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SE 6053 Ed Procedures for Mild Disabilities

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committed to developing highest quality of life for children with disabilities ... 'bumper crop' of SE children. list 7 reasons why REI failed ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SE 6053 Ed Procedures for Mild Disabilities


1
SE 6053 Ed Procedures for Mild Disabilities
  • Module 1 Organizing for Service Delivery
  • Chapter 3
  • Approaches to Teaching Learners
  • with Mild Disabilities
  • Dr. Lewis R. Johnson
  • December 1999

2
CEC Code of Ethics
  • committed to developing highest quality of life
    for children with disabilities
  • high level of professional competence
  • engage in activities which benefit the disabled
  • demonstrate objective professional judgment
  • advance own professional knowledge
  • uphold disability laws
  • uphold CEC professional standards

3
The 8 areas of Professional Development
  • historical and legal foundations
  • characteristics of learners
  • assessment
  • Instructional content and practice
  • planning / managing instructional environment
  • managing student behavior
  • communication and collaborative partnerships
  • professionalism and ethics

4
define instruction- click to see definition
  • The planning, delivering, and evaluation of
    conditions created by a teacher which addresses
    the unique learning needs of a student or group
    of students which have a strong likelihood of
    changing behavior.

5
services- click to see definition
  • the setting and the instructional role assumed by
    a teacher or therapist
  • examples
  • resource services
  • self-contained services

6
placement- click to see definition
  • the physical location of the services

7
curriculum- click to see definition
What is taught and learned in the three
domains cognitive psychomotor affective Th
ere are various types of curriculum-
8
define related services- click to see definition
  • any service which is provided to a student in
    addition to the primary service

9
list and define the array of related services
  • transportation
  • speech therapy
  • counseling
  • occupational therapy
  • physical therapy

10
describe the purpose of related services
  • related services are those services which a
    student must receive to derive benefit form the
    special education services
  • it is critical to understand the to derive
    benefit clause

11
define enhanced curriculum-
  • A curriculum used in the regular education
    classroom
  • which has added features which enhances the
    learning outcomes for students.
  • Features include
  • guided notes,
  • programmed learning
  • video support
  • advanced organizers
  • multiple representations of content

12
define functional curriculum-
  • A curriculum based on the individuals needs to
    enable the
  • independent functioning in social, economic, and
    educational
  • settings.
  • Examples include
  • Strategy instruction,
  • Social skills training
  • Vocational training

13
parallel curriculum-
  • A curriculum which teaches the same content as
    the
  • general education class but uses different
    materials,
  • and may require different levels of performance.
  • Examples
  • Teaching a grade 9 class a Shakespeare play
  • while you are teaching the same play using the
    classic
  • comic book as your textbook.

14
list 5 elements of effective programs for
individuals with mild
disabilities
  • instruction is designed for individual needs
  • instruction is based on frequent assessment
  • direct instruction in important skills
  • collaboration between RE and SE
  • teacher behaviors for high on-task success

15
describe the SE process from referral to placement
  • Pre-referral screening
  • Pre-referral intervention/consultation
  • Referral
  • Assessment
  • Determination of Eligibility
  • Placement into services
  • Reevaluation
  • Refer to the SE Due Process /IEP Handbook

16
describe Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA)
  • Applied behavior analysis as an instructional
    approach begins with task analysis which breaks
    the target behavior into small discreet steps,
    then arranges these steps into a skill sequence.
    The teacher arranges environmental situations
    which elicit the behavior and then the teacher
    reinforces the behavior. The teacher makes
    frequent assessments and data recordings of the
    target behavior. If the student does not perform
    the target behavior, other situations which are
    likely to elicit or reinforce the behavior are
    tried. This works best for teaching social or
    work-study behaviors.

17
Describe Direct Instruction
  • Direct Instruction is a unified system for
    organizing, planning and presenting instruction.
    It is based on learning theory principles of
    behaviorism, like ABA, and also social learning
    theory through the use of modeling. The
    instruction is teacher directed and can be highly
    repetitive, if needed. Another characteristic of
    DI is the scripted lessons. We should be careful
    not all scripted lessons are good examples of DI.
    Also, Distar or Reading Mastery, highly
    controlled reading systems, are examples of DI.
    Some people equate DI with Distar and dismiss DI
    because they do not like Distar.

18
Describe Strategy Instruction
  • Some students with mild disabilities do not learn
    through trial and error the most efficient ways
    to get a task done. Strategy instruction uses
    teacher directed lessons to teach specific
    learning strategies for the student to use.
    Teaching a student to self-monitor his on task
    behavior or how to remember a list of names
    through the use of mnemonics are examples of
    strategies.

19
describe the Supportive-Preventative
Services Initiative
  • The current approach which appears to be
  • REI recycled. It posits that prevention is
    better than treatment.

