- PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Description:

'LIFE IS 90% SHOWING UP' IMPROVING THE TRANSITION SUCCESS ... I don't feel like I'm gonna make it. I don't have the kind of help that I need and I don't have ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:52
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: mikeb173
Category:
Tags: don

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title:


1
LIFE IS 90 SHOWING UPIMPROVING THE
TRANSITION SUCCESS OF YOUTH WITH EMOTIONAL AND
BEHAVIORAL DISABILITIES
  • Michael Bullis, Ph.D.
  • Dean Sommerville-Knight Professor
  • College of Education, University of Oregon
  • (bullism_at_uoregon.edu, 541-346-1601)

2
  • I dont feel like Im gonna make it. I dont have
    the kind of help that I need and I dont have the
    kind of willpower to give myself the help I need.
    I dont want to start using because I know how my
    life goes down the drain. I just wish somebody
    was in my life, you know? I think it would help a
    lot if someone was as coming over ever day to
    talk to me -- just talk to me -- about AA and
    stuff. Im supposed to be mature enough to handle
    myself, but its kind of hard when Im totally in
    my addiction. I need people there for me at this
    point in my life to take initiative for me
    because I cant do it myself.
  • -- Youth with ED, Todis et al., 2001

3
OBJECTIVES
  • HOW? (SHOULD EFFECTIVE TRANSITION PROGRAMS BE
    STRUCTURED)
  • WHO? (ARE STUDENTS WITH EBD)
  • WHAT? (RELATES TO TRANSITION SUCCESS)
  • WHY? (IS SPECIAL ATTENTION NECESSARY)

4
BREAKING THE CYCLE
5
GETTING STARTED RIGHT
6
(No Transcript)
7
RESILIENCE
  • THE ABILITY TO OVERCOME SEEMINGLY IMPOSSIBLE
    ODDS AND YET STILL SUCCEED IN ONES DAILY BATTLES
    AND LIFE GOALS.

8
HOW DO THEY DO IT?(PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS)
  • MATURATION
  • PERSISTENCE
  • NATIVE INTELLIGENCE
  • APPEARANCE
  • ACCESSING RESOURCES
  • EFFECTIVE SERVICES
  • MENTORING

9
PROGRAM STRUCTURE
  • LOCATED IN SCHOOL
  • MULTI-AGENCY COLLABORATION
  • SERVICE COORDINATION
  • STAFF TRAINING
  • FAMILY INVOLVEMENT
  • BALANCE BETWEEN ACADEMICS WORK

10
KEY COMPONENTS
  • SCREENING RECRUITMENT
  • YEAR-AROUND
  • CONSISTENT ROUTINES
  • HIGH EXPECTATIONS
  • ACADEMICS WORK
  • REALISTIC FOCUS
  • - Competitive Work
  • - Real Life Decision-making

11
THE MOST IMPORTANT INGREDIENT -- IS YOU
  • He (the transition specialist) gives lots of
    chances he works around my schedule. The focus
    is on helping the student, not on getting you
    through some requirements. I wouldnt be nowhere
    in life without this program.
  • - Youth with EBD, Bullis et al., 2002

12
THE TRANSITION SPECIALIST
  • 10-15 STUDENTS/STAFF
  • SCREENING RECRUITMENT
  • SERVICE COORDINATION
  • - In-school
  • - Community-based Agencies
  • SOCIAL SKILL TRAINING
  • JOB PLACEMENT SUPPORT
  • WORKS OUTSIDE OF THE SCHOOL

13
ADMINISTRATIVE APPLAUSE
  • . . .the student gets a lot of one-on-one case
    management type support. A staff person is
    assigned to them and gives a lot of supportive
    kinds of things to get the student through
    whatever program theyre going through. I dont
    know what the student to staff ratio is, but to
    have the time to do that is really what makes the
    program successful and the student successful . .
    . We dont have as much time to go out and do all
    that. My impression is thats really what has
    made a big difference in those kids lives.
  • - Alternative Education Director

14
ADMINISTRATRIVE CHALLENGE
  • The strengths are that you have a lot of
    flexibility in how you work with kids because
    staff arent tied to a classroom where they cant
    spring free. Theyre available to work with kids
    so they can do a lot of innovative interventions,
    get out in the community, find services for kids
    who have left school . . . The downside of it,
    though, is that theyve been located off-site.
    But thats the strength of it. The strength of it
    is that theyre not on-site. The down side is
    that its very difficult to supervise.
  • Special Education Administrator

15
FISCAL REALITIES
  • ADM 10,000/YEAR
  • 12 STUDENTS x 10,000 120,000
  • COST 8,000/YEAR PER STUDENT
  • 12 STUDENTS x 8,000 96,000
  • PROGRAM COSTS
  • - STAFF 50,000 Benefits 75,000
  • - SERVICES 21,000
  • PROFIT?

16
SCREENING RECRUITMENT
  • SPECIAL EDUCATION PERSPECTIVE
  • - AN EDUCATIONAL DISABILITY
  • - 90-95 IDENTIFIED BY THEN END OF ELEMENTARY
    SCHOOL
  • - 10 OF ALL SPECIAL EDUCATION STUDENTS
  • - 1-1.5 OF THE TOTAL SCHOOL POPULATION

17
  • MENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVE
  • - A MEDICAL DISABILITY
  • - 5 OF ALL ADOLESCENTS IDENTIFIED
  • - 20 OF ALL ADOLESCENTS WILL EXPERIENCE
    CLINICAL DEPRESSION
  • - INTERNALIZING VS. EXTERNALIZING

18
REALITIES OF SCREENING RECRUITING
  • 60 DROPOUT
  • MANY POTENTIAL PARTICIPANTS WILL
  • - NOT Have A SPED Disability
  • - NOT Be In School
  • RELUCTANCE TO LABEL

19
REALITIES OF JOB PLACEMENT
  • POOR WORK HISTORIES
  • POOR POST-SCHOOL OUTCOMES

20
MULTIPLE JOBS EXPERIENCES
  • THE AVERAGE ADOLESCENT WILL HAVE 6-8 DIFFERENT
    PAID WORK EXPERIENCES BEFORE GRADUATING FROM HIGH
    SCHOOL. WITHOUT AN EFFECTIVE VOCATIONAL PROGRAM,
    AN ADOLESCENT WITH EBD WILL HAVE 1 0R 2 SUCH
    EXPERIENCES

21
EMPLOYMENT
22
A WORKING CLASS HERO
  • WORK AS AN INCENTIVE
  • STUDENT CHOICE
  • MULTIPLE COMMUNITY JOBS
  • DEVELOPMENTAL JOB PLACEMENTS
  • CAREER FOCUS

23
DEVELOPMENTAL APROACH(Handout)
24
FINDING JOBS
  • SELF-FAMILY-FRIEND NETWORK
  • 1-TIME OR CONTINUING PLACEMENT?
  • HOW MUCH DO YOU DISCLOSE?
  • CULTIVATING EMPLOYERS

25
REALITIES OF REAL WORK
  • IN THE COMMUNITY
  • - How Do They Get There?
  • - Academic credit?
  • WHO SUPERVISES?
  • WHAT IF THEY ARE FIRED?
  • HOW DO YOU FOSTER SUCCESS?
  • - Careful Placement (Handout)
  • - Regular Monitoring

26
THE ULTIMATE TENSION
  • DIGNITY OF FAILURE
  • PROVIDING THE RIGHT INTENSITY OF SUPPORT
  • INVOLVING STUDENTS IN DECIDING THEIR SERVICES
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com