1 / 12

WELCOME TO BREWER PARENT NIGHT

WELCOME TO BREWER PARENT NIGHT. Our goals:. Provide information that parents need to know when their child has an IEP Provide ideas for helping your child reach their potential Provide important things to think about for the approaching high school years Answer your questions.

Download Presentation

WELCOME TO BREWER PARENT NIGHT

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. WELCOME TO BREWER PARENT NIGHT

  2. Our goals: • Provide information that parents need to know when their child has an IEP • Provide ideas for helping your child reach their potential • Provide important things to think about for the approaching high school years • Answer your questions

  3. How is the IEP developed? The IEP development process must consider: • your child’s strengths; • your concerns for your child’s education; • the results of your child’s individual evaluation; • the results of any State or districtwide tests or assessments; and • any unique needs related to your child’s disability (such as communication needs, behavior, etc.).

  4. Things to consider in middle school: • What can your child do now to prepare for being an adult? What can you do to help him or her prepare? • What will your child do after he or she graduates from school? (Or when he or she turns 21 and is no longer eligible to attend school?) • Will your child go to college? If so, what high school courses should he or she take? What tests will your child take? • Where will your child live? Does he or she need to learn new skills to live independently?

  5. Least Restrictive Environment Least Restrictive Environment (LRE) means that a student is with his or her general education peers as much as possible during the school day while meeting their specific needs. This could take place in a variety of service models

  6. Service Models/Placements(from least to highest percentage in special education) • Itinerant- general education classes all day; visits with special education teacher just to check in. • Inclusion/Co-teaching – general education classes for all core subjects; Special and general education teachers co-teach in the classroom. • “Resource”- one enrichment period to provide remediation of skills and assistance with assignments • Partial integration- instruction in Math and/or ELA given by the special education teacher • All core areas in the special education classroom-instruction in all core areas given by the special education teacher

  7. Accommodations Accommodations are changes in materials or procedures that provide access to instruction and assessments for students with disabilities. They are designed to enable students with disabilities to learn without the impediment of their disabilities, and to show their knowledge and skills rather than the effects of their disabilities. Remember: We want to level the playing field while helping the student become more and more independent 

  8. High School Considerations It is important to begin thinking about high school and beyond now! • Students who do not take general education courses will not receive credits toward their diploma • Students who do not pass general education courses will not receive credits toward their diploma

  9. High School Options • High School Diploma - student must take credit-earning courses and pass them to earn 24 credits and pass the HSAP exam. • Occupational Credential - student will take core courses (English, Math, History, Science) in the special education classroom along with work-readiness courses. • Attendance Certificate- student will receive this if they do not earn the necessary credits nor do they take the Occupational Credential path.

  10. How can you help your child succeed? • Positive, frequent communication with teachers and service providers • Encourage them to read and locate information • Talk to them and listen, let them know you are interested in them • Monitor homework and studying • Put a limit on TV and video game playing • Encourage responsibility and independence • Encourage active learning- asking and answering questions, getting involved in cooking, sports, etc. • Teach about accountability and consequences • Make education a priority

  11. Good Study Habits • Study a little each day- review notes, break spelling or vocabulary lists into chunks • Get a routine established for the week and follow as closely as possible. • Choose a quiet, comfortable place without distractions. • Use index cards for learning vocabulary or other information for memorization • Use an agenda daily to write down assignments and important information • Have a healthy snack while you study to help you concentrate.

  12. References • National Center on Secondary Education and Transition. http://www.ncset.org/publications/viewdesc.asp?id=247 • A Parent’s Guide to Special Education. http://www.p12.nysed.gov/specialed/publications/policy/parentguide.htm#LRE • U.S. Department of Education Office of Communications and Outreach, Helping Your Child Succeed in School http://www2.ed.gov/parents/academic/help/succeed/succeed.pdf

More Related