20
define and describe the Cascade of Service
  • a continuum of services representing varying
    degrees of restrictive ness
  • indirect service-
  • resource service-
  • self-contained-
  • day school
  • residential school
  • home instruction

21
list concerns \ problems with pull-out programs
  • instructional fragmentation-
  • time erosion
  • instructional duplication
  • accountability issues
  • social alienation of student
  • isolation of SE teacher

22
describe the Regular Education Initiative (REI)
  • Proposed by Madeline Will (1986)
  • An initiate to merge SE and RE into one unified
    system of services which did not rely on labels
    to ensure the provision of services. It focused
    on increasing the capacity of RE to meet the
    needs of the disabled, while maintaining a
    continuum of services.

23
list 5 reasons why REI emerged
  • questioning of effectiveness of pullout services
  • SE programming fragmented segregated
  • SE is based on illogically categorical labels
  • SE is not preventative
  • SE lacked parent participation
  • SE is expensive
  • bumper crop of SE children

24
list 7 reasons why REI failed
  • lack of grass roots involvement of all parties
  • one-sided initiative by SE, not RE
  • philosophical not research-based
  • threat of adopting a teacher-deficit model
  • requires greatly increased resources
  • increased emphasis on high standards
  • lack of a specific cost effective plan to
    implement
  • insufficient services will be available

25
differentiate between mainstreaming,
LRE, and inclusion
  • Mainstreaming- placement in RE
  • if able to perform w/o significant assistance
    sink or swim approach
  • Inclusion- placement in RE with adaptations and
    modifications as support
  • Full inclusion - a policy approach, based on
    the belief that all students should be in RE
  • 100 of the students in RE part of the day or
  • 100 of the students 100 of the day

26
describe a Teacher Assistance Team (TAT)
  • A teacher assistance team is a group of teachers
    that could include SE teachers, or SLP therapists
    who talk about a students problem and
    collaboratively think of solutions to the
    problem.

27
describe Adaptive Learning Environment Model
(ALEM)
28
describe the Integrated Classroom Model
29
describe the Success For All Program (S4AP)
(Slavin)
30
  • Chapter 4
  • Communication for Student Success

31
Special Class Teacher Model
  • This is the traditional service delivery model
    composed of a continuum of pull-out special
    education services. It is used in most school
    districts as the primary means of serving the
    needs of students with disabilities.

32
Consulting Teacher Model
  • This model places primary responsibility for the
    education of students with mild disabilities on
    the regular education teacher. In Arkansas this
    is equivalent to the indirect service on the IEP.
    The special education teacher supports the RE
    teacher in providing adaptations/modifications in
    the RE classroom.

33
Co-teacher Model
  • This model of service delivery involves the SE
    and RE teacher working together as professional
    equals to provide instruction to students, some
    of whom have disabilities.
  • Refer to handout for co-teaching models.

34
describe collaborative teaching - co-teaching
(third model)
  • The handout and video contain information on 5
    models
  • one teach-one support
  • station teaching
  • parallel teaching
  • alternative teaching
  • team teaching
  • Connection between models and curriculum types

35
define collaborative consultation
  • Collaborative consultation occurs between two or
    more individuals who have unique areas of
    expertise and who interact as equals in working
    toward a solution to a problem.
  • It is best used as a pre-referral problems,
    behavior problems, or for solving
    curriculum-instruction issues.
  • Teacher hurdle help

36
describe the role of a consultant
  • Problem clarification
  • Source of objectivity
  • Catalyst for ideas
  • Ego support
  • documentation of actions (pre-referral)
  • Source of expertise -assessment, adaptations
    and modifications

37
identify prerequisites to effective consultation
  • Communication skills
  • Understanding of consultation process
  • Consultant credibility - knowledge base
  • instruction, behavior management, materials
  • Mutual respect with confidentiality
  • Opportunity (time) Admin Support

38
list and describe the 8 steps of
collaborative consultation
  • 1. Establish the relationship - communication
  • 2. Gather information- objectivity
  • 3. Identify problem- objective, catalyst
  • 4. State target behavior
  • 5. Generate interventions - select one
  • 6. Implement selected intervention
  • 7. Evaluate intervention for effectiveness
  • 8. End consultation

39
list communications skills which facilitate
consultation
  • Establish rapport
  • non verbal behaviors
  • proximity
  • eye contact
  • smile
  • Verbal behaviors
  • ice breaker - set collaborative tone
  • ask open-ended questions

40
list communications skills which facilitate
consultation
  • Use clarification statements to reflect interest
    and reduce fuzzy thinking generalizations
  • restatements
  • paraphrasing

41
list communications skills which facilitate
consultation
  • Use questioning to maintain focus and objectivity
  • ask clarification questions
  • use choice questions to force choices
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