Toot by Serge from BabkaSerge from Babka (babka.social)

@dukepaaron @csgraves Just to add to this thread as one of those so-called "special needs" kids, sometimes the religious school can provide better resource availability for things like materials in alternative formats, (braille/large print), because resource teachers/facilitators for religious schools end up serving maybe one or two schools while the same resource teachers/facilitators for public schools can end up serving multpile counties, and everyone who gets shoved under the special needs umbrella, which can mean everyone in the public situation ends up getting underserved somehow. This matters especially in rural areas, where the religious school can provide what ends up being a better and more accessible education experience. (1)