Special Students Named Homecoming Kings and Queens
[Source: USA Today]
By Sarah Reinecke and Jeff Martin, USA TODAY
CHESTER, S.D. — Homecoming brought joy to Betsy Daniel this fall, when classmates chose her as homecoming queen.
A similar scene played out this month in New Mexico, where students  erupted in cheers when a classmate with special needs was named  homecoming king.
In Lawrence, Kan., a boy with Down syndrome is on the homecoming court  after classmates went to administrators and demanded his name be on the  ballot. The king and queen at that school, Free State High, will be  crowned Friday.
“It’s really amazing to see because there was a time when they were  never even invited to go to prom, so to be the king or queen is just  phenomenal,” says Kirsten Seckler, a spokesperson for the Special  Olympics.  
Under federal law, students with special needs have the right to be in  the same classes as the rest of the students, to the maximum extent  possible, says Frances Duff, a teacher at Cibola High School in  Albuquerque.
As that has happened, and students with special needs become more  integrated into the school culture, “they’re no longer seen as  different,” Duff says.
“There’s a climate of acceptance and enjoying each other,” says Duff,  who has seen this first-hand at Cibola, where students with special  needs have been chosen homecoming king twice in the past couple of  years.
A student with autism, Luke Sachs, was named Cibola High homecoming king  in 2008, Duff says. Then, James Keefner, who has Down syndrome, was  named homecoming king this fall.
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