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Using the Early Childhood Outcomes Summary Form

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Title: Using the Early Childhood Outcomes Summary Form


1
Using the Early Childhood Outcomes Summary Form
  • Presentation Modified by Dee Gethmann
  • Iowa Department of Education
  • October 2006
  • Author of Original Presentation
  • Kathy Hebbeler
  • ECO Center at SRI International

2
Overview
  • Why collect Early Childhood Outcomes data?
  • Understanding Early Childhood Outcomes
  • Measuring Childrens Accomplishments of the 3
    Early Childhood Outcomes
  • Using the Early Childhood Outcomes Summary Form
  • Practice with the Early Childhood Outcomes
    Summary Form

3
Iowas Early Childhood OutcomesPurpose
  • Develop and Implement a Statewide Accountability
    System to Measure Outcomes for Infants and
    Toddlers in Early ACCESS and Preschoolers in
    Early Childhood Special Education

4
Early Childhood OutcomesTarget Population
  • Early ACCESS
  • Infants and Toddlers
  • All infants and toddlers that have an IFSP
  • Include children when transitioning at the age of
    3
  • Early Childhood Special Education
  • Preschoolers
  • All preschool children that have an IEP
  • Include children when transitioning from ECSE
    services to kindergarten
  • Include children receiving ECSE services and
    Kindergarten services (Part-Time/Part-Time)
  • Does NOT include children that begin receiving
    special education services in kindergarten

5
The Essential Question
  • Are students with disabilities entering school
    ready to learn at high levels?

6
  • Why Collect Early Childhood Outcomes Data?

7
How will this make a difference for children and
families?
  • System of Accountability
  • Looking at Results
  • Requirement to report in IDEA 2004
  • Provide information to the public
  • Data Reported by AEA and LEA
  • Document effectiveness of Early ACCESS and Early
    Childhood Special Education (ECSE) services

8
How will this make a difference for children and
families?
  • System of Accountability
  • Looking at Results
  • Provide leadership to advance assessment
    practices and data use
  • Improve developmentally appropriate practices,
    instruction and outcomes for children (EC
    Blueprint)
  • Use data to plan and implement effective
    curricula, assessments, and interventions (EC
    Blueprint)

9
  • Understanding
  • Early Childhood Outcomes (ECO)

10
Three Early Childhood Outcomes Areas
  • Children with IFSP/IEP who demonstrate improved
  • Positive social-emotional skills (including
    social relationships)
  • Acquisition and use of knowledge and skills
    (including early language/communication and early
    literacy for preschoolers)
  • Use of appropriate behaviors to meet their needs

11
The 3 ECO Areas Refer to the Whole Child
  • Represent Critical Skills that
  • Promote positive outcomes for young children
  • Support active and successful participation in
    everyday activities and routines, now and in the
    future
  • Integrate all areas of development
  • Prepare children to enter school ready to learn
    at high levels (The Essential Question)

12
Thinking Functionally (within age-expected
bounds)
  • Not just.
  • Know how to make eye contact, smile, and give a
    hug
  • Know how to imitate a gesture when prompted by
    others
  • Use finger in pointing motion
  • Show a skill in a specific situation
  • But does he/she
  • Initiate affection toward caregivers and respond
    to others affection
  • Watch what a peer says or does and incorporate it
    into his/her own play
  • Point to indicate needs or wants
  • Use a skill in actions across settings and
    situations to accomplish something meaningful to
    the child

13
ECO Area 1 Children have positive
social-emotional skills
  • Involves
  • Relating with adults
  • Relating with other children
  • For older children - following age appropriate
    rules, limits, and routines
  • Participates/contributes as part of a group
  • Includes areas like
  • Attachment/separation/ autonomy
  • Expressing emotions and feelings
  • Social interactions and play

14
ECO Area 2 Children acquire and use knowledge
and skills
  • Involves
  • Thinking
  • Reasoning
  • Remembering
  • Problem-solving
  • Using symbols and language
  • Understanding physical and social worlds
  • Includes
  • Early concepts symbols, pictures, numbers,
    classification, spatial relationships
  • Pre-writing scribbling, shapes, pictures,
    letters
  • Object permanence
  • Expressive language and communication

15
ECO Area 3 Children use appropriate behaviors
to meet their needs
  • Involves
  • Taking care of basic needs
  • Getting about in the environment
  • Daily living skills
  • In older children, contributing to their own
    safety, fitness, and health care
  • Includes
  • Integrating motor skills to complete tasks
  • Self-help skills (e.g., dressing, feeding,
    grooming, toileting, household responsibility)
  • Acting on the world to get what one wants
  • Engaging in play
  • Persisting in activities

