Special Education What the Research Says

One Group of Teachers Is Less Likely to Identify Black Students for Special Ed. Why That Matters

By Sarah D. Sparks — March 06, 2024 4 min read
Full length side view of Black female instructor in mid 40s with hand on shoulder of a Black elementary boy as they stand in corridor and talk.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Teachers are often among the first to recognize that a student’s classroom struggles hint at an underlying disability. But racial and cultural differences may also lead teachers to interpret the same student as needing different kinds of help.

A new study published in the American Educational Research Journal finds Black teachers significantly less likely to identify students—and particularly low-income Black boys—for special education.

“I think the study could support calls for more recruitment of Black teachers,” said Cassandra Hart, a co-author of the study and an education professor at the University of California, Davis, noting that nationwide, only 7 percent of the teaching force yet 15 percent of students are Black. “But also ... it gives support to the idea of providing more explicit training, making sure that teachers have clear guidance so that there’s less of an element of chance, based on who your teacher is in a given year, about whether you are screened for disability services.”

While special education identification can help students get needed supports, it can also exacerbate education opportunity gaps, and students of color and low-income students tend to be disproportionately identified for many kinds of disabilities. One 2019 study, for example, found that the greater the concentration of white students in a school, the more likely it was for students of color to be identified with disabilities like attention deficits, which are associated with more classroom exclusion and less access to grade-level material.

Hart and co-author Constance Lindsay, an assistant professor of educational leadership at the University of North Carolina, tracked data on teacher and student demographics as well as identification for gifted and special education services from more than 50,000 students who attended North Carolina public elementary schools from 2008 to 2013.

Nearly 1 in 4 of the students studied was identified as having a disability, nearly three-quarters of them by grade 2. But which teachers they had during those elementary years made a big difference in whether they ended up in special education.

In any given year, the researchers found that Black boys who had a teacher of the same race were 18 percent less likely to be identified for special education for the first time than their peers taught by a teacher of a different race. White students, and particularly boys, also were significantly less likely to be identified for disabilities if they had a Black teacher, though the effect was smaller than it was for Black boys. There was no significant difference in identification for girls or for academically gifted students, except that Black girls who had a Black teacher in 2nd grade—the year before gifted education identification—were about 2 percentage points more likely to be tapped for gifted programs.

Teacher-matching made the biggest difference when it came to certain categories for special education. For example, Black students were 25 percent less likely to be identified as having specific learning disabilities—a category including dyslexia and dyscalculia—and 10 percent less likely to be identified as having another health concern—a category including attention deficits—if they had a teacher of the same race than if their teacher was of a different race. By contrast, Black students taught by Black educators were slightly more likely to be identified as having intellectual disabilities, such as Down syndrome or fetal alcohol spectrum disorders.

“There’s very little subjectivity as to whether or not a child has a hearing disability or traumatic brain injury,” Hart said. “But if you think about things that might get students screened for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, it’s sort of based on teachers looking at classroom behavior and determining whether [the students] seem to have difficulty paying attention in classroom settings. That’s a little bit more of a judgment call, whether a particular student is exhibiting a lack of attention in school or not.”

It’s not clear why Black teachers are identifying fewer students of any race for disabilities, though. “It’s possible that there’s something about the teacher’s personal philosophy toward when to screen for disabilities” that leads to lower identification rates, Hart said, “or it could be that there’s a better relationship with the teacher—and so the kid is actually coming and paying more attention at school, exhibiting less of the [behaviors] that might make you think to screen. We can’t disentangle that in these data.”

The results provide more evidence of benefits of diversifying the teacher workforce. In prior studies of teacher-student matching, Lindsay found low-income Black boys who had a Black teacher for at least one elementary school year were nearly 40 percent less likely to drop out of high school.

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Student Well-Being Webinar
Attend to the Whole Child: Non-Academic Factors within MTSS
Learn strategies for proactively identifying and addressing non-academic barriers to student success within an MTSS framework.
Content provided by Renaissance
Classroom Technology K-12 Essentials Forum How to Teach Digital & Media Literacy in the Age of AI
Join this free event to dig into crucial questions about how to help students build a foundation of digital literacy.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Special Education Can AI Help With Special Ed.? There's Promise—and Reason to Be Cautious
Some special education professionals are experimenting with the technology.
3 min read
Photo collage of woman using tablet computer and AI icon.
iStock / Getty Images Plus
Special Education Many Students Can Get Special Ed. Until Age 22. What Districts Should Do
School districts' responsibilities under federal special education law aren't always clear-cut.
4 min read
Instructor working with adult special needs student.
iStock
Special Education How a Mindset Shift Can Help Solve Special Education Misidentification
Many educators face the problem of misidentification of special education students. Here are strategies educators are using to fix it.
3 min read
Timothy Allison, a collaborative special education teacher in Birmingham, Ala., works with a student at Sun Valley Elementary School on Sept. 8, 2022.
Timothy Allison, a collaborative special education teacher in Birmingham, Ala., works with a student at Sun Valley Elementary School on Sept. 8, 2022.
Jay Reeves/AP
Special Education Impact of Missed Special Ed. Evaluations Could Echo for Years
The onset of COVID-19 slowed special education identification. Four years later, a new study hints at the massive scale of the impact.
6 min read
Blank puzzle pieces in a bunch with a person icon tile standing alone to the side.
Liz Yap/Education Week with iStock/Getty