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Special Education In-service for Substitute Teaching Assistants . 2011-2012 Mat-Su Borough School District Student Support Services. Welcome from Lucy Hope, Director. Agenda. Overview of special education in Mat-Su Overview of special education law:
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Special Education In-service for Substitute Teaching Assistants 2011-2012 Mat-Su Borough School District Student Support Services Welcome from Lucy Hope, Director
Agenda • Overview of special education in Mat-Su • Overview of special education law: IDEA; Individuals with Disabilities Education Act • Overview of disabilities
Who’s who…. • Introductions: Your name, Why are you subbing? School(s) you are working in Programs you have worked in
Related Services • Speech Language Pathologists • School Psychologists • Occupational Therapists • Physical Therapists • Audiologists • Vision and Hearing Specialists • Sign Language Interpreters • Assistive Technology Specialists
CONFIDENTIALITY • Protection of Records, • Disclosure of personally identifiable information pertaining to children with disabilities • Parental Access to Educational Records • Parental Consent for Release of Records
MSBSD Special Education Policies and Procedures • Are one and the same as……… • Alaska Special Education Handbook
DEFINITIONS • Special Education: • Related Services • 504 Plan • Accommodations • Modifications Is: specialized instruction, Is: required for a child to benefit from special education
The legal and political aspects of Special Education Series of federal public laws regarding children’s entitlement to a Free and Appropriate Public Education in the Least Restrictive Environment • 1975 Education for All Handicapped Children Act • 1987 Preschool Handicapped Act • 1990 Individuals with Disabilities Education Act • 1997 IDEA Amendments of 1997 • 2004: Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act
BASIC CONCEPTS • FAPE (free and and appropriate public education) • Ages 3-21, suspended or expelled students, students in correctional facilities, private schools, home schools, charter schools, district and state correspondence schools. • LRE (least restrictive environment) • to maximum extent appropriate
IDEA Disability • Must meet eligibility criteria as defined by law under fourteen disability categories • Must adversely affect education performance • Must substantiate requirement for special education and related services
IDEA Disability Categories • Specific Learning Disability (about half of all students with IEPs): 1174 students • Speech Impaired: 428 students • Early Childhood Developmentally Delayed: 301 students • Other Health Impaired: 238 students • Emotionally Disturbed: 154 students • Cognitively Impaired: 100 students
Other disability categories:Low incidence disabilities: • Autism: 78 students • Multiple disabilities: 52 students • Hard of Hearing/Deaf: 19 students • Visually Impaired: 6 students • Deaf Blind: 1 students • Traumatic Brain Injury: 6 students • Orthopedically Impaired: 12 students
Childfind • Early childhood, school age children enrolled in the district, school age children not enrolled in the district Interventions Must be attempted in regular education before a referral to special education is made…. Commonly called “RTI” in our district (Response to Intervention)
Referral and Evaluation • Must be completed within 45 school days of the date parent signed consent to evaluate. Reevaluations • Must be conducted every three years Exit • Only for reasons allowed by state regulations
IEP • Individualized Education Program • Consists of 13 sections, defined by state regulations. • iPlan is our software, forms on iPlan come directly from Alaska Special Education Handbook. • Developed by team
IEP Meeting: Required Participants • Must be invited • Parent • Student after age 14 • General Ed teacher • Special ed provider • District representative • Anyone knowledgeable about evaluation conducted • Must attend: • General Ed teacher • Special Ed provider • District representative
IEP Alignment From Evaluation………………… to PLAFFP…………………………. to Goals & Objectives………… to Services…………………………. to Placement
Placement: based on IEP following it’s completion • LRE (to what extent is the child being educated with typical same age peers???) • Not where the child is educated, but with whom….. • Should be enrolled in their attendance area school or as close to home as possible. • Team must consider continuum of options. • Justification must be written if services are more restrictive than fulltime services in general education classroom.
Implementation of IEP • Must be implemented within 45 days of receipt of consent to evaluate • Upon proposal of IEP, regardless of any disagreement. If consensus cannot be reached, district must provide Prior Written Notice of its proposed IEP.
Transition Services • Into Preschool • 90 days prior to 3rd birthday, children in Infant Learning Program have Transition meeting in their home • Process of evaluation begins • By age 16 • Transition Plan required for every student, addressing the purpose of IDEIA: “to prepare for employment and independent living”
MSBSD Programs Early Childhood (ages 3-5) • Itinerant • Headstart • Center Based preschool (2 or 4 days) Elementary (grades k-5) • Itinerant • Resource • Intensive resource • Regional programs for ED and Deaf students, and ABA programs
MSBSD Programs Middle School (grades 6-8) • Itinerant • Resource • Intensive resource • Self contained High School (grades 9-12) • Itinerant • Resource • Intensive resource • Self Contained • Next Step Transition K-12 Special Day School
No Child Left Behind (NCLB) • AYP: Adequate Yearly Progress…measured by annual Standards Based Assessments • District is at Level 4 • Schools are at different levels For more info go to www.eed.state.ak.us • SWD: Students with Disabilities • A subgroup, specified in NCLB • Performance of this subgroup includes all students in district with IEPs, grades 3-10.
Alaska Statewide Assessment • Grades 3-10 • Terra Nova (NRT) • Standards Based Assessments (CRT) • Grade 10 • High School Graduation Qualifying Exam (CRT) • SWD MUST take assessments: • without accommodations, or • with accommodations, or • Participate in an Alternate Assessment All are decisions Made by IEP team
Alaska Statewide Assessments • All accommodations specified in the IEP must be administered during the assessments. • SSS Records Specialist, will work with case managers so you know which students have which accommodations.
Alaska Statewide Assessment • After 10th grade administration of the HSGQE, if a SWD has failed a subsection, the IEP team may recommend a • Modified HSGQE • Nonstandardized HSGQE • All of these need to be approved by DEED. • Submission of these requests is coordinated by SSS, Records Specialist • Upon approval, info will be sent to case managers.
Extended School Year • Eligibility under three categories: • Regression/Recoup-ment • Self-sufficiency • Emerging skills • IEP meetings annually determine eligibility for ESY • IEP Amendment meetings must be held, to determine skills to be addressed in ESY
Special Education Attendance • Required to be taken daily • Paper/pencil, in addition to iCue attendance at your school • Mark each day you are scheduled to see a child (i.e. positive attendance) • Submit at the end of each quarter to Records Specialist
Working Files • Must be locked • You are responsible for confidentiality • Must contain current iep, this year’s progress notes, and any other confidential information about that child that you want to keep
Thank you! • Please enjoy the rest of your day…. • Please fill out questionnaire about future topics