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Access to General Curriculum for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities

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Title: Access to General Curriculum for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities


1
Access to General Curriculum for Students with
Significant Cognitive Disabilities
  • Diane M. Browder, PhD
  • Tracie-Lynn Zakas
  • University of North Carolina at Charlotte

2
Something is happening to curriculum for students
with significant disabilities
3
(No Transcript)
4
Access to general curriculum
  • Where did the idea originate?
  • Why has this idea persisted?
  • Is there any research to support it?
  • What happens to functional life skills?

5
Whose Idea Was Access to General Curriculum?
  • Momentum of increasing expectations
  • Serendipity in federal policy

6
Changing Curricular Context for Students with
Significant Disabilities
  • Early 1970s
  • Adapting infant/ early childhood curriculum for
    students with significant disabilities of all
    ages
  • 1980s
  • Rejected developmental model
  • Functional, life skills curriculum emerged
  • 1990s
  • Also social inclusion focus
  • Also self determination focus
  • 2000
  • General curriculum access (academic content)
  • Plus earlier priorities (functional, social, self
    determination)

7
Serendipity
  • serendipity    (srn-dp-t)  NOUN pl.
    serendipities
  • The faculty of making fortunate discoveries by
    accident.
  • The fact or occurrence of such discoveries.
  • An instance of making such a discovery.

8
IDEA 1997
  • All students have access to general curriculum
    content
  • All students assessed on state standards
  • Creation of alternate assessment
  • All?
  • Content?
  • What is an alternate assessment?

9
No Child Left Behind
  • Schools accountable for ALL students
  • AYP in language arts/reading, math, and science
  • Did you say ALL?
  • Schools are accountable?

10
NCLB Regulations/ Guidance
  • AYP can use alternate achievement standards for
    up to 1 of Ss with SCD
  • These standards must be based on academic content
    linked to grade level
  • Really reading? Really math? Science??

11
What promoted general curriculum access.
  • A national focus on reading, math, and science
  • Includes all students (yes, including Ss with
    significant cognitive disabilities)
  • Schools report as part of AYP
  • (yes, including Ss with significant cognitive
    disabilities)

12
Why has the idea of general curriculum access
persisted?
  • False starts and new hopes
  • Research on AA
  • Browder, D., Flowers, C., Ahlgrim-Delzell, L.,
    Karvonen, M., Spooner, F., Algozzine, R.
    (2004). The alignment of alternate assessment
    content with academic and functional curricula.
    Journal of Special Education, 37, 211-233.

13
UNC Charlotte Research on Alignment of Alternate
Assessments
  • New hopes (strong links to standards)
  • Math
  • Compare volumes of more and less
  • Use strategies such as counting, measuring, to
    determine possible outcomes in problem solving
  • Reading
  • Answer questions related to story
  • Identify pattern in familiar story
  • False starts (weak link to standards)
  • Math
  • Replace rollers in beauty parlor
  • Measure growth of fingernails
  • Reading
  • Show anticipation on roller coaster
  • Attend to visual stimuli

14
Have we gotten carried away with our hopefulness?
  • What does research indicate about whether
    students with moderate and severe disabilities
    can learn academics?

15
Reading Mostly sight words (without
comprehension)
  • Browder, D. Wakeman, S., Spooner, F.,
    Ahlgrim-Delzell, L., Algozzine, R.F. (2006). A
    comprehensive review of reading for students with
    significant cognitive disabilities. Exceptional
    Children. 72, 392-410.

16
Math Mostly money
  • Browder, D., Spooner, F., Ahlgrim-Delzell, L.,
    Harris, A., Wakeman, S. (in submission). A
    comprehensive review of research to teach math to
    students with significant cognitive disabilities.

17
Science Almost nothing!
  • Courtade-Little, G., Spooner, F., Browder, D.
    (Accepted). A literature review of science for
    students with significant disabilities. Research
    and Practice in Severe Disabilities.

