

"The question that Congress must ask is why have so many states had to
introduce resolutions or pass legislation to curb schools labeling and drugging
children? Unfortunately, the answer is that until IDEA is reformed, and
Congress provides a physically based scientific definition of 'disability,' the
diagnosing of children with subjective disorders will continue to be a national
problem."
Mrs. Patricia Johnson
Member, Colorado State Board of Education
In 1999, in the wake of the Columbine school massacre, and
under the direction of Mrs. Johnson, the Board passed the
precedent setting Resolution that called for academic rather than drug
solutions for behavioral and learning problems in the classroom.
When Congress originally passed IDEA, covering Special Education, its
primary purpose was to provide a Free and Appropriate Education for children
with hearing, sight, speech and other physical handicaps.
Over the ensuing 27 years, the funding has been largely funneled, instead,
to children with "learning disorders," a term so subjective that children who
fidget, butt into line or interrupt their teachers are so labeled. In most
cases they are subsequently prescribed cocaine-like, mind-altering drugs. Many
of these children simply have never been taught to read. Clearly, there is a
critical need to provide an objective, scientifically based definition of
"learning disability," and this must be the central point of reforming
IDEA.
The President's Commission on Excellence in Special Education found that
40 percent of children have been targeted as having "learning disorders" simply
because they have not been taught to read. This finding leaves no doubt that
the subjectivity of the term "learning disorder" must be the cornerstone of
Special Education reform, as well as the basis for any increased funding
demands.
Today more then 3.2 million children have been placed in Special
Education due to subjective and unscientific categories, such as "Specific
Learning Disability." State and federal governments are wasting $28 billion per
year, when clearly these children simply need standard academics.
The definition of "learning disabled" is so ambiguous that researchers
at the University of Michigan found that 85 percent of students they
tested—who had previously been identified as normal—would have been
classified as learning disabled. The result of this one flawed aspect of the
law—the subjectivity of who is classed as "disabled"—has resulted
in more than 60 percent of Special Ed funding being channeled away from the
children who really need it—the physically and intellectually
handicapped.
U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige has stated, "Our system fails to
teach many children fundamental skills like reading and then inappropriately
identifies some of them as having disabilities. Not only does this hurt those
children who are misidentified, it also reduces the resources available to
serve children with disabilities. If we provide all children with
scientifically-based reading instruction delivered by well-trained teachers,
many will never need special education."
Labeling a child with these "disorders" have led to school personnel
threatening parents to place their child on a psychiatric drug as a requisite
to remaining in class, or face the child being dismissed from school.
Nationwide, reports of parents being threatened with medical neglect or
child expulsion have prompted four states [Connecticut, Illinois, Minnesota and
Virginia] to enact laws and 15 more to introduce bills prohibiting school
personnel from recommending children be put on psychiatric drugs. The other 15
states are: Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky,
Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, New Hampshire, Nevada, New York, Texas,
Vermont and West Virginia.
Drugs are often a first choice for a child displaying "learning" and
"behavioral" problems. Yet these could be caused by diet (A New York study that
changed the diets of over a million juveniles caused a 40% decrease in
"learning disabilities"); high mercury levels, exposure to pesticides and other
toxins, and iron deficiency can place children at risk of both school failure
and delinquent behavior. Creative, intelligent children also often have trouble
concentrating in school. Thousands of children put on psychiatric drugs are
simply smart. The behaviors associated with giftedness closely mirror those
associated with ADHD.
"EARLY INTERVENTION": Any attempts to increase "early identification"
and "early intervention" of children with disabilities must be based on
physical diagnostic criteria and not subjective criteria for "learning
disorders" that will only exacerbate the growing numbers of children being
prescribed dangerous mind-altering drugs.
SEC. 602. (3) This section of IDEA is key to reform as it contains the
generalized psychological and psychiatric terms that lack any scientific
validity. The terms "serious emotional disturbances," "emotional disturbance"
and "specific learning disabilities" should be deleted.
Kevin P. Dwyer, a former assistant executive director at the National
Association of School Psychologists admitted that the way "learning disorders"
are diagnosed is "not a science." "We're not sophisticated enough to do a
perfect diagnosis," he candidly admitted.
Pediatric Neurologist Fred Baughman, who has testified before Congress
on this issue, says: "The most fundamental aspect of reforming IDEA is to
provide a definitive physically based definition of disability. A proper and
equitable definition for disability must include the necessity to establish
that a tangible, objective physical abnormality can be determined by a test
such as, but not limited to, blood or urine test, x-ray, brain scan or biopsy.
If none of these learning 'disorders' can meet this test, then clearly there is
no physical abnormality and we are labeling entirely normal children as
abnormal."
IN SUMMARY:
"In schools throughout the nation, children who are having problems with
their academic work, their peers, their teachers, or their families are being
labeled
as suffering from disorders that carry labels like Oppositional
Defiant disorder, Conduct Disorder, or Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder. These children may be placed in special classes, dismissed from
school, or given medication. From prisons to child welfare agencies, DSM
[Diagnostic Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders] is shaping how we
think about problems and determining who gets labeled as having a mental
disorder."
Professors Herb Kutchins & Stuart A. Kirk, Authors,
Making Us Crazy, DSM: The Psychiatric Bible and
The Creation of Mental Disorders
SEC. 602. (3) needs amending to provide an objective, scientifically
based definition of "learning disability." The terms "Serious Emotional
Disturbances," "Emotional Disturbance" and "Specific Learning Disabilities"
have no scientific merit, are subjectively determined and should not be
included in IDEA reform. The subjective terminology must be eliminated in order
to prevent the mass misidentification of children.
As part of the Individualized Education Plan (IEP) under IDEA, it should
be mandatory for parents to be given all options for their child's education,
including first ruling out any physical problem manifesting as a
behavioral/learning "disorder." This would require advising that a full and
searching medical examination be conducted.
As part of the IEP, parents must have access to all educational
resources, including tutoring to address any perceived learning or behavioral
problem in their child, and testing for giftedness.
Special Education should be available to those children suffering from
physically-based/caused disabilities and intellectual disabilities that have
been physically caused, including autism. The psychological/psychiatric system
should not be able to abuse Special Education by diagnosing childhood and
educational problems and failure as "mental disorders."
Existing funds used for school psychologists and psychiatrists to
identify "learning disabilities" and to recommend drugs, should be channeled to
provide more teachers and tutors, including specialized teachers who can deal
with the special needs of a physically or intellectually handicapped
child.
This report was issued by the Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) International, a
mental health watchdog established by the Church of Scientology in 1969 to
investigate and expose psychiatric violations of human rights. CCHR has been
responsible for the reform of more than 100 laws internationally that protect
the rights of the mentally ill. For more information, contact the Citizens
Commission on Human Rights International at 800-869-2247.
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