1 / 65

Rolling out the New Forms For OT/PT’s

Rolling out the New Forms For OT/PT’s. State Support Team 13 Sue Bitsko, Susan Burns, Gretchen Estreicher, Deb McGraw, Patrick Wong. Outcomes for Today. Familiarize participants with new ETR and IEP forms.

Télécharger la présentation

Rolling out the New Forms For OT/PT’s

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rolling out the New FormsFor OT/PT’s State Support Team 13 Sue Bitsko, Susan Burns, Gretchen Estreicher, Deb McGraw, Patrick Wong

  2. Outcomes for Today • Familiarize participants with new ETR and IEP forms. • Participants will identify components of the new ETR and IEP forms recently clarified by OEC. • Participants will review resources available from OEC and SST #13

  3. So Just Roll With it…..

  4. Top Ten Reasons for this IEP/ETR training • Sounded like a good idea • We Love being asked questions we can’t answer • We wanted our own special education March Madness • Because none of us had anything else to do • We love being the messenger that things have changed …again • You needed one more thing on your plate • We had requests from some of you to sit and listen for a whole day • You wanted to listen to Steve Winwood’s song • ODE made us • Ohio’s forms did not conform and we needed to be in compliance

  5. Today’s Toolkit

  6. ODE Tools Forms Annotated Guide

  7. www.edresourcesohio.org

  8. Directions to Task Force Site • Go to www.hcesc.org • Click on “What we do” 3. Click on CRES 4. Click on Task Force- “Click here” User Name: taskforce1 Password: task123

  9. Task Force Website

  10. Q and A – Ann Guinan

  11. EdReourcesohio.org & Adobe 9 • Fill-able form • Dynamic document • Printable • Name and dates populate • Check boxes to get various sections (i.e. transition, visually impaired) • Check boxes when sections are completed

  12. PR-01 Prior Written Notice

  13. Initial Evaluation Flow Chart

  14. School Aged Planning Form

  15. Preschool Planning Form • All of these developmental domains are to be assessed using at least one method of evaluation: • Adaptive Behavior • Cognition • Communication • Hearing • Vision • Sensory/Motor Function • Social and emotional Development • Behavioral Functioning Under Construction

  16. Preschool Eligibility: Rule 3301-51-11 • All 4 in the area of suspected disability: • Interview • Observations • Standardized Norm Referenced • Criterion References or Curriculum Based assessments Under Construction

  17. Preschool Planning Grid

  18. Orthopedic Impairment Example

  19. Preschool Age Timelines • A child who will be 3 yrs. By Dec. 1st, can begin earlier than their 3rd birthday. • A child who will be 5 yrs. By Dec. 1st, should have considered kindergarten • If a child is 6 years by the district entry date, they are NO longer a preschooler

  20. Evaluation Planning Form • Suspected Disability: the category(s) of suspected disability as defined in the Operating Standards • Team members: name and position • Planning does NOT require a face to face meeting but must include the entire team’s input before the evaluation begins

  21. Type of Evaluation • Initial: • Never identified as a SWD • Was a SWD but exited after an evaluation • Move in from out of state – district wants to evaluate • Reevaluation • Already identified as a SWD, even if last evaluation is expired • Move in from out of state and district accepted the out of state evaluation and serving the child under their out of state IEP or wrote a new IEP

  22. Assessment Areas • The team decides what information is needed to determine whether or not the child is a SWD that qualifies under IDEA • Team decides if: • The information has already been collected & is current (not over a year) • If further information is needed • Person responsible: first and last name

  23. Signatures on Planning • LEP and racial/cultural bias – taken into consideration (to show an accurate assessment of the child’s knowledge and skills) • Date = date each team member signs (will vary if not a face-to-face meeting) • Set your date for the ETR meeting at the planning meeting

  24. PR-06 Evaluation Team Report ETR Tools Forms Annotated Guide

  25. ETR: Evaluation Team Report Cover Page

  26. Child’s Information • Grade or Grades child will be for duration of IEP

  27. Parent Information • Enter Parent’s information

  28. Type of Evaluation • Timelines: • ETR must occur within 60 days of date district received parent consent • ETR must occur within 90 days from date of referral • Whichever is shorter • Last ETR: • If move in and can’t get write N/A • Referral Date: • Date received request for evaluation • After request is received the district has 30 days to determine if they suspect a disability or not and provide parents with PWN

  29. ETR Form Status • As each section is completed and the box checked at the end, checks appear on the front for a quick check of process status

  30. Instructions • Provides an overview of the entire form • Select school aged or preschool planning form

  31. Part 1: Individual Evaluator’s Assessment

  32. Individual Evaluator’s Assessment • Page for each person doing an assessment • Areas of Assessment: • vision, hearing, gross motor, academic skills, speech and language development, social-emotional functioning, behavior, cognitive ability, adaptive behavior, secondary transition skills, etc….

