Black autistic students

Overview:

United Teachers Los Angeles NEA vice president Georgia Flowers-Lee warns that Black autistic students will suffer due to cuts to Title I funding and the Department of Education. Despite a surge in diagnoses, Black students are receiving fewer supports, such as trained educators, one-on-one aides, and tailored learning environments. The federal data shows that 21% of public schools were not fully staffed in special education, and teachers rated their access to support as "somewhat insufficient" to "somewhat sufficient." The post highlights the urgent need for practical solutions to maintain manageable class sizes, preserve autism-specific supports, invest in paraeducators, and ensure that financial decisions do not outweigh student needs.

When United Teachers Los Angeles NEA vice president Georgia Flowers-Lee began teaching special education in the Los Angeles Unified School District over 20 years ago, she didnโ€™t expect to find her calling. Years of supporting and working closely with often overlooked students on the autism spectrum โ€” many of them Black โ€” changed that.

โ€œIf youโ€™ve met one student with autism, youโ€™ve met one student with autism,โ€ she says. โ€œItโ€™s a spectrum disorder. Iโ€™ve had students who were academically strong but needed social-emotional support, and Iโ€™ve had students who were heavily impacted and needed far more support.โ€

But as rates of autism among Black students surge thanks to better diagnosis methods, the very supports these students rely on โ€” trained educators, one-on-one aides, federally funded programs โ€” face catastrophic cuts. With Title I funding threatened and cuts to the Department of Education, Flowers-Lee warns that Black autistic students will pay the price.

โ€œThese are our kids,โ€ she says. โ€œAnd if we donโ€™t fight for them โ€” who will?โ€

RELATED: Itโ€™s Not an Epidemic โ€” Black Autistic Students Need Support

More Diagnoses, Less Support

According to the CDCโ€™s Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network, 3.7% of Black 8-year-olds were diagnosed with autism in 2023 โ€” compared to just 2.7% of white children. Itโ€™s the second consecutive report showing higher prevalence among Black children, reversing decades of underdiagnosis.โ€‹

Flowers-Lee says some students require minimal interventions, while others have severe impairments, but what they all need is trained educators, consistent support, and learning environments tailored to meet their needs.

โ€œSome students thrive in general education classrooms,โ€ she adds. โ€œBut for others, a class of 32 is not where they are going to be successful. And those students deserve options.โ€

Flowers-Lee explains that autistic and other special education students all need an Individualized Education Plan โ€” or IEP โ€”ย with specific learning goals. If the IEP says a student โ€œneeds speech therapy every week, the district is legally obligated to provide it,โ€ she says. โ€œBut too often, schools donโ€™t have the staff, resources, or training โ€” and thatโ€™s a big problem.โ€โ€‹

Federal data from the 2023โ€“24 school year reveal that 21% of public schools were not fully staffed in special education, marking the highest level of reported shortages among all teaching specialties. Additionally, a 2022 national study found that teachers of students with disabilities rated their access to support as โ€œsomewhat insufficientโ€ to โ€œsomewhat sufficient,โ€ with the lowest ratings given for planning and release time and training.

And even if their learning disability is identified, Flowers-Lee says many students enter classrooms ill-equipped to educate them: โ€œThey walk into increased class sizes and lower staffing,โ€ she explains. โ€œThatโ€™s a disaster waiting to happen.โ€โ€‹

She also adds that paraeducators, who often provide one-on-one support, are paid so poorly that districts canโ€™t even compete with fast food chains for talent.โ€‹

โ€œIf you can make more money working at Chick-fil-A, why would you want to be in a classroom where you might get bitten, kicked, or spit on?โ€ she asks. โ€œItโ€™s a complex work environment, and we donโ€™t compensate or support people properly.โ€โ€‹

RELATED: Special Ed Isnโ€™t Fair to Black Kids โ€” and DEI Cuts Wonโ€™t Help

Title I and DOE Cuts Will Hurt Special Ed Kids

These challenges could soon get worse. President Donald Trump and Education Secretary Linda McMahon proposed eliminating the Department of Education entirely โ€” and recent directives have tied federal funding, including Title I, to anti-DEI compliance. Meaning schools must certify theyโ€™re not advancing diversity, equity, or inclusion initiatives โ€” or risk losing support.

Title I funding is especially vital to schools in low-income Black communities, providing essential resources for everything from school meals to afterschool programs to special education staffing.

โ€œWeโ€™re talking about basic things โ€” school lunches, intervention programs, afterschool care,โ€ Flowers-Lee says. โ€œFor many parents, that after-school program is their childcare.โ€

And while the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) legally mandates services for students with disabilities, it has never been fully funded. Currently, Flowers-Lee says the federal government covers only 13% of special education costs โ€” far below the 40% originally promised.

In LAUSD, the second-largest school district in the nation, about a billion dollars a year comes from the general fund just to fill the gap,โ€ she says. โ€œSo if we lose Title I on top of that, itโ€™s going to break systems that are already hanging on by a thread.โ€

Advocating for the Support Black Students Deserve

As uncertainty looms, Flowers-Lee says sheโ€™s spending her time advocating for practical, urgent solutions that include maintaining manageable class sizes, preserving autism-specific supports, investing in paraeducators, and ensuring that financial decisions do not outweigh student needs.

โ€œChildren with special needs are expensive to educate properly โ€” and thatโ€™s just the truth,โ€ she says. โ€œBut that doesnโ€™t mean we stop trying.โ€

She also calls on districts to use the reserves they already have. โ€œOur district has a massive reserve, but they keep saying itโ€™s for a rainy day. Well, guess what? Itโ€™s storming.โ€

The post Georgia Flowers-Lee Sounds Alarm on Autistic Student Support appeared first on Word In Black.

The post {{post title}}, https://wordinblack.com/2025/04/georgia-flowers-lee-sounds-alarm-on-autistic-student-support/ appeared first on Word in Black.ย