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Guidelines for Making Decisions about IEP Services. IEP Services 3 of 8 Team Practices.
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Guidelines for Making Decisions about IEP Services • IEP Services 3 of 8 • Team Practices
This series of slide shows is based on:Guidelines for MakingDecisions about IEP Services2001Michael F. Giangreco, Ph.D.University of Vermont, Center on Disability and Community InclusionThis document is available in a pdf (portable document format) on the internethttp://www.uvm.edu/~uapvt/iepservices/http://www.state.vt.us/educ/Cses/sped/main.htmDistributed by theVermont Department of EducationFamily and Educational Support TeamMontpelier, VermontDevelopment of this material was supported by a grant from the Vermont Department of Education, Montpelier, Vermont under the auspices of Vermont Act 117: An Act to Strengthen the Capacity of Vermont’s Education System to Meet the Needs of All Students, Section 7 (d) (5).
Team members should be aware of each other’s specific skills, interests, and experiences, in addition to their professional training. Members without such training (parents or students for example) are equally valuable team members.
Knowing about each team member’s specialization can assist the team in deciding... • how to support each other, • what skills they need to learn, or • where they need to seek help beyond the existing team.
Acknowledge Varying Decision-Making Values • More-is-Better • Return-on-Investment • Only-as-Specialized-as- Necessary
Decision-making models are all based on underlying values. Sometimes these are clearly understood and agreed to by team members. When they are unclear or competing it is problematic because differences increase the probability that people will be working at cross-purposes (sometimes without realizing why).
More-is-Better • This approach is misguided because it confuses quantity with value. • It can have negative outcomes for students by interfering with participation in other school activities.
decrease time for participation with peers disrupt the normal flow of class activities interfere with class membership cause disruption in acquiring, practicing, or generalizing skills cause inequities in the distribution of scarce resources overwhelm families with a large number of professionals result in students with disabilities feeling stigmatized by “special” services create dependencies unnecessarily complicate communication and coordination Providing more services than necessary may:
Return-on-Investment • Places a high value on serving students who have a favorable history and prognosis for being “fixed” and those likely to contribute the most economically to society • It fails to recognize the many non economic contributions made by even people with the most severe disabilities
Only-as-Specialized-as-Necessary • Helps determine the appropriate type and amount of service, but not more than is needed • Draws upon natural supports • Includes data collection on the impact of services • Takes precautions to avoid the drawbacks of well-intentioned over-service
The only-as-specialized-as-necessary approach does not necessarily mean “less is always best” or “only a little is plenty. When used as intended, it results in students receiving needed services. It is meant to be a value orientation agreed to by the team, which includes the family.
Develop a Shared Framework • A shared framework consists of a team’s common set of beliefs, values, or assumptions about education, children, families, and professionals to which they agree through ongoing discussion.
It is advisable to share differing perspectives openly among team members. When beliefs, values, or assumptions are unknown or hidden the team process is more likely to be undermined. Developing a shared framework provides a foundation upon which a team can build effective educational programs.
Clarify the Process • Establish ground rules, group expectations, and process steps from the outset, either before a meeting or at least at the beginning of a meeting. • Process steps need to be agreed to by group members and adhered to by the group.
Have a written agenda Make sure all members have an opportunity to contribute to setting the agenda Set an expectation that members will arrive on time, start on time, and come prepared Establish and share roles (e.g., facilitator, recorder, timekeeper) Make sure all members have an opportunity to participate (e.g., use round-robin) Limit jargon No “put downs” Don’t criticize the person, critique the idea Build on each other’s ideas Common Ground Rules & Group Expectations
Have a clear meeting process,here’s an example: • Present an agenda item • Have a discussion ensuring opportunities to all • Make a decision • Identify and record tasks to be completed • Name the persons responsible for task completion • Establish timelines for task completion • Spend time processing your teamwork practices
Seek Consensusand clarify procedures if consensus is not achieved • The absence of team processes to help reach consensus about educationally necessary supports is a problem that continues to plague IEP services decision-making. • This problem takes two basic forms.
Some groups have no identifiable process. Decisions are made based on intuition, clinical judgment, historical practices, or advocacy. Although some teams might have good luck with this approach, most are not so lucky. Some groups have identifiable processes designed for use by single disciplines; these have substantial limitations. Without exploring the interrelationships among the other disciplines it increases the likelihood of service gaps, overlaps, and contradictions.
If consensus is not reached... • it is the responsibility of the Local Education Agency to make a service recommendation. If parents disagree, they have access to dispute resolution options including mediation, administrative complaints , and due process hearings. All of these options can be avoided or minimized by having a sound way to reach consensus.
Open the next slide show • Open the next slide show labeled: • IEP Services 4 of 8 • Slide show 4 of 8 addresses, Learn About the Student and Learn About the Context