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Rolling Out the New IEP. State Support Team Region 13 Sue Bitsko, Susan Burns, Gretchen Estreicher, Deb McGraw, and Patrick Wong. PR-07 IEP IEP Tools. Annotated Guide. Forms. What is your IEP IQ?. Cover Page. IEP Effective dates should be….
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Rolling Out the New IEP State Support Team Region 13 Sue Bitsko, Susan Burns, Gretchen Estreicher, Deb McGraw, and Patrick Wong
PR-07 IEPIEP Tools Annotated Guide Forms
What is your IEP IQ? Cover Page
IEP Effective dates should be… • Starting the day of the meeting and ending 1 year from that date (i.e. 4/15/09-4/15/10) • Starting either the day of the meeting or whenever the start, and ending one year from that date. (i.e. 4/16/09 - 4/16/10) • Starting either the day of the meeting or whenever the start, and ending one day less than from the date (i.e. 4/15/09-4/14/10)
If a student has parents who are divorced and share custody, Whose name goes on the Parent Information section? • Both parents – add a box • Both parents – on the same line • The parent -where the student primarily lives
Child’s Information • Name populates throughout the pages • If 14 yrs. – Transition Pages appear • If Ward of State – Surrogate parent field appears
Parent Information • Can add • additional boxes for parents that live at different addresses
Meeting Information • Initial= • Never Identified as SWD • Exited as SWD after evaluation • Move in from out of state and district evaluates • Review Other Than Annual Review: • if less than 1 yr.
IEP Timelines • ETR completion date: • Is the date of the meeting -when it was completed and signed • Next ETR: • No more than 3 years, or when transition to kindergarten • IEP start date: • First full week of school • Effective Dates • No more than 364 days
Other Information • New Field – Document information not anywhere else, or information you want “up front” • Document attempts for parent involvement in IEP • ESY justification
IEP Form Status • After you check the box at the bottom of each section – this will populate • Nice way to check what still needs to be completed
Amendments • Can be accomplished in several ways: • May agree to convene entire team • Agree NOT to convene entire team- need written excusals for those not attending (can have face to face meeting or phone conference, email) • Can Document 3 ways: • Revise Entire IEP – need to send PWN • Make changes in body of IEP (highlight, underline, hand written), summarize changes in amendments part of IEP • Make changes on paper and attach (must include all elements)
Future Planning… • Should include parent input • Should include parent and student input • Should not duplicate what was put in the transition section
Section 1: Future Planning ? • Based on a discussion with the child and family about the child’s future • Younger children – focus is on the education component, Older children- focus is postsecondary education goals and outcomes • 14+ there needs to be a specific goal for post high school that is somewhat realistic • Can not go to Due Process over this section
If you checked “yes” for a Special Instructional Factor • There should be a goal for what ever was checked • There should be a goal or service for what was checked • There doesn’t need to be anything else.
Section 2: Special Instructional Factors ? • All Items marked “Yes” must be addressed in the IEP • If “yes” to visually impaired – will get the Section 15 • If “yes” the information should be summarized in Section 3 Profile and strategies and supports will be part of the IEP
Which one of these does NOT belong in the Profile • The student needs an Epipen. • The family speaks Spanish as their primary method of communication. • The student reads 30 wpm on fifth grade text. • Strengths and interests
Section 3: Profile • Information that is NOT connected to a goal • Include parents’ concerns, strengths and interests of child, results of state and district wide tests , recent evaluations… • Behaviors, LEP, Communication…(Special Instructional Factors) • Discuss academic, developmental and functional needs of the child • Include needs identified in ETR but not addressed in this IEP and tell why • How disability affects progress in general curriculum • Do not need to repeat if the information is in other sections
If a student is currently 13 years old, but will turn 14 in 5 months you … • Should include the Transition 14 years and older section. • Should not include the 14 years and older section • Should only include the 14 years and older section if the student probably will graduate with their class (18 yrs).
