From Government Accounting Office:
As we reported in February 2019, the Department of Education’s (Education) data suggest that
the restraint and seclusion of K-12 public school students is rare nationwide, though it
disproportionately affects students with disabilities and boys in general.1 In broad terms,
Education defines restraint as restricting a student’s ability to freely move his or her torso, arms,
legs, or head, and defines seclusion as involuntarily confining a student alone in a room or area
from which the student is physically prevented from leaving. Education’s 2012 resource
document on the use of restraint and seclusion states that restraint or seclusion should never be
used except when a child’s behavior poses imminent danger of serious physical harm to self or
others...
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