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Cost Drivers

By Ms. Janet R. Beales and Dr. Thomas F. Bertonneau / Posted: Oct. 1, 1997

The cost of educating difficult-to-educate youth, particularly students with disabilities and adjudicated youth can be significantly higher than the cost of educating regular students for a host of reasons. The most obvious reason for the cost difference is that this group of students often has special needs requiring more intensive services, higher staff-to-student ratios, and specialized equipment. Students with hearing impairments, for example, may require special adaptive equipment or an interpreter. Adjudicated youth may need to be in a highly controlled, secure environment as a condition of their sentencing. These costs are often a necessary, and unavoidable, cost of educating special-needs students. But other factors including some that are avoidable also drive the high cost of education for this population. These include the following.

Publication: Study
Next page: Labor Costs
This text is part of the larger publication:
Do Private Schools Serve Difficult-to-Educate Students?
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