160 likes | 293 Views
“Town Hall Meeting” Future Directions. Delivery Model Students with Special Needs. Issues. Commitment to success for all within the context of inclusion Students normally attend community school Support services according to need Finite resources
E N D
“Town Hall Meeting”Future Directions Delivery Model Students with Special Needs
Issues • Commitment to success for all within the context of inclusion • Students normally attend community school • Support services according to need • Finite resources • Increasing demand for services within a context of decreasing enrollment
Our Current Approach • Striving to include all students • Organizing services so that students can attend their community school
Framework Guiding the Organization of Services • The Education Act • The Policy on Special Education (MELS 2000) • The QEP (Differentiation, Cycles, Teamwork)
Framework Guiding the Organization of Services Continued • The Framework on Complementary Educational Services (MELS 2002) • The Policy on the Evaluation of Learning(MELS 2003) • The Collective Agreements (2005-2010)
A Continuum of Needs At risk / Students with Social Maladjustments / Students with Handicaps Learning Difficulties Vulnerable LD/MI/BD Codes (14-99) Prevention Intervention BLUE: MELS Categories BLACK: LBPSB Operational Categories
Classification of Special Needs(Ministry of Education, Leisure, & Sport) • Two broad categories • Students in Difficulty (Learning/Behavior/Mild Intellectual Delay) • Students with Social Maladjustments/ Handicaps • Identification procedures and funding differ for both categories
LBPSB Statistics (2007-08) • Approximately 11% of student population has identified special needs • Total Population:25 665 • Students in difficulty (LD/BD/MI):1953 • Students with Social Maladjustments/Handicaps:777
STUDENTS “IN DIFFICULTY” 2007-2008 STUDENTS “HANDICAPPED” 2007-2008
School Classroom Teachers Resource Teachers Integration Aides Sp. Needs Technicians Behavioral Technicians Spiritual Animators Planning Room * Guidance Counsellors* In-School Alternate Programs* Work Study Programs * Secondary school only Support at School Level
School Board and External Agency Support Board • Student Services • Special Needs Consultants, Psychologists, Speech - Language Pathologists, Occupational Therapists, FSSTT, Health Promotion Team • REACH ATTACHMENT Program** * * Elementary school only
School Board and External Agency Support Continued • Educational Services • Curriculum Consultants • Early Literacy Intervention Program • Summer Literacy Camp • Summer School External • Health & Social Services Agencies • Community Groups
Options • Maintain current model • Refine current model • Develop new approaches for specific clientele (e.g. behavior) • Explore alternative programming for students • Develop and implement a different model • Re-distribute existing Board budgets
Impact of Present Board Policy and Practices • An individualized approach to success • Based on identified needs, not category • A high quality of service is costly (in time and $$) • A culture of appreciation for diversity
Impact Continued • Over-representation of students with Special Needs in Elementary Bilingual program • Over-representation of students with Special Needs in certain secondary school programs • Need for on-going professional development to build capacity