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Paw Paw CUSD 271

Lee County, IL · 193 students

Inclusion — where this district teaches kids with disabilities

Federal law (the IDEA, 20 U.S.C. §1412(a)(5) the law ) says children with disabilities should learn alongside their classmates without disabilities as much as is right for them — what the law calls the “Least Restrictive Environment.” The bar below shows how this district actually places its students with IEPs, from a regular classroom most of the day to a fully separate school. There's no single right answer — some children genuinely need a more specialized setting — but districts that include more students in the regular classroom usually have the staffing and support to do it well.

88.9%are in a regular classroom most of the day (ISBE 2024–25)
More included than 98% of Illinois districts · state median 55.7%
88.9%In a regular classroom most of the day — 80%+ of the time — the most included
0.0%Split between a regular class and a separate room — 40–79% of the day in general ed
0.0%Mostly in a separate special-education room — less than 40% of the day in general ed
11.1%In a separate school for students with disabilities — a different building entirely — the most separated
Where IEP students spend the school day, all four settings. ISBE Illinois Report Card 2025 — Special Education data set 2026-06-10

Safety & discipline record

How the district responds when a child with a disability struggles, from the federal civil-rights collection (CRDC). Suspension/expulsion remove a child from school; a police referral or arrest brings law enforcement into a school matter; physical restraint is staff holding a child immobile; seclusion is confining a child alone in a room they can't leave. The government tracks these because students with disabilities face them far out of proportion: nationally they are about 12% of students but 75% of those physically restrained and 58% of those secluded, and are suspended at roughly twice the rate of students without disabilities. U.S. Dept. of Education / OCR High numbers can flag a district that meets behavior with force or exclusion rather than support — read them as something to ask about, not a verdict.

Students w/ disabilities suspended out of school
1 student · 3.8% of those with IEPs · 3.2× the rate of students without disabilities (state avg 2.4×) (CRDC 2017-18) U.S. DOE OCR — Civil Rights Data Collection 2017-18 2026-06-10
“× the rate” compares how often students with disabilities face this vs. students without disabilities in the same district — the clearest sign of disproportionate discipline. Nationally the suspension gap is about 2×.
Students w/ disabilities suspended in school
1 student · 3.8% of those with IEPs · 3.2× the rate of students without disabilities (state avg 1.9×) (CRDC 2017-18) U.S. DOE OCR — Civil Rights Data Collection 2017-18 2026-06-10
In-school suspension keeps a child in the building but out of their classroom — still lost instruction.
Students w/ disabilities expelled
0 students · 0.0% of those with IEPs (state avg 1.9×) (CRDC 2017-18) U.S. DOE OCR — Civil Rights Data Collection 2017-18 2026-06-10
Expulsion (with or without continued services, including zero-tolerance) — the most severe exclusion.
Students w/ disabilities physically restrained
0 students · 0.0 per 1,000 with IEPs · state avg 5.5 (CRDC 2017-18) U.S. DOE OCR — Civil Rights Data Collection 2017-18 2026-06-10
Unduplicated student counts, self-reported to OCR by 2 of 2 schools. A reported 0 can mean none — or under-reporting. Counts are not a verdict on a district.
Students w/ disabilities placed in seclusion
0 students · 0.0 per 1,000 with IEPs · state avg 3.0 (CRDC 2017-18) U.S. DOE OCR — Civil Rights Data Collection 2017-18 2026-06-10
OCR disability complaints
value pending — see source U.S. DOE — Office for Civil Rights 2026-06-09
Civil-rights complaints filed with the U.S. Education Dept.'s Office for Civil Rights. “Open” means under investigation — not a finding of wrongdoing.
Due-process record
Illinois statewide summary
Formal disputes between parents and districts that reached a hearing. ISBE anonymizes the district, so we summarize them statewide.

Students with disabilities — and who supports them

Students with IEPs
Support staff
12.4 per 1,000 students · state avg 5.6 · 1 social worker · 1 counselor · 0 nurses (CRDC 2017-18) U.S. DOE OCR — Civil Rights Data Collection 2017-18 2026-06-10
School psychologists, social workers, counselors and nurses — the people who evaluate children, deliver the counseling/related services written into an IEP, and keep kids supported. More staff per student means more capacity to serve.

Data vintage — and why some of it lags

Each figure is a public record, linked to its source with a retrieval date. Vintages differ because the agencies publish on different cycles:

  • Inclusion / LRE, % with an IEP, and the academic outcomes for students with disabilities (proficiency, graduation, dropout, chronic absenteeism, mobility, 9th-grade-on-track) — ISBE Illinois Report Card, 2024–25 (current). The state publishes annually each fall.
  • Restraint & seclusion — federal CRDC, 2017–18. This is the newest usable collection: the CRDC runs every two years and releases ~2–3 years later. The 2021–22 collection is released but, for restraint/seclusion, ~80% of Illinois schools are coded “not applicable/skipped” — virtual/remote-only schools (widespread that pandemic year) were skipped for this measure, and the collection had a documented skip-logic failure. The next complete collection, 2023–24, is expected from OCR around the end of 2025; we’ll refresh when it lands.
  • Due-process decisions — ISBE, through FY 2026 (current). Statewide, because ISBE anonymizes the district.
  • OCR complaints — value pending. The federal Office for Civil Rights complaint portal blocks automated access; on the roadmap.

Verify the numbers yourself. Every figure is computed from the agencies' public-use files and linked above. We cross-checked our Illinois restraint/seclusion/suspension totals against OCR's official state tables and they match exactly — e.g. physical restraint · seclusion · out-of-school suspension (open the file, find the Illinois row). PedsList aggregates and links — it does not editorialize beyond what the public data shows.