When we try to improve special education outcomes, many schools focus on implementing specific interventions, purchasing new curricula, or training individual teachers. Yet these approaches often fall short of creating lasting change. The reason? They address symptoms rather than root causes embedded in how our educational systems function.
A system is more than just a collection of procedures or a flowchart. In education, systems represent the interconnected processes, beliefs, structures, and practices that either enable or hinder student success. These include formal elements like referral protocols and IEP processes, as well as informal dynamics like communication patterns and implicit expectations.
Systems thinking requires looking beyond isolated problems to understand the relationships and interactions that create patterns over time. High referral rates, inconsistent IEP quality, or intervention failures often stem not from individual effort but from systemic issues like unclear processes, limited collaboration opportunities, or misaligned schedules.
Many improvement efforts fail because they target isolated components without addressing how they interact. Training teachers on differentiation won't help if scheduling doesn't allow for planning time. New procedures won't take root if existing beliefs about student capabilities remain unchanged. When improvements depend on specific people rather than institutional structures, they collapse with personnel changes.
High-impact systems in special education share key characteristics (or, if you like, a pneumatic - IMPACT).
Without these characteristics, predictable dysfunctions emerge—schools fall into reactive "whack-a-mole" responses to problems, accumulate band-aid solutions, or rely on individuals rather than consistent structures. (Click on the image below to download your own IMPACT tool)
Effective systems change in special education follows these principles:
When schools successfully implement systems change, benefits extend beyond compliance: teachers experience greater efficacy with clear processes, resources get allocated more effectively, collaboration improves with role clarity, and students receive more consistent support across settings.
Systems change isn't about adding to educators' workloads—it's about redesigning how work happens to be more coherent and sustainable. By shifting from focusing solely on individual practices to intentionally designing the systems that enable those practices, schools create conditions where all students can truly thrive.