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New Special Education Teacher Training (NSETT)

Day 2 October 2013. New Special Education Teacher Training (NSETT). Provide participants with: Available resources and supports Review of key IDEA compliance requirements Examples of compliance to practice Opportunity for practice, networking, questions, and reflection. NSETT Purpose.

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New Special Education Teacher Training (NSETT)

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  1. Day 2 October 2013 New Special Education Teacher Training (NSETT)

  2. Provide participants with: Available resources and supports Review of key IDEA compliance requirements Examples of compliance to practice Opportunity for practice, networking, questions, and reflection NSETT Purpose

  3. Rules of the Road Breaks Cell Phones Parking Lot ?s

  4. Agenda Day 1 Day 2 IEP Development IEP Team Present Level of Performance Goal Services Accommodations/ Adaptations Written Notice and Consent • Structure of Support • Getting Started Binder • Framework for Teaching • Special Education Process • Child Find • Referral to Consider SpEd Evaluation • Written Notice and Consent • Evaluation and Eligibility

  5. Training Norms • This training is yours and its success depends largely on you. • Enter into the discussion enthusiastically. • Contribute positively to the discussion. • Confine your discussion to the topic. • Only one person at a time should talk. • Be patient with others. • Appreciate the other person’s point of view. • Listen to others. Listening is an art.

  6. Special Education Process

  7. Individualized Education Program (IEP) • A written document developed for an eligible student with a disability to document the specially designed instruction and related services to be provided • A product of collaboration among the IEP team members who: • Identify unique needs of the student • Plan the special education services to meet the unique needs of the student

  8. Developing the IEP: • The IEP Team will consider: • The strengths of the student • Concerns of the parents and/or adult student for enhancing the education of the student • Results of the initial or most recent evaluation • e.g., data collected during the implementation of the previous IEP/IFSP can serve as “recent evaluation” • Academic, functional, and developmental needs • Social/Emotional needs • Behavioral needs

  9. The IEP Team • *Parent and/or adult student • *General Education Teacher • *Special Education Teacher/Service Provider (e.g. SLP for a Speech only student) • *District Representative • Student • Related Service Provider(s) • Individual who can interpret evaluation results and implications (e.g., School Psychologist, SLP, Nurse, etc.) • Other: • Transition agencies (secondary and preschool) • Individuals with knowledge/expertise

  10. An IEP meeting is held: • Annually (prior to the expiration date of the previous IEP) • Within 30 calendar days after an initial evaluation that finds a student eligible for special education • To consider revision to the IEP • At the request of any IEP Team member • To review and/or develop a Behavior Intervention Plan • To address discipline requirements

  11. IEP Meeting Invitation • Schedule the meeting at a mutually agreed upon time with the parents and/or adult student and the district • The invitation shall include: • Purpose, time, and location • Who will be attending or invited • Information informing the parents that they have the right to bring other people to the meeting • Provide a copy of the Procedural Safeguards Notice (at least annually)

  12. IEP Cover Sheet • All IEPs shall include: • Date of the IEP Meeting • General demographic information • Student’s full (legal) name, birth date, grade • Native language • Ethnicity • Birth date and age • Identification Number • Name, address, phone number, native language of parent(s)

  13. The IEP Cover Sheet Documents: • IEP Team attendance and participation • Documentation of who did or did not attend meeting • Does not reflect agreement or disagreement • Required Members: • Parent and/or Adult Student • Special Education Teacher/Service Provider • General Education Teacher • District Representative • Individual to interpret evaluation results/implications

  14. “You Do It” File Review Activity • Look at the first page of the IEP you have brought with you. Does it satisfy the criteria for a compliant cover sheet? • Would you change anything?