18
Evidence?
  • Known
  • How to use systematic prompting and fading to
    teach some academic skills
  • How to apply for students with severe as well as
    moderate disabilities
  • Sight words and money!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • Learning as we go
  • How to extend to other areas of academic content
  • How to adapt for students with most significant
    disabilities

19
Have we lost sight of the big picture?
  • Functional life skills
  • Preparation for adult life in the community

20
Academics vs. Life Skills
  • Both can be taught both are important
  • Academics can be taught in ways that are
    meaningful
  • We do not know what students can learn until we
    try teaching the content
  • Life skills are not a prerequisite to learning
    academics
  • Students who are not disabled do not have to
    master all life skills to be eligible to learn to
    read double standard
  • Balance is needed-in planning IEPs and developing
    daily schedule

21
Questions and Review
  • Where did the idea of teaching more academic
    content to students with significant
    disabilities?
  • How is it part of an ongoing evolution of
    curriculum for this population?
  • How is it meant to add to not replace the
    teaching of functional life skills?
  • What might we off load so there is time and
    energy to teach more academics?
  • Your questions and comments

22
Knowledge Needed to Implement General Curriculum
Content
  • A clear understanding of what it means to teach
    general curriculum content linked to grade level
    standards
  • Examples of interventions teachers can follow as
    models for planning instruction
  • Social validation from students and parents that
    goals and outcomes are valued and meaningful

23
What is Access to General Curriculum Content?
  • Access to the general curriculum for students who
    in the past focused solely on functional or
    remedial academics requires NEW THINKING ABOUT
    CURRICULUM

24
What Is Access to General Curriculum Content?
  • Browder, D.M., Wakeman, S.Y., Flowers, C.,
    Rickelman, R.J., Pugalee, D., Karvonen, M.
    (Accepted). Creating access to the general
    curriculum with links to grade level content for
    students with significant cognitive disabilities.
    Journal of Special Education.
  • Seven Criteria for Access to the General
    Curriculum
  • Four derived from federal policy
  • Three based on needs of population

25
Criterion 1 The Content is Academic
  • Self check
  • I am familiar with my state standards
  • I know the major strands of math, science,
    language arts/ reading
  • I collaborate with general education teachers
  • I realize that this might be difficult
  • I may need to commit to some research and
    self-study to learn my state standards

26
Criterion 2- The students assigned grade level
is the point of reference
  • Middle School (Grades (6-8)
  • Literature of Focus The Call of the Wild by Jack
    London
  • Students read chapters of book on grade level and
  • make diagram (e.g., fishbone) of story events
    describing cause and effect with evidence.
  • identify facts and opinions related to the
    characters
  • write a narrative comparing Phillips quality of
    life before and after the boat accident using
    evidence from the text.

27
Criterion 3-The Achievement Level Differs from
Grade Level
  • Examples of Alternate Achievement for The Call of
    the Wild
  • Students hear chapter summaries read and
    participate using pictures, repeated story lines,
    and controlled vocabulary.
  • Students select pictures for fishbone diagram
    after hearing story.
  • Students use pictures to answer simple yes/no
    questions about characters in the story (e.g.,
    Was Buck a dog?)
  • Students compare events from their own life to
    events in Bucks life in the story using a yes/no
    chart, and a Venn diagram.

28
Criterion 4- Differentiation in achievement
across grade levels/bands
  • Elementary
  • Childrens picture books provide support for
    comprehension
  • Stories have simpler themes and story lines
  • Answers can more often be found on the page
    (matching)
  • Middle School
  • Chapter books student follows along in own book
  • This may be an adapted book
  • Books may have picture symbol supports objects
    may still be used to support comprehension
  • Themes are more mature
  • More content from which to glean answer

29
Criteria 5- Promote access to grade level
activities, materials, contexts
  • - JAFTA Thinking Map (by Bree Jimenez)

30
Criteria 6- Content centrality and when possible,
performance centrality
  • State Standard
  • Student will identify, analyze, and apply
    knowledge of the structure and elements of
    fiction
  • Content
  • Structure and elements of fiction
  • Performance
  • Identify, analyze, and apply knowledge of
  • Camilla will use her AAC to greet peers in
    English class
  • Content? No
  • Performance? No
  • Camilla will choose a fictional story
  • Content? Yes?
  • Performance? Some
  • Camilla will use pictures to identify components
    of a fictional story
  • Content? Yes?
  • Performance? Stronger link