  33. Evaluation Methods and Strategies • Indicate the method(s) used

  34. Assessment Information • Summary of Assessment: • Clear and understandable description of performance and results compared to reason for referral • If use test scores – INTERPRET them in lay terms and passes the “stranger test” • Any conditions/limitations that may have influenced the validity of the results • Educational Needs: • Including academic weakness, speech and language skills, etc… • Preschool: precursor skills, and needs to access the curriculum • Describe the child’s strengths • Implications for Instruction: • State the deficit (i.e. “moderate expressive language delays”) • Do NOT put “qualifies for S/L services” • How these needs impact the child’s progress in the general curriculum (adverse effect)

  35. Part 2: Team Summary Page

  36. Interventions Summary • Completed by the team • All but last 2 areas (Educational Needs and Implications for Instruction) can be done ahead of time prior to meeting • Interventions summary (prior to referral or as part of the evaluation) including the length, intensity, frequency and duration, assessment method used to monitor progress, and analysis of data collected. Charts can be attached

  37. Reason for Evaluation/ Parent Info • Reason for Evaluation: • From PR-04 Referral for Evaluation, or the PR-04 can be stapled to the ETR • Summary of information provided by the parents • Include information from PR-04 • May contain results of checklists, interviews, outside evaluations provided to the team • Information provided by parents at the team meeting is also included here

  38. Summary of Observations • Summary of Observations is only required for SLD and Preschool • Child must be observed in a learning environment including regular ed. setting. • Can be done prior to referral or as part of referral • Data should quantify the performance in terms of frequency, duration, intensity or quality

  39. Medical Information • Medical information that has an impact on the educational needs of the child or necessary to ensure the health/safety of the child • May record medications, explanation of medical procedures, instructions for school personnel to follow if … (i.e. seizure, diabetes)

  40. Summary of Assessment Results • Concise summary of key findings – from all assessments, that led to the conclusions of the team • Not as detailed as what was in part 1 (individual evaluators) • Include teacher input to help show “adverse effect”

  41. Educational Needs/Implications for Instruction • Done as team at meeting • Summary of educational needs – “What does this mean?” • For preschool – focus on how the child will access the general preschool curriculum, as well as interactions with peers/adults • Describe the strengths of the child • Progress Monitoring: how the child’s needs have an impact on the progress in the general ed. curriculum – which will lead to the development of goals and identification of needed services

  42. Part 3: SLD

  43. Required Notification • If the child participated in RTI, were parents notified of: • Amount and nature of data collected, and support services provided? • Strategies to increase rate of learning • Parents right to request an evaluation

  44. Identified Areas • For SLD • Identify which areas the team determined that the child is not achieving adequately for the child’s age or Academic Content Standards.

  45. Response To Intervention • Either this section (B) or (C) must be completed • If the team used a RTI process they should summarize the results in this section • Include how the interventions were delivered with fidelity • Focus on the analysis of the data – which provides evidence to support the decision that the gap can not be closed with out specialized instruction

  46. Strengths and Weaknesses • If the team conducted an evaluation process to determine patterns of strengths and weaknesses (not RTI) they would summarize the results here. • Multiple sources of data and information should support the need for specialized instruction • One ore more areas should be checked in Section A

  47. Exclusionary Factors • Check the box ONLY if the team feels the factors listed are the primary reason for the academic deficiencies. • If checked – the child CANNOT be determined to be a child with SLD • The child should receive the necessary supports and services in the regular ed. environment

  48. Not Due to Lack of Instruction • Document the data used to show the child was provided appropriate instruction, by qualified personnel, AND • Summarize the results of any assessments (i.e. curriculum based measurement, formative short-cycle assessment) used to monitor the child’s progress during instruction and how they were shared with the parents.

  49. Observation • If information on observation has been reported in part 2 it does NOT need to be repeated – note information is found in 2 Team Summary • Child should be observed in the child’s learning environment (either prior to referral or as part of referral process) and the performance should be quantified in terms of frequency, duration, intensity or quality • Preschool or home bound – observe in an environment appropriate for a child of that age

  50. Medical Findings • Any medical information not already provided in Part 2 Team Summary that would impact the child’s eligibility or be in the range of supports needed to be successful educationally

More Related