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Transition Assessment for Students with Severe & Multiple Disabilities

Transition Assessment for Students with Severe & Multiple Disabilities. Jim Martin University of Oklahoma Zarrow Center Web: http://education.ou.edu/zarrow/. Agenda. Introductions Part I Descriptions Recognizing abilities and expectations What is a Satisfying Life?

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Transition Assessment for Students with Severe & Multiple Disabilities

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  1. Transition Assessment for Students with Severe & Multiple Disabilities Jim Martin University of Oklahoma Zarrow Center Web: http://education.ou.edu/zarrow/

  2. Agenda • Introductions • Part I • Descriptions • Recognizing abilities and expectations • What is a Satisfying Life? • Part II - Three-Part Transition Assessment Process • Independent Living Assessments & the IEP • Career Interests/Skills & the IEP • Self-Determination Assessments & the IEP • Part III - Pulling It All Together ASK QUESTIONS ALONG THE WAY!

  3. Web Links • Handout lists all the web sites used today • Easy to read

  4. Description of Students with Severe and Multiple Disabilities • Demonstrate diverse skills, strengths, limits, and support needs • Multiple system impairments that impact the student, family, community participation, and severity of associated health conditions • Two or more simultaneously occurring impairments • Supports are usually pervasive and extensive in order to achieve community living, employment, and self-sufficiency.

  5. Description - continued Severity Continuum Severity Supports • Communication issues - frequently • Self-care issues – almost always • Intellectual issues – often, but not always • “Multiple” systems - always Mild Moderate Severe Profound

  6. Description - continued • Everyone you meet today has a diagnosis of severe and multiple developmental disabilities (and some have profound impairments); • Some can more readily communicate their thoughts, desires, needs; and • They give voice to those that cannot speak for themselves or are not with us today.

  7. Recognizing Ability Unrecognized potential and ability in public school can result in wasted time, and delayed or NO access to postsecondary dreams and goals… Meet Sherri and Tolby. See their impairments and needs; LOOK for their abilities. Sherri post-high school and Tolby is still in high school. Different outcomes??? Sherri Tolby – 18 years old

  8. Abilities and Expectations • What did you see in Tolby? • What did you see in Sherri? Expectations for Tolby? Expectations for Sherri? Expectations for YOUR student…today

  9. The Purpose of SPED . . . a free appropriate public education that emphasizes special education and related services designed to meet students’ unique needs and to prepare them for further education, employment, and independent living. 2004 IDEA Changed Secondary SPED

  10. IDEA 2004 Post-Secondary Goals • IEPs must include appropriate measurable postsecondary goals • based upon age-appropriate transition assessments • related to training, education, employment, and when appropriate, independent living

  11. Student Transition Questions • Postschool Goal Questions • Where do I want to live • Where do I want to work? • Where do I want to learn? • Annual Transition Goal Question • What do I need to learn now to live where I want? • What do I need to learn now to do the career I want? • What do I need to learn now to be able to learn where I want? Greene, G., & Kochhar-Bryant, C. A. (2003). Pathways to successful transition for youth with disabilities. New Jersey: Merrill Prentice Hall.

  12. Transition Assessment Results help Answer Students’ Questions • Present Levels of Academic Achievement and Functional Educational Performance • Current assessment data • Transition strengths and needs • Address with transition goals • Transition Assessment Results • Name of assessment, date given, and results • Used to develop postsecondary goals and transition goals

  13. What is a satisfying life for you? What is a satisfying life for people with disabilities?

  14. A Satisfying Life is… • Home, career, social life, community lifestyle, spiritual well being (Romer, Frantangelo, & Fanjoy, 2009) • Personal Fulfillment? • Right mix of opportunities and support to nourish the presence and contribution of a human being (Kendrick, 2009) • Outcome of high quality supports A life that is uniquely ones own! (Simpson, 2009)