31
Criteria 7- Multiple levels of access to general
curriculum
  • Some students with significant disabilities rely
    on nonsymbolic communication or may have limited
    intentionality in communication consideration
    needs to be given to expectations for these
    students

32
Questions and Review
  • Self Check I can explain-
  • Strands/ domains of academic content
  • Grade appropriate instruction
  • How is it like age appropriate instruction
    what is different about this term
  • How to teach grade level content but with
    ALTERNATE achievement
  • Examples of students at different symbolic levels
  • Your questions and comments

33
Steps To Align Instruction From General
Curriculum to IEP
  • Whats available
  • Grade level standards
  • Typical content
  • Alternate achievement
  • Alignment
  • Enhancement
  • Pivotal Skills for the IEP

34
Step One Whats Available?
  • List the domains of content for each academic
    area to begin creating a curriculum planning
    chart
  • E.g., Mathematics may include data analysis,
    geometry, algebra, numbers and computation,
    measurement
  • Use the categories of your state standards

35
Step Two Grade Level Focus
  • Identify the students specific grade level
  • Obtain the state standards for this students
    grade level and any state extensions Alternate
    Knowledge Skills
  • Review together as an IEP team
  • List some priority standards in your curriculum
    chart general educators can help you know which
    are core to overall learning
  • A Thought By looking at the general standards
    you may discover other ideas for teaching the
    curriculum not identified in the AA guidelines.

36
Step Three Typical Content
  • For the priority standards, ask general educator
    to give examples of activities, materials, key
    concepts taught
  • To be sure everyone understands the standards and
    to create a framework for the next steps
  • Discuss how teaching this typical content could
    be done using principles of UDL share resources
    on UDL with team
  • This discussion can promote planning for all
    children from the beginning

37
Example BiographiesGrade Level Achievement
  • Standard
  • Compare and contrast elements of biographies
  • Symbolic Level
  • Reads and writes at grade level
  • Content
  • Biographies of well known Americans
  • Depth of knowledge
  • Requires connecting ideas
  • Activities/skills
  • Silent reading of biography answer questions
    about comparisons compose biography with all
    elements

38
Step Four Alternate Achievement
  • Target what this students goal for achievement
    will be related to these standards
  • In Idaho you can use Alternate Sample
    Applications
  • In the next three slides, we suggest a way of
    thinking about different levels of access

39
Alternate AchievementLevel 1- Symbolic
  • Standard
  • Compare and contrast elements of biographies
  • Symbolic Level
  • Reads sight words sentences with pic symbols
    writes sight words or can circle large vocabulary
    of picture symbols
  • Content
  • Biographies of well known Americans
  • Depth of knowledge
  • Requires connecting ideas
  • Activities/skills
  • Read aloud biography written in simple sentences
    with picture cues circle pictures to answer
    questions about comparisons compose biography by
    selecting pictures and making captions

40
Alternate AchievementLevel 2- Concrete Symbolic
  • Standard
  • Compare and contrast elements of biographies
  • Symbolic Level
  • Recognizes a few picture symbols recognizes
    larger number familiar objects and can use some
    symbolically
  • Content
  • Biographies of well known Americans
  • Depth of knowledge
  • comprehension
  • Activities/skills
  • Simplified text with pictures and repeated lines
    and vocabulary read to student about student
    selects pictures to answer question about the
    story puts pictures into circles to show same
    and different to compare biography with own
    life story

41
Alternate AchievementLevel 3- Presymbolic
  • Standard
  • Compare and contrast elements of biographies
  • Symbolic Level
  • Picture recognition is inconsistent, must be
    paired with objects communicates by looking at/
    moving to objects or people
  • Content
  • Biographies of well known Americans
  • Depth of knowledge
  • recall/ matching
  • Activities/skills
  • Adapted text with pictures read with student
    objects also used to give meaning student looks
    at/ points to objects from story