  15. Present Level of Performance (PLOP) • Identifies the present levels of academic achievement and functional performance in an area of need (Note: IDEA uses the term “Present Level of Academic and Functional Performance”) • Provides a brief but clear description of the students educational and/or functional skills using a measurable “baseline” that is directly related to an annual goal

  16. PLOP Components: • Tell how the student’s disability effects his/her involvement and progress in the general education curriculum • Are written in objective, measureable terms • Show a direct relationship to other components of the IEP (goals, special education services, LRE determinations, etc) • Provide a baseline for goal development • Reference Idaho Core Standards

  17. General Education Content Standards • Idaho Core Standards • English/Language Arts and Math • Idaho eGuidelines (Early Childhood) • Basic Workplace Competencies • Idaho Health Content Standards

  18. “You Do It” File Review Activity • Look at the PLOP for at least one of the goals in the IEP you have brought with you. • Does it satisfy the criteria for a PLOP? • Would you change anything?

  19. Goals • Written, measurable statements that describe what a student is reasonably expected to accomplish within the time period covered by the IEP (typically 1 year) • Written to enable the student to be involved in and make progress in the general education curriculum and meet other education needs that result from the disability

  20. Components of a Measurable Annual Goal • Begins with baseline measurement stated in the PLOP • Includes the behavior, the performance criteria, and the evaluation procedure • Includes a condition if needed for clarification When do you need to add objectives/benchmarks to a goal?

  21. Behavior and Conditions • Behavior: (target skills) clearly identifies the performance that is being monitored • It represents an action that can be directly observed and measured. • Conditions: specify the manner in which progress toward the goal occurs. • Conditions describe the specific resources that must be present for a student to reach the goal. The condition of the goal should relate to the behavior being measured. • For example, a goal relating to reading comprehension may require the use of a graphic organizer. The graphic organizer is the condition.

  22. Criteria, Procedure and Schedule • Criterion: identifies how much, how often, or to what standard the behavior must occur in order to demonstrate that the goal has been achieved • The goal criterion specifies the amount of growth that is expected. • Procedure: identifies how the behavior and criteria are documented • Timeframe: (Schedule) identifies the amount of time in the goal period and is usually specified in the number of weeks or a certain date for completion.

  23. Progress Monitoring • Progress Monitoring is a scientifically based practice that is used to assess a student’s academic and/or behavioral performance and evaluate the effectiveness of instruction. • There are a variety of ways that this can be done, and how you collect the data will depend on the goal. • Measurable academic achievement, developmental, and functional annual goals are written to enable the student to be involved in and make progress in the general education curriculum and to meet other educational needs that result from the disability.

  24. “You Do It” File Review Activity • Look at a goal in the IEP you have brought with you. • Does it satisfy the criteria for a compliant goal? • Would you change anything?

  25. Reporting Progress Toward Goals to Parents and/or Adult Student • The IEP includes a statement describing how and when progress toward goals is measured and reported. • This statement includes both: • how the progress will be measured • when and how progress will be reported to the parents and/or adult student

  26. Reporting HOW… • A description of how parent and/or adult student will be informed of the student’s progress toward the annual goals, including whether progress is sufficient for student to achieve goal • What has been mastered so far? • What is currently being taught or practiced? • Will the student meet the goal within the specified time frame?

  27. Reporting WHEN…

  28. “You Do It” File Review Activity • Look at how you are reporting progress to parents. • Does the statement include the how and when of reporting progress? • Is there anything you would change?

  29. Special Education and Related Services • Special education includes specially designed instruction (SDI) to meet the unique needs of the student. • Related services are services required to assist a student with a disability to benefit from special education as described in the IEP.

  30. Special Education and Related Services • These services might include: • Audiology • Speech Therapy • Language Therapy • Psychological Services • Physical Therapy • Occupational Therapy • Social Work Services • Supports for school staff • Behavior Intervention

  31. Special Education and Related Services • Include: • Description • Location • Duration • Frequency • Start and End Dates • Show a direct relationship to the other components of the IEP • Statement of Service Delivery

  32. School-Based Medicaid • Changes in services this year • Information and Webinars on Idaho Training Clearinghouse • Communities – School-Based Medicaid • Ask for guidance from your district

  33. Find the Mistake

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