  15. Satisfying Participation in Life includes… realizing societal roles, with or without support, in a meaningful and satisfying way Work participation and being satisfied with life is broader than just job satisfaction… (Van Campen & Cardol, 2007) Four years after high school, youth with multiple disabilities were least engaged in their communities (NLTS-2)

  16. Tolby’s satisfying life… • Healthy • Be with his family • Communicate what’s going on in his head with others • Consistent care • Operable equipment

  17. What’s a satisfying life for Sherri? • Sherri’s satisfying life • Josh’s satisfying life

  18. Lauren’s Satisfying Life…

  19. Guiding Questions for Secondary Transition Planning for Youth with Significant Disabilities • Can the young adult express interests? If no, get information from parents and caregivers to develop transition plan. • What are special health care needs? • What are needs/challenges preventing the young adult from working outside the home?

  20. Guiding Questions for Secondary Transition Planning for Youth with Significant Disabilities • Who can provide education/training to assist the young adult? • What can the young adult accomplish without assistance? • What else could the young adult accomplish if assistance were provided by a job coach, habilitation training specialist (HTS), or other caregiver?

  21. \Sample Scenarios and Postsecondary Goals Tolby Tolby has DD, CP, multiple disabilities, no fine motor skills, dependent on others for mobility in and out of his manual wheelchair; requires full-time assistance for all daily personal needs. He is non-verbal; it is difficult understanding what he needs, wants and knows. Tolby enjoys interacting with children, especially his cousins. Tolby’s mom wants him to be able to communicate things to her…what’s going on in his head, safety, etc. She wants him to remain healthy, and she wants to care for him, with help.

  22. Tolby’s Postsecondary Goals Tolby will live at home with his mother, and with the support of a job coach, will volunteer at a local childcare facility where play music during dance and nap times.

  23. Sample Scenarios and Postsecondary Goals Clarification Tolby’s Case Although Tolby may not earn an hourly wage for his job work experience at a childcare facility, he is still accomplishing something he set out to do in terms of employment. Although Tolby requires assistance and support with everything, staying healthy and helping at home with his cousins and nieces/nephews contributes to achieving his adult living goal, and it engages his employment goal.

  24. NSTTAC can help! National Secondary Transition Technical Assistance Center (NSTTAC) has good and not so good examples of postsecondary goals. Go to: http://www.nsttac.org/tm_materials/Default.aspx

  25. OK’s Sample Scenarios and Postsecondary Goals Scenario 2 - John John D. is a 21-year-old who has a severe intellectual disability, is blind, and exhibits self-stimulatory behavior. John loves balloons and the squeaking sounds they make when they are inflated and touched, or rubbed. Due to John’s significant health care needs, he lives with his parents and has a part-time assistant who comes to his home to help with daily personal needs. John likes traveling in a vehicle. He wants to earn his own money so he does not have to rely so heavily on his parents. John’s expressive verbal skills are low, so it is difficult to get information from John. Discussions with his parents revealed John’s love of balloons, car travel, and desire to earn money.

  26. OK’s Sample Scenarios and Postsecondary Goals Scenario 2 – John’s Real Postsecondary Goals Education/Training: John will participate in on-the-job training at flower shops or Party Galaxy to learn how to properly inflate balloons. Employment: With the help of a job coach, John will develop and operate a home-based balloon business. Independent/Adult Living:While living at home with his parents, John will maintain a checkbook and pay for his purchases with the assistance of his parent(s) or assistant.

  27. Three-Part Transition Assessment Model

  28. Transition Assessment Model Components • Independent Living Assessment • Vocational Interest and Skills Assessment • Self-Determination Assessment Use information gathered from multiple sources and settings!

  29. Independent Living Assessments Part 1 of the 3-Part Transition Assessment Model This is the area that oftentimes impacts so many other postsecondary pursuits for students with severe and multiple disabilities.

  30. Our Belief • The law states that an independent living goal be addressed “when appropriate.” • We believe that to determine if an independent living goal needs to be written, an adaptive behavior assessment needs to be given. This provides evidence of needing an independent living goal or not. How else would a team determine if an independent living goal is needed?

