The Kennebec Journal has an article on the innovative BACE program that Wayne Public Schools has established in partnership with QBS.
PUBLIC, PRIVATE APPROACHES DEBATED
A public program push
A handful of public school programs for children with autism have opened in Maine in the past decade. The Wayne program joins existing public school offerings in Gorham and Old Town, for example.
State Education Commissioner Susan Gendron told lawmakers in September that she's pushing special education directors to establish regional, public school programs for children with autism. State education officials, she said, are searching for a public model that can be replicated throughout Maine.
"You have to have enough of a population," Gendron said in a recent interview. "You have to find good staff and it can be successful."
The Wayne program -- which can accommodate eight students -- has access to a critical mass of children with autism by opening its doors to school districts throughout the Capital area.
This year, all three students come from outside the Maranacook-area school district.
Their home school districts pay Maranacook tuition, translating into revenue for the Readfield-based district.
"Our whole goal is to have these kids be as functional as possible in a public school," Collins said. "When you can accomplish that level of functionality, that's everything in the world."