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Our Road to National Recognition of Intervention Specialist Programs at Walsh University. Gary D. Jacobs, Ph.D. Janet M. Devine, MAED Jean A. DeFazio , Ph.D. Walsh University’s Programs. Intervention Specialist, K-12, Mild/Moderate Intervention Specialist, K-12, Moderate/Intensive
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Our Road to National Recognition of Intervention Specialist Programs at Walsh University Gary D. Jacobs, Ph.D. Janet M. Devine, MAED Jean A. DeFazio , Ph.D.
Walsh University’s Programs • Intervention Specialist, K-12, Mild/Moderate • Intervention Specialist, K-12, Moderate/Intensive • Early Childhood Intervention Specialist, PreK-3, Moderate/Intensive
Use the Red Book • See pages 18-21 in the What Every Special Educator Must Know for key phrases, incorporate into your report • http://www.cec.sped.org/Content/NavigationMenu/ProfessionalDevelopment/ProfessionalStandards/Red_book_5th_edition.pdf • 14 designations of special education programs • Learn the language of your standard, e.g, Clinical vs. Student Teaching
Know Your Acronyms • SPA = Specialized Professional Association • ELS = English as a second language • ELN = Exceptional Learning Needs • EC = Exceptional Conditions • CF = Conceptual Framework • IR = Institutional Report
Administrative Support • Full support of Dean and Chair • NCATE Coordinator • Stipends for summer work • Consultant hired
Assemble Your Team • Writers should have special education background • Recruit other experts in your division or college • Find an outside reader • Balance skills of team
Preliminary Ground Work • Know your SPA standards • Know 10 CEC Standard Domain Areas align with Ohio Educator Standards • Link alignment chart website here • Know your program requirements • Undergraduate or Graduate level Programs • Allow time to write, analyze data, define assessments, create rubrics
Choose friends wisely • Confer with your ODE consultant • Consider a paid consultant • Ask questions • Use your connections • Ask for feedback from others • Utilize the NCATE and CEC resources
Submission Deadlines • Electronic submission of reports • Submit six months prior to on-site visit • Encouraged to submit one year prior to visit • September 15th & February 1st • Solicit help from your IS department • Check NCATE website or with NCATE consultant
NCATE website • Become familiar with NCATE websitehttp://www.ncate.org/ • Helpful hints • Model programs on website • BOE guidelines
Conceptual Framework • Thread the conceptual framework throughout your report • What makes your institution unique? Include in report • Assessment data from the SPA reports becomes a part of your assessment plan
Rubrics • Study assessment plan • Link assessments to the CEC standards • Determine scale (5, 4, 3) • Label and define each scale rating, e.g., 3 = Target; 2 = Acceptable; 1 = Unacceptable • We followed NCATE 3 point scale
Data Collection • Choose 6-8 key assessments based on candidate proficiencies found in your institution’s conceptual framework • Align those key assessment with the CEC standards • Solicit input from school partnerships
Use of Data • Design data collection to help you improve your program • Make program changes based on data • Objectively review data • Be honest about results of data • Review for validity and reliability • Be receptive of feedback from outside consultants, cooperating teachers and supervisors
Assessment #1 • Praxis II content test data is required • Check out Praxis website http://www.ets.org/praxis • Align test to CEC standards • Discovered we didn’t have subcategory information
Assessment #2 • Another content assessment is required • We chose an assessments for each of the three different programs • ISE M/M = case study • ISE M/I = unit of study with learning centers • ECIS = field-based case study
Assessment #3 • Assessment of Candidate’s Ability to Plan Instruction • DAPP = Developmental Assessment Plan Project • Students write an Individual Assessment Plan (IAP), then assess a student, write a Diagnostic Prescriptive (DP), an Individualized Educational Plan (IEP) and then implement goals and objectives with a real child
Assessment #4 • Assessment of Clinical Practice required • Two types of rubrics used to gather data • One is aligned with Praxis/Pathwise • Second is CEC specific rubric • CEC specific rubric is changing due to feedback from users
Assessment #5 • Assessment of Candidate Effect on Student Learning • Portfolio Assessment • Freshmen begin a developmental portfolio • Transitions into professional portfolio during pre-clinical practice • Updated in clinical practice • Evolving into an electronic teacher work sample • In future will use impact on student learning
Assessment #6 • Additional Assessment to address CEC Standards • Family Interview Project • Candidates interview parents of child with disabilities, provide a written and oral report as an in-class project • Reflect on the experience
Assessment #7 • Additional Assessment to address CEC Standards (optional, but use) • 3-D Classroom Model • Develop rules and consequences • Group behavior change • Parent letter and newsletter written • Classroom management plan
Assessment #8 • Additional Assessment to address CEC Standards (optional but use) • Impact on Student Learning • Modeled after the Ohio value added project • Based on the assess, teach, assess model • We put this here, but will have to be used in Assessment #5 at next submission
Assessment Chart CEC Report • http://www.ncate.org/ProgramStandards/CEC/CECWebReport-July1.doc
Meetings • Don’t miss one • Get summaries if you can’t attend • Attend with writing partners or other faculty • Cover all breakout sessions • Attend SPA training sessions offered by ODE • Attend NCATE, AACTE and SPA national conferences
Lessons Learned • Keep current – moving target • Attend all meetings • Learn from the work • Balance teaching and writing tasks • Take time from work to celebrate
Contact Information • Gary Jacobs gjacobs@walsh.edu • Janet Devine jdevine@walsh.edu • Jean DeFazio jdefazio@walsh.edu