  31. Independent Living Assessments – We‘ll Focus on Four • Personal Preference Indicators (PPI) • Postsecondary applications of PPI • Enderle-Severson Transition Rating Form • Great tool for students with significant support needs • www.estr.net • Life Skills Inventory • Informal and free • http://www.dshs.wa.gov/pdf/ms/forms/10_267.pdf • Casey Life Skills • www.caseylifeskills.org

  32. Personal Preference Indicators • Interview format • Family members, friends, professionals who know student well • Designed for students with significant support needs • Likes, dislikes, social indicators, choices • Health, body clock, future • http://education.ou.edu/zarrow/ • Cost: free • Use the results in PLEP

  33. Enderle-Severson Transition Rating Form • ESTR-J • Students with mild disabilities • Parent (available in Spanish) and Teacher version • Five Transition areas • ESTR-III • Students with “more” disabilities • Parent and Teacher version • Five Transition areas • ESTR-S • Students with severe/multiple impairments • Parent and Teacher (on-line only) versions • Employment, Rec/leisure, home living, community participation, and adult life • Estr.net (each costs $2.00)

  34. ESTR-S Automatic Scoring • Sample Report From Estr-S

  35. Life Skills Inventory • 15 domains (money, hygiene, safety, etc) • Four levels: basic, intermediate, advanced, exceptional • Must know 3 of 5 to advance from basic to intermediate • Must know the person or have family member complete • Cost: free • Available at: http://www.dshs.wa.gov/pdf/ms/forms/10_267.pdf

  36. Casey Life Skills • Web based • Spanish, French or English, with numerous supplemental assessments • Youth and caregiver formats • Automatically scored and sent to you • Provides different levels of questions for students across functioning levels • Level 1 basic skills • Level 4 complex skills • Caution: It over-estimates skills for students with the most disabilities • Cost: free • Available at: www.caseylifeskills.org

  37. Tolby’s Assessment Results

  38. Career Interest and Skill Assessment Part 2 of the 3-Part Transition Assessment Process

  39. Belief • Work benefits individuals emotionally and socially • Enables individuals to contribute to society and to their own well being • Can be done without fear of losing social security or other benefits • Adds meaning to life

  40. Employment Options • Individual Competitive Employment • Individual Supported Employment • Group Supported Employment • At Home or Community-Based Entrepreneurial Jobs

  41. Functional Vocational Assessment Most Effective Method for Many Students with Severe and Multiple Disabilities

  42. What does the law say? . . . and when appropriate . . . functional vocational evaluation. When to consider what’s appropriate? When paper-pencil or computer-based interest inventories simply do not work What is it? Tools that student’s use to make a job match.

  43. Functional Assessment Process • Over time • Repeated Measures Situational Assessment Apply what you already know – Information from other Assessments…Personal Preference Indicators and postsecondary Applications.

  44. Discrepancy Problems • Logical choice making occurs when chosen preferences match available jobs. • Discrepancy problems occur when • Chosen job, task, and characteristics do not match specific jobs • Discrepancy problems diminish when job site characteristics match preferences • Task is to provide ample opportunities for students to determine matches and non-matches.

  45. Personal Preference Indicators • Use Supplemental Preference Form • Interview format • Family members, friends, professionals who know student well • Likes, dislikes, social indicators, choices • Health, body clock, future • http://education.ou.edu/zarrow/ • Cost: free • Use the results in PLEP

  46. Choose and Take Action Vocational Assessment Software Use of a software program and community experiences to identify entry-level job interests

  47. Target Population • Secondary students and adults with moderate to significant cognitive needs who: • Have difficulty getting information from print • Can attend to a computer screen • Can follow simple 1 or 2 step directions • Have limited to no previous work experience

  48. CTA Constructs • • Vocational Choice Making • Characteristics • Setting • Activities (jobs) • • Planning • • Community Experience • Watch • Do • • Self-Evaluation • • Choose Again with Adjustment

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