachers and kids. If we actually cared as a society about including kids with disabilities in the classroom (and, later on, in workplaces and community life), we would call on Congress to increase the funding nationally, not shut it down entirely.
__
4. In keeping with everything I’ve already noted, the Trump administration has canceled millions of dollars of grants intended to support students with disabilities.
__
I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: special education laws matter for all of us.

Special education laws matter for our family personally because we’ve seen the difference it makes for Penny to learn and grow among her peers. They matter for kids with disabilities and their families if we want to live in a just society where we care for the vulnerable ones in our midst. They also matter for all of us who believe disability is part of our common humanity—that when we learn to embrace vulnerability and see the gifts in everyone, we will all become people who belong and who know that we matter to one another.

Fifty years ago, many children and teenagers with disabilities lived in institutions. Many had been deemed “ineducable.” Doctors, parents, and teachers assumed that kids with Down syndrome, like our daughter Penny, couldn’t learn to read or do basic math or live outside of an institutional setting. But in 1975, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) passed, and for the first time, kids with disabilities were guaranteed the right to an education in the “least restrictive environment.”

In my lifetime, I’ve seen huge progress in educational access for kids with Down syndrome and other disabilities. Life expectancy for people with Down syndrome has also doubled—not just because of medical advances, but because kids are now growing up in communities, classrooms, and families where they belong. Special education makes a difference.

It matters to our whole society that kids with disabilities continue to receive the supports and services they deserve.

I shared more recent disability news in this week’s Substack, and it also includes links to the data I share in this post: https://amyjuliabecker.substack.com/p/whats-happening-to-special-education?r=2byk42
__
[image is a 2012 photo of Penny wearing glasses and sitting at a desk as she draws on a piece of paper]

Photos from National Down Syndrome Congress's post 10/13/2025

Please don’t scroll past this!

Now is the time to act if you care anything about special education or people with disabilities!

Sam would not be the person he is today without these services. Let’s not fail the next generations!!

The White House

Want your public figure to be the top-listed Public Figure in Naperville?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Category

Address


30 N Brainard St
Naperville, IL
60540