Arizona Autism Charter School Founder Tapped as Ed Dept. Special Education Chief
Diana Diaz-Harrison鈥檚 schools use a controversial intervention. She wants to use her new position to help others launch more like them.

The founder and executive director of a network of Arizona charter schools serving autistic children has been named the U.S. Education Department鈥檚 deputy assistant secretary for special education and rehabilitative services. Education Secretary Linda McMahon made the announcement while touring the 鈥 Phoenix location.
Diana Diaz-Harrison, whose son is autistic, said that in she hopes to continue her efforts to help others launch autism charter schools throughout the country. Her schools, she said in remarks captured on , are a testament to what happens 鈥渨hen parents like me are empowered to create solutions.鈥
鈥淢y vision is to expand school choice for special needs families 鈥 whether through charter schools, private options, voucher programs, or other parent-empowered models,鈥 she said in a statement to 麻豆精品. .
The five-school network uses a controversial intervention that attempts to train children to appear and behave like their neurotypical peers. Created by the researcher behind LGBTQ conversion therapy, applied behavior analysis, or ABA, is widely depicted as the gold standard despite scant independent evidence of its effectiveness and mounting research documenting its harms.
Diaz-Harrison opened the network鈥檚 first school in 2014 as a free, public alternative to private schools for autistic children, which are popular in Arizona but typically charge tens of thousands of dollars a year in tuition. Her Arizona charter schools are a 501(c)3 nonprofit financed by state and federal per-pupil funds. ABA is specifically endorsed by Arizona education officials as a strategy to use with autistic students.
In the time since those charters opened, ABA has grown to be a national, multi-billion-dollar industry, with for-profit companies tapping public and private insurance to pay for as much as 40 hours a week of one-on-one therapy. The intervention uses repeated, rapid-fire commands that bring rewards and punishments to change a child鈥檚 behavior and communication style.
A 74 investigation last year showed that most data supporting ABA’s effectiveness is drawn from research conducted by industry practitioners. Independent analyses, including a years-long U.S. Department of Defense review, found little evidence the intervention works. Former patients who underwent the therapy as children reported severe, lasting mental health effects, including PTSD.
Diaz-Harrison told 麻豆精品 the therapy is both valuable and sought-after. 鈥淔or the autism community, specifically, many families seek schools that integrate positive behavioral strategies,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he evidence supporting behavioral therapy is extensive and well-established. It has been endorsed by the U.S. surgeon general and the American Academy of Pediatrics as an effective, research-backed approach for individuals with autism.鈥
During her visit, McMahon told students and staff she was eager to tell President Donald Trump about the schools. 鈥淗e doesn鈥檛 believe any child, whether they have neuro-difficulties or any other problems, should be trapped in a school and not have the facilities that they need,鈥 she said.
Since Trump鈥檚 second inauguration, he has issued numerous orders that have alarmed disability advocates and the autistic community. Though both edicts contradict longstanding federal laws, in March he ordered the closure of the Education Department and said responsibility for special education will be transferred to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
About half of the Education Department鈥檚 staff has been fired, including most of the people responsible for investigating what had been a backlog of some 6,000 disability discrimination complaints. Though it鈥檚 unclear whether Trump and McMahon may legally disregard special education funding laws and allow states to spend federal dollars as they see fit, both have said they favor giving local officials as much decision-making power as possible.
Meanwhile, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has stoked fear in the autistic community by announcing a new effort to tie autism to vaccines or other 鈥渆nvironmental toxins鈥 鈥 a hypothesis discredited by dozens of studies. The man he appointed to head the study has been cited for practicing medicine without a license and prescribing dangerous drugs to autistic children.
Last week, the new head of the National Institutes of Health announced that an unprecedented compilation of medical, pharmaceutical and insurance records would be used to create an autism 鈥disease registry鈥 鈥 a kind of list historically used to sterilize, institutionalize and even 鈥渆uthanize鈥 autistic people. HHS later walked back the statement, saying the database under construction would have privacy guardrails.
Among other responsibilities, the offices Diaz-Harrison will head identify strategies for improving instruction for children with disabilities and ensure that as they grow up, they are able to be as independent as possible. The disability community has raised concerns that the administration is retreating from these goals.
Advocates have said they fear the changes pave the way for a return to the practice of separating students with disabilities in dedicated special ed classrooms rather than having them attend class with typically developing peers. The Individuals with Disabilities in Education Act guarantees special education students the right to instruction in the 鈥渓east restrictive environment鈥 possible.
Families鈥 preferences vary widely, with some parents of autistic children refusing any form of behavior therapy, while others want their kids in settings with children who share their needs. Many insist on grade-level instruction in general education classrooms
Diaz-Harrison has a master’s degree in education and worked as a bilingual teacher in California early in her career. From the late 1990s until she began supporting her son full time, she worked as a public relations strategist and a reporter and anchor for the Spanish-language broadcast network Univision.
In 2014, frustrated with her son鈥檚 school options, she who applied for permission to open what was then a single K-5 school serving 90 children. The network now has about 1,000 students in all grades and features an online program.
At the end of the 2023-24 academic year, of the network’s students scored proficient or highly proficient on Arizona鈥檚 annual reading exam, while 4% passed the math assessments.
In December 2022, the network won a $1 million , an award created by Jeff and Janine Yass. The billionaire investors have a long track record of donating to Republican political candidates and organizations that support school choice.
One of the award’s creators, Jeanne Allen, is CEO of the Center for Education Reform. The center nominated Diaz-Harrison for the federal role.
Yass award winners were featured at the 2023 meeting of the American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC, a conservative forum where state lawmakers are given model bills on education and other policies to introduce in their respective statehouses.
Diaz-Harrison has partnered with a Florida autism school to create a national to help people start schools like hers throughout the country. She told 麻豆精品 the effort has so far supported teams of hopeful school founders from Louisiana, Texas, Florida, Alabama and Nevada.
Parents of young autistic children and autistic adults often disagree about ABA. Told by their pediatrician or the person who diagnosed their child as autistic that they have a narrow window in which to intervene, families fight to get the therapy. Adults who have experienced it, however, report lasting trauma and have lobbied for research 鈥 much of it now at risk of being defunded by Kennedy 鈥 into more effective and humane alternatives.
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