Four years ago, Barack Obama courted people with disabilities as a voting bloc. PolitiFact counted 14 campaign promises about disabilities, from hiring more federal workers with disabilities to streamlining the application process for Social Security benefits.
Here we'll assess a pledge to launch an education study on students with disabilities.
Specifically, Obama wanted a comprehensive evaluation of these students' transition to higher education and the workforce. He sought to answer the following questions:
- What prevents students with disabilities from attending and finishing college?
- What stops them from getting jobs directly after college?
- Do they have adequate access to student loans and grants?
- Why do they drop out of college at a higher rate?
- Which programs have a proven record for recruiting and graduating students with disabilities?
In his first annual budget, Obama asked Congress to pay for such a study, and it was funded. Earlier this year Mathematica Policy Research, a private firm hired for $14 billion by the U.S. Education Department, launched a five-year evaluation. Its design combines survey data with government records, comparing students receiving individualized special education to students who are not.
Since the study isn't complete, we can't know its findings. Its basic design suggests it will shed light on the questions candidate Obama outlined.
Obama said he would commission a study on post-graduation opportunities for high school students with disabilities. A contractor employed by the Education Department is doing just that. We rate this a Promise Kept.