When Schools Lack Resources, Everyone Suffers

A twenty-year veteran special education teacher in San Antonio’s Northside Independent School District says she’s been injured at least fifteen times in five weeks by one student whose behavioral needs exceed what her classroom can address. Tracey Sorrell teaches students with cognitive differences who need more support than general education classrooms can provide, and she’s accustomed to occasional challenging moments. What’s different this year is a student whose outbursts occur daily and have escalated despite standard intervention approaches.

The district says it follows federal requirements, provides protective equipment and training, and has specialists observing the classroom. But Sorrell argues the process moves too slowly while injuries accumulate, and that the district has far fewer specialists than it once did. Where there used to be five or six autism specialists, she says there’s now one for the entire district. When specialized support is stretched thin, teachers and students both pay the price.