42
Alternate Achievement-Special Consideration
  • Standard
  • Compare and contrast elements of biographies
  • Symbolic Level
  • No consistent voluntary responding that can be
    used reliably (continue to observe for response/
    AT consultations)
  • Content
  • Biographies of well known Americans
  • Depth of knowledge
  • Level ? Awareness
  • Activities/skills
  • Adapted text with pictures read with student
    objects also used to give meaning note whether
    student made any response to these stimuli
    (change in respiration, opened eyes, vocalizes)

43
Scaffold Concept of Biography by Using
Autobiography First
  • Standard
  • Compare and contrast elements of biographies
  • Symbolic Level
  • Recognizes a few picture symbols recognizes
    larger number familiar objects and can use some
    symbolically
  • Content
  • Biographies of family members autobiography
  • Depth of knowledge
  • Level connections
  • Activities/skills
  • Adapted text with pictures read with student
    objects also used to give meaning student
    compares elements of family members and own
    story into same/ different charts using
    pictures/objects

44
Scaffold Understanding of Life Story by Beginning
with a Display
  • Standard
  • Compare and contrast elements of biographies
  • Symbolic Level
  • Recognizes a few picture symbols recognizes
    larger number familiar objects and can use some
    symbolically
  • Content
  • Biographies of famous Americans
  • Depth of knowledge
  • Level Comprehension
  • Activities/skills
  • Adapted text with pictures read with student
    recreates biography by placing objects related to
    story on shelf for biography display as teacher
    rereads story

45
Step 5 Double Check for Alignment
  • A match between the written, taught, and tested
    curriculum

46
Alignment of Instruction
  • As you plan instruction based on standards and
    using your states guide for alternate
    assessment, you create this match or alignment

47
Questions and Review
  • We have some more steps to help you get from
    standards to lesson plans and IEPs, but before we
    move on
  • Are you clear about how to translate a standard
    into a skill you can teach students in your
    classroom? Questions?
  • In the slides to follow, we are going to give you
    a few more ideas from our work

48
An Intervention Strategy
  • Task analytic instruction
  • Student masters the academic routine
  • General curriculum content can vary
  • Student learns to generalize routine to the new
    content

49
An Intervention Strategy
  • Task analytic instruction
  • Student masters the academic routine
  • General curriculum content can vary
  • Student learns to generalize routine to the new
    content

50
Middle School Literacy Study
  • Browder, D.M., Trela, K.C., Jimenez, B. (In
    preparation). Increasing participation of middle
    school students with severe disabilities in
    reading of grade appropriate literature.
  • Zakas, T. L., Browder, D. M., Spooner, F. (In
    preparation). The Effects of Peer Support in
    Reading Adapted Grade Level Books on the Literary
    Responses of Middle School Aged Students with
    Significant Cognitive Disabilities

51
Literacy Task AnalysisWhat Teacher or Peer
Tutor Does
  • Before Reading
  • Use an attention getter
  • Review vocabulary (picture symbols/ sight words/
    letter sounds)
  • Point to title
  • Point to author
  • Ask what story is about (prediction)
  • While reading
  • Give turn to point to text as you read
  • Give turn to fill in repeated story line
  • Give opportunity to turn own pages
  • Give turn to find vocabulary on page
  • After reading
  • Ask comprehension question

52
Literacy Task AnalysisWhat Student Does
  • Before Reading
  • Attends to attention getter
  • Identifies each word/ picture
  • Finds title
  • Finds author
  • Chooses picture or says what story is about
    (makes a guess)
  • While teacher/peer reads
  • Turns own pages
  • Points to text as teacher reads a line
  • Anticipates word in repeated story line
  • Finds vocabulary on the page
  • After reading
  • Answers comprehension question

53
Intervention
Baseline
54
Baseline
Intervention
55
Math Algebra
  • Jimenez, B., Browder, D.M., Courtade-Little, G.
    (In preparation). Teaching an algebraic equation
    to students with moderate disabilities.

