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OSPIWASA Special Education Workshop

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Title: OSPIWASA Special Education Workshop


1
Wise Investments in Special EducationTransparen
cy and Respectful Communication
  • OSPI/WASA Special Education Workshop
  • Early Childhood Education-Birth to 3
  • August 5, 2009
  • Kristin Hennessey
  • Special Education Ombudsman
  • kristin.hennessey_at_k12.wa.us

2
Commitment to compliance, transparency, and
respectful communication
  • Short and longer term investment returns are
    many
  • Focus stays on the needs of the student.
  • Disagreements stay more contained, rather than
    spiraling out to include less substantive issues.
  • Emotional and physical energy are conserved, not
    wasted.
  • Fewer meetings need to be held.
  • Teaming with parents is more enjoyable and more
    rewarding.
  • (GREATER JOB SATISFACTION)

3
Compliance
  • Compliance means doing what is required.
  • Thoughts on compliance
  • Believe there is a reason for the requirement.
  • If you are not quite sure what is required, its
    always a good idea to check.
  • When you become aware of non-compliance, its
    always a good idea to correct it as soon as
    possible, and pro-actively offer to make up for
    the non-compliance, when appropriate.

4
Transparency here means
  • Narrating special education procedures as they
    are occurring.
  • Providing a verbal explanation of the Procedural
    Safeguards (parent rights), including options for
    families to have areas of disagreement or
    complaint formally resolved (mediation, citizen
    complaint, due process hearing).
  • Encouraging families to learn more about special
    education.
  • Once again, owning up to a mistake or lack of
    compliance when it has occurred (including
    inability to provide service), and proactively
    compensating for it when appropriate.

5
Respectful communication here means
  • Openly considering what parents bring to the
    tablea commitment to active listening.
  • Doing your part to make meetings efficient, yet
    valuable for all parties.
  • Arriving at meetings prepared and focused (draft
    IEPs).
  • Inviting parent questions and answering them
    thoughtfully.
  • Being truly present in your interactions with
    families, ever sensitive to the many and varied
    implications of having a child with a disability.

6
Providers have a unique opportunity to
  • Set the tone for positive communication between
    school districts and families.
  • Emphasize the importance of family engagement in
    special education.
  • Educate families about the basics of special
    education.
  • Empower parents to participate.
  • Inform parents about their rights related to
    special education.
  • Thoughtfully share with parents some of the
    limitations of their rights related to special
    education (Ex., teacher assignments).

7
IDEA partnership principles for parents and staff
(Kristins)
  • Respectful communication skills (may or may not
    mean there is agreement).
  • Sense of responsibility and ownership about role
    in building a successful IEP team.
  • Basic understanding of special education.
  • Willingness to learn more when necessary.
  • Commitment to transparency and honesty.
  • Healthy amount of trust.
  • Good advocacy skills.
  • Patience.

8
Suggestions/ideas
  • Find, bookmark, and utilize credible on-line
    special education technical assistance.
  • Consider developing a list of special education
    resources to provide parents upon
    referral/eligibility determination.
  • Allow enough time to schedule and prepare for
    IEP meetings.
  • Consider developing, sending home, and requesting
    input on a draft IEP.
  • Consider utilizing Parent Input state model
    form to prepare for annual IEP meeting.

9
More ideas
  • Educate parents about the importance of the IEP
    document and the three-year evaluation report (as
    well as the connection between the two).
  • Consider ways to partner IEP parents with
    building and district wide general education
    committees, initiatives, and activities.
  • Provide parent with name and contact information
    for staff members to contact with any follow-up
    questions.
  • Consider ways to facilitate interactions and
    bridge-building between Part C staff and
    families, Preschool staff and families, and Part
    B staff and families.

10
Remember
  • Even
  • Full IEP team is required at annual IEP meeting,
    unless team member is formally excused.
  • When developing the IEP, positive behavioral
    interventions, supports, and other strategies
    must be considered for a student whose behavior
    impedes the students learning or that of
    others.
  • Consider learning (more?) about and utilizing
    positive behavioral support to address discipline
    generating behaviors (instructive rather than
    punitive, BIPs before required, individualized).

11
Productive IEP meetings
  • Consider using the state IEP model forms to
    develop a protocol for running an IEP meeting.
  • Create IEP task list
  • Agenda, with meeting manager
  • Purpose of meeting.
  • Introduction of IEP team members (name and title
    only).
  • Having utilized the Parent Input state model
    form and/or a draft IEP, quickly review items of
    agreement.
  • Clarify issues of disagreement, and resolve when
    possible.
  • State how meeting is ending and provide
    information about next steps, if any.
  • Develop IEP in real time using computer and LCD
    projector?

12
Quotes to share
  • Every generalization is dangerous, especially
    this one.
  • --Mark Twain
  • Wise men talk because they have something to say
    fools, because they have to say something.
  • --Plato
  • The problem with communication ... is the
    illusion that it has been accomplished.
  • --George Bernard Shaw

13
Final quote
  • "The best way to escape from a problem is to
    solve it.
  • Alan Saporta

14
Resources
  • Technical Assistance Paper (TAP) 1 The
    Individuals with Disabilities Education Act A
    Review of the Basics (Developed prior to passage
    of IDEA 2004, but
  • still provides good general information about
    special education)
  • http//www.k12.wa.us/SpecialEd/pubdocs/TAP1.pdf
  • The 10 Basic Steps in Special Education (NICHCY)
  • http//www.nichcy.org/EducateChildren/Steps/Pages/
    default.aspx 
  •  About the IEP  (NICHCY)
  • http//www.nichcy.org/EducateChildren/IEP/Pages/de
    fault.aspx
  • Developing Your Childs IEP (NICHCY)
  • http//www.nichcy.org/InformationResources/Documen
    ts/NICHCY20PUBS/pa12.pdf
  • Special Education Evaluation and IEP Technical
    Assistance Module http//www.k12.wa.us/SpecialEd/M
    odule.aspx

15
Resources
  • Model Forms
  • http//www.k12.wa.us/SpecialEd/forms.aspxModel_St
    ate_Forms
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