Section 4: Postsecondary Transition 14+ Years • If you check the box on the front page as being 14+ - you’ll get Section 4 • Current courses of study • What the student’s postsecondary goal is • Proposed course of high school study based on realistic post secondary goals • Any related service needs that impede the student to get to their goal
Section 4: Postsecondary – 16+ years • Course of study • Strengths • What they need to learn based on their postsecondary goal (education/training, employment, independent living) • Assessments: how they will behave at work (attendance, job shadows, time-on-task), interest inventories, vocational evaluations, career surveys…
? • Goals must be based on transition assessments • Written in 3rd person “Sally will… upon completion of high school”. • District is NOT responsible for ensuring goals are completed after student leaves IEP coverage – but there should be a good faith effort documented by the district
In the Transition section- Age appropriate transition assessments would probably include.. • OGT information • Work Study information, job performance information • Interest inventories, absence information • All of the above
When writing postsecondary goals you should… • Write in measureable terms • Write in measureable terms, in Third person (i.e. ___ will…) • Write goals without data, knowing that you will be gathering this information
Section 5: Postsecondary Services Cont. • Can say “no need for goal as there is no need for specially designed instruction outside the regular education curriculum” – based on transition assessments
In the Goal section … • The area would be a content standard area such as science, math, ELA… • The area would be a skill such as reading, writing, communication… or content standard area • The area could be all of the above.
Section 6: Measurable Annual Goals • Area = ACS or communication, behavior…. • Present levels • Academic, functional (hygiene, community based instruction, safety…), post secondary transition • Include information about strategies and interventions and their results • Use clear and concrete terminology
Section 6: Measurable Annual Goal- Cont. • Goals should be prioritized • Accomplished in 12 months • Aligned to Academic Content Standards • Must be a direct relationship between the ETR, PLOP and goals • Must contain: condition, clearly defined behavior, • criteria for mastery
Section 6: Measurable Annual Goal- Cont. • Objectives (steps towards goal) or • Benchmarks (able to do by a specific time) • These are your plan for reaching the annual goals and the means of reporting progress • Must be a direct relationship between the Goal and the objective/benchmarks • Should include condition, clearly defined behavior and performance criteria
Section 6: Measurable Annual Goal – Cont. • How the progress will be reported and how often • Check all the boxes that apply • Must be at least concurrent with issuing of report cards and periodic reports for typical students
In the Specially Designed Services section, If an SLP saw a student in a pull out group, and in the classroom and provided consultative services they would… • Put two boxes of services one describing the direct (pull out and classroom) and one for consultative • Put three boxes, one for each service • Put one box describing all the services
If a student only needs a certain service occasionally you should… • Write the service and put “as needed” • Write the service and give specific frequency, duration and location of the service. • Write the service and put “when the student needs supports”.
Section 7: Specially Designed Services • Adapting the content or methodology or delivery of instruction to access the General Ed. Curriculum • This area shows a synthesis of services- it pulls all the goals together that a person is responsible for.
Be specific as to what you are going to do, where, how frequently, etc… • If providing multiple services/ • environments you must make a new box- so it is clear
Section 7: Specially Designed Services – Cont. • Accommodations: • Providing access to , but NOT altering the amount or complexity • Do NOT need to specify frequency or duration of accommodations • Modifications: • Altering the content (decreasing amount or complexity)
Section 7: Specially Designed Services – Cont. • Support for School Personnel: • Training, aide, resource materials, equipment, consultation with other professionals… • Services to Support Medical Needs: • Medical services child needs to receive FAPE
If the student chooses to participate in football and practice ends after the buses have left… • A special bus is required to take the SWD home. • The student is transported by parent – like everyone else. • The coach will take him home
Section 8: Transportation • Always has been a requirement • If child needs transportation to access FAPE • If the child can ride the regular yellow bus with no supports – they won’t need transportation as a related service
Section 9: Nonacademic/Extracurricular • Always has been a requirement • Document opportunities to participate in non-academic activities • If parent doesn’t want participation, specify “parent and child do not wish to participate” • If parent does want participation – you must provide whatever supports the child needs to participate fully • If it is in the IEP – it must happen as it is FAPE
When does a district need to provide ESY? • When they have sufficient funds. • When the disability category is MD or Autism. • The skills will be lost and not readily recovered. • If the child does not reach their IEP goals.