1 / 36

Inclusive Practice

Inclusive Practice. Inclusive Practice Model. Celeste Henkel Elementary April 20, 2011. Jonathan Ribbeck – Principal Dr. Lucille Asbury – Assistant Principal Dawn Alsop – Teacher Crystal Harris – Teacher Anne Gardner – Teacher Jamie Goodwin –Teacher. Getting buy-in and creating ownership

iona
Download Presentation

Inclusive Practice

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. Inclusive Practice

  2. Inclusive Practice Model Celeste Henkel Elementary April 20, 2011

  3. Jonathan Ribbeck – PrincipalDr. Lucille Asbury – Assistant PrincipalDawn Alsop – TeacherCrystal Harris – TeacherAnne Gardner – TeacherJamie Goodwin –Teacher

  4. Getting buy-in and creating ownership Scheduling and use of support staff Planning strategies Inclusive approaches Reflections from the team Overview

  5. 530 students 70% free/reduce lunch Sub-groups: EC, low socio-economic 78% Caucasian; 12.5% African- American; 6.11% Hispanic; 2.97% Asian; .33% other Blue collar workers Both parents work/single parent homes Our Demographics

  6. In 2009/2010 met AYP with Safe Harbor and Confidence Interval with EC sub-group Currently in Corrective Action Must meet AYP in 2010/2011 to be out of Corrective Action Our Data

  7. 70 36.6 Total EC

  8. 84.4 56.1 EC Total

  9. 58.7 47.2 Total EC

  10. Provide pertinent data to staff AYP, EOG, PA, DRA, TWC, Climate Survey, & comparative data Whole staff Review data Identified strengths/weaknesses Identified greatest gap areas Light vote on two focus (gap) areas Buy-In Process

  11. Whole staff process Strengths/ weaknesses of EC Opportunities for improvement Identified needs Discussed misunderstandings of inclusion Seek interest/commitment for inclusion EC Identified as Gap Area

  12. EC staff was included in every aspect for input Select inclusive teachers 3 out of 4 inclusive classes looped Students who would benefit Communicate with parents of all students in inclusive classes Proactively create class lists for success Staff development for reg-ed, EC, TA in co-teaching/inclusion Inclusive Team

  13. How does your school serve EC students? Paradigm Shift #1

  14. Provide the full continuum of EC services Two EC teachers to service 40 students, 26 of which are in inclusive classrooms Each EC teacher serves (through inclusion) two grades 2/3 and 4/5 * EC teachers serve k/1 and students in resource pull-out EC Provided Services

  15. No more than 8 EC students in each inclusive homeroom Based on individual IEP’s Inclusive classrooms drove master schedule No before or after school duties for inclusive teachers EC Goal Team meets every other week Non-Negotiables

  16. What drives the master schedule at your school? Paradigm Shift #2

  17. 60-90 minute (based on IEP) for EC teacher to be in each inclusive class 30 minute lunch increments 10:30-12:30 45 minute Enhancement 8:00-2:05 45 minute leveled intervention time 20 minute recess Master Schedule Components

  18. Continuous feedback from inclusive teams & staff, always adjusting to improve model One EC student could change the schedule Continuous Improvement Process

  19. How are teacher assistants utilized in your building? Paradigm Shift #3

  20. TA in each inclusive classroom during reading and math block TA ownership – issues in past Utilizing Assistants

  21. Support Staff Video

  22. Classroom Video Example2nd Grade

  23. Who leads discussion Incorporating grade level subject instruction with IEP Goals Matching strategies to the students Inclusion Planning Strategies

  24. Team Teaching – both teachers deliver the instruction at the same time during a whole group lesson. The teachers tag team during the delivery, pose questions, and play off each others strategies and explanations. Stations– students rotate through content specific areas to receive direct instruction (based on need) from teachers working with each focus group. A station may have students working collaboratively or independently. Inclusion Approaches

  25. Classroom Video Example5th Grade

  26. 1 Teach / 1 Observe – teachers should decide on what information will be gathered during the observation and how to use the data to guide instruction. 1 Teach / 1 Assist – the assisting teacher provides continuous coaching, assistance, and modeling during the main instruction. Inclusion Approaches at the Beginning of the School Year

  27. Inclusion Approaches • Parallel – students are divided between teachers who deliver the same objective. • Alternate – during instruction one teacher pulls out a small group of students within the room to prep, re-teach, challenge, provide different instruction.

  28. Parent Video

  29. Students do not miss regular instruction Parents know their child is receiving services Builds confidence in students Hone in on student learning styles Implementation of various strategies Better understanding of EC and Reg.ed students EC teacher works with all students Shared instruction Benefits of Inclusion

  30. Less then 45 minutes of inclusion is not beneficial Planning time with teacher assistant is needed Inclusive times protected Master schedule is pivotal EC teacher should be in for the whole reading/math block Students from other classes need to have the same schedule Teachers’ Reflective Thoughts

  31. Prerequisites for inclusion Buy in Teacher relationships Student/teacher relationships Prerequisites for scheduling Free yourself from prior schedules Think outside the box Team approach Make adjustments as needed Administrators’ Reflective Thoughts

  32. Questions? Feel free to ask any member of our team.

  33. Jonathan Ribbeck: ribbeck@iss.k12.nc.us Dr. Lucille Asbury: asbury@iss.k12.nc.us Dawn Alsop: dalsop@iss.k12.ns.us Crystal Harris: harrisc@iss.k12.nc.us Anne Gardner: agardner@iss.k12.nc.us Jamie Goodwin: jgoodwin@iss.k12.nc.us Contact Information

  34. Please fill out the exit card before you leave. Exit Card

More Related