16
CHILDRENS DEVELOPMENT IS INTERCONNECTED
To be active and successful participants now and
in the future in a variety of settings
To be active and successful participants now and
in the future in a variety of settings
Masters the environ-ment
17
How do we describe the ECO Areas in Iowa?
  • Iowas Alignment of
  • Early Childhood Outcome Areas
  • IFSP Outcome/IEP Goal Codes used in IFSP/IEP
    Results
  • Iowa Early Learning Standards
  • February 2006, Iowa Dept. of Education

18
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19
ECO Will Help Us Look at Our Results to Ensure
  • Early ACCESS/ECSE is
  • Making a difference for children and families
  • so that children with developmental delays and
    disabilities are entering school ready to learn
    at high levels

20
  • Measuring Childrens Accomplishment of
    the 3 Early Childhood Outcomes

21
Measuring Childrens Accomplishments
  • What is Assessment in Early Childhood?
  • Assessment is a generic term that refers to the
    process of gathering information for
    decision-making.
  • (McLean, 2004)

22
DEC Recommended Practices for Assessment
  • Involves multiple measures
  • e.g., observations, criterion-curriculum-based
    instruments, interviews, curriculum-compatible
    norm-referenced scales, informed clinical
    opinion, work samples
  • Involves multiple sources
  • e.g., families, professional team members,
    service providers, caregivers, physicians
  • DEC Division for Early Childhood (a division of
    the Council for Exceptional Children)
    http//www.dec-sped.org/

23
Use of Multiple Measures and Multiple Sources
  • Iowa refers to this as RIOT
  • Record Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Observations
  • Tests/Assessments

24
Examples
  • Measures
  • Reports
  • Medical
  • Interviews
  • Parent Interview
  • Observations
  • Time Sampling
  • Tests/Assessments
  • Example Curriculum-based assessments (e.g.,
    Creative Curriculum Child Observation Assessment)
  • IFSP/IEP Results
  • Sources
  • Parents and family members
  • Service providers
  • Therapists
  • Physicians
  • Child care providers
  • ECSE Teachers
  • People familiar with the child across settings
    and situations

25
Include Families
  • Input from Families is Critical
  • Family members see the child in situations that
    professionals do not

26
Multiple Measures and Sources Need to Address
Childrens Functioning
  • ECO Areas Reflect
  • Functioning across a variety of settings and
    situations that make up the childs day
  • Typical functioning, not childs capacity to
    function under ideal circumstances
  • Many pathways to demonstrate accomplishments for
    children with atypical development (e.g., using
    sign language, wheel chair).
  • Include any assistive technology or supports the
    child typically uses

27
Challenges in Measuring Childrens
Accomplishments
  • There is not one measure that will assess the 3
    ECO Areas directly
  • Many child assessments are organized around
    developmental domains
  • Thus, the need to gather information using
    Multiple Measures from Multiple Sources

28
Key Points
  • Assumption Children can be described in regard
    to how close they are to age expected behaviors
    and skills for each of the 3 ECO areas
  • By definition, most children in the general
    population demonstrate the ECO areas in an
    age-expected way
  • By providing services and supports, Early
    ACCESS/ECSE is trying to move children closer to
    age expected behavior

29
Summarizing Childrens Accomplishments
  • ECO Summary Form is used by IFSP/IEP Teams to
    Summarize this Information

30
  • Using the Early Childhood Outcomes (ECO) Summary
    FormSummarizing information from multiple
    methods and sources

31
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32
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33
The ECO Summary Form
  • When do Teams complete the ECO Summary Form?
  • Initial IFSP and IEP Meetings
  • Annual Review, Re-Evaluation and Exit Meetings
  • Must complete when children are leaving or
    exiting services
  • Transition from Early ACCESS to ECSE
  • Transition from ECSE to Kindergarten

34
The ECO Summary Form
  • An ECO Summary form for each of 3 ECO areas must
    be reported for every infant/toddler with an IFSP
    or preschooler with an IEP.
  • Data are needed in all ECO areas even if
  • No one has concerns about a childs development
  • A child has delays in one or two ECO areas, but
    not in all three ECO areas

35
The ECO Summary Form
  • Comparison to peers or standards
  • To what extent does this child show
    age-appropriate functioning in the area of ECO
    Area across a variety of settings and
    situations?
  • Using a 7-Point Rating Scale

36
The ECO Summary Form
  • Childs Ratings are a snapshot of
  • The whole child
  • Functioning
  • Across settings and situations
  • Rather than
  • Skill by skill,
  • In one standardized way, or
  • Split by domains

37
The ECO Summary Form
  • Progress
  • Has the child shown any new skills or behaviors
    related to ECO Area since the last IFSP/IEP
    meeting?

38
The ECO Summary Form
  • Childs Progress is based on any of the
    following
  • Acquisition of a new skill or behavior since the
    last IFSP or IEP meeting
  • Independent demonstration of a skill or behavior
  • Progression made toward achieving IFSP Outcomes
    or IEP Goals
  • Improvement of skills and behaviors to a level
    nearer to age-appropriate functioning

39
The ECO Summary Form
  • Supporting Evidence for Outcome Rating and
    Progress in ECO Area
  • Information gathered from various procedures and
    multiple sources of data
  • RIOT
  • Progress monitoring data
  • IFSP and IEP Results data
  • Age appropriate expectations

40
Using the Early Childhood Outcomes Summary
FormDetermining a Childs Rating and Progress
41
The Comparison to Peers or Standards (Questions
1a, 2a, 3a)
  • Thinking about each ECO area
  • To what extent does this child show
    age-appropriate functioning in the area of ECO
    Area across a variety of settings and situations?

42
To Decide on a Childs Rating
  • Know what behaviors and skills are appropriate
    for the childs age
  • How do children who are developing typically
    function on this ECO area?
  • Review the multiple sources of information to
    determine how the child functions across a
    variety of situations and settings
  • Understand the differences between the outcome
    rating scale from 1 to 7

43
Childs Ratings in the ECO Areas
  • The IFSP or IEP Team determining the childs
    rating reach consensus on a number between 1 and
    7.
  • Descriptions are given for numbers
  • 7 Completely
  • 5 Somewhat
  • 3 Emerging
  • 1 Not Yet
  • Check 2, 4, or 6 if the childs functioning is
    in between. That is, the child functions with
    more skill than the lower number, but not quite
    as described in the higher number.

44
7 Completely means
  • Child shows functioning expected for his/her age
    in all or almost all of everyday situations that
    are part of a childs life
  • home, store, park, child care, with strangers,
    etc.
  • Functioning is considered appropriate for his/her
    age
  • No concerns

45
6 Between completely and somewhat means
  • Childs functioning is generally considered
    appropriate for his/her age
  • Some concerns about the childs functioning

46
5 Somewhat means
  • Functioning expected for his/her age some of the
    time and/or in some situations
  • Mix of appropriate and not age- appropriate
  • Might be more like a slightly younger child

47
3 Emerging means
  • Child does not yet show functioning expected of a
    child of age in any situation
  • Skills and behaviors include immediate
    foundational skills upon which to build
    age-appropriate functioning
  • Saying one word is a foundational skill to
    putting two words together
  • Playing beside one another before they interact
    in play
  • Might be more like a younger child

48
1 Not Yet means
  • Child does not yet show functioning expected of a
    child of his/her age in any situation
  • Skills and behaviors do not yet include any
    immediate foundational skills upon which to build
    age-appropriate functioning
  • Might be more like a much younger child

49
None Quite Fit?
  • Use the in-between Outcome Ratings of 2, 4, and 6
    for children who have some characteristics of two
    different descriptions

50
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51
The Progress Question (1b, 2b, 3b)
  • Progress based on childs own past performance
  • Has the child shown ANY new skills or behaviors
    related to ECO Area since the last IFSP or IEP
    Meeting?
  • Yes
  • No
  • Not Applicable because Initial IFSP/IEP Meeting
  • Small steps of progress count!
  • Most will check yes

52
Supporting Evidence for Outcome Rating and
Progress (1c, 2c, 3c)
  • On the ECO Summary form, IFSP and IEP Teams will
    need to document
  • What methods (RIOT) were used to determine
    childs rating and progress
  • What were the specific sources of information
  • E.g. Parent, ECSE Teacher, SLP, XYZ Assessment
  • What were the relevant results that support the
    teams decisions
  • Provides a record of the basis for the decisions

53
Supporting Evidence for Outcome Rating and
Progress (1c, 2c, 3c)
54
EXAMPLE Supporting Evidence for Outcome Rating
and Progress for Appropriate Behaviors to Meet
their Needs
55
  • Practice with the Early Childhood Outcomes
    Summary Form

56
The Take Home Messages
  • Early Childhood Outcomes are not primarily about
    data
  • ECO are about doing good things for children and
    families
  • And using ECO data as a tool to help programs,
    providers and families know if what they are
    doing is making a difference for children and
    familiesand if not, to make improvements so they
    will!
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