56
Equation Prompt
ADD

SUBTRACT


-
57
Algebra Task Analysis
  • 1. Student points to sum on equation (e.g.,
    7).How many (spoons) do you need?
  • 2. Moves red marker to sum on chart (at 7)
  • 3. Counts number of items in container and finds
    this known number on equation (3)How many spoons
    do you already have?
  • 4. Moves the green marker to known number on
    chart (at 3)
  • 5. Count to the sum with materials (from 3 to
    7)How many more spoons will you need to get?
  • 6. Selects the number counted (4)
  • 7. Puts correct number in for x in for formula
    (4)
  • 8.Puts correct number needed in container (4
    items)
  • 9. Solves for x (writes 4 for x4)
  • For more information-Bree.jimenez_at_cms.k12.nc.uc

58
(No Transcript)
59
Science
  • Courtade, G. (2006). The Effects of Inquiry-Based
    Science Instruction Training on Teachers of
    Students with Significant Disabilities. Doctoral
    Dissertation, UNC Charlotte.
  • Students learn about density.

60
Science Steps
  • Engage
  • Student interacts with materials and communicates
    what wants to know
  • Investigate Describe Relationships
  • Plans ways to gather information
  • Looks for pattern
  • Construct Explanation
  • Communicates explanation
  • Tests explanation
  • Report
  • Communicates what found (e.g., selects picture)
  • Contact Ginevra Courtade-Little for more
    information.

61
Results-Teachers
Number of lesson components taught during science
instruction
62
Results-Students
Number of Inquiry Skills Acquired by the Students
during Science Instruction
63
Step 6 Enhancement
  • In this step we apply some of the values we have
    for working with students with significant
    disabilities to be sure the academic content we
    teach will be meaningful and beneficial

64
Value Added Promote literacy across the
curriculum
  • Brian will eye gaze to select pictures to be
    included in a picture report for science
  • Melissa will identify the main characters of a
    story by using pictures/ initial letter sounds
    for their names.
  • Nadia will select the picture/word phrase that
    best summarizes the math problem to be solved.

65
Value added Use assistive technology to increase
active, independent responding
  • Examples
  • John will read 10 complete sentences composed
    with Writing with Symbols using picture cues to
    identify at least one novel word per sentence.
  • After using assistive technology to independently
    read a Start-to-Finish novel, Henry will answer
    five comprehension questions based on the novel.

66
Value added Promote Self Determination in
academic learning
  • Choice-making
  • Make choices within an activity
  • Choose between two or more activities
  • Decision-making
  • Decide topic for class project
  • Determine best resource to use to get information
  • Problem-solving
  • Look at a picture to determine why DVD player is
    not working
  • Identify three alternative ways character in
    story could resolve a conflict

67
  • Goal setting
  • Set a goal for number of books to be read in a
    month
  • Identify and communicate IEP goals
  • Self management / self evaluation
  • Use a bar graph to track number of assignments
    completed
  • Rate self on how well performed on given
    assignment
  • Self awareness
  • Develop picture/word list of likes and dislikes
  • Develop and learn to read a list of facts about
    me

68
Value Added Apply Academic Skill to a Real Life
Activity
  • Academic skills can be taught in functional,
    meaningful contexts
  • Consider the students chronological age and life
    environments (home, work, leisure, community)

69
Examples of Functional Applications
  • How do we get from the music store to the food
    court when we go to the mall?
  • To practice drawing a line segment
  • Recipe for Sweet Southern Tea
  • Sugar melts better in the boiled water steep the
    tea then iceto apply how temperature affects
    solvents (Chemistry)

70
Step Six Writing the IEP
  • Look at the curriculum map that has been created
  • Domains of academic content
  • Priority standards from the grade level
  • How these standards are typically taught could
    be taught with UDL
  • Achievement targets for this students symbolic
    level/ instructional level
  • Double check alignment
  • Enhance it- literacy, self determination, AT,
    functional

71
The IEP
  • Do not