“…A large number of studies (e.g., Farrell, Dyson, Polat, Hutcheson, & Gallannaugh, 2007) indicate no relationship between academic achievement and inclusion at the district level for students without disabilities and a small relationship at the school level between academic achievement and inclusion. Two studies suggest that when students without disabilities are educated alongside peers with disabilities, they slightly outperform those in non-inclusive settings in math & literacy (Saint-Laurent et al, 1998). In a longitudinal study, Peetsma, Vergeer, Roeleveld and Karsten (2001) found that while there were no initial differences in the academic progress of students with and without mild disabilities even after Abery, Tichá, & Kincade / Moving toward an inclusive education system… 54 two years, by the four-year mark students educated in inclusive settings had made significantly greater academic progress than their matched pairs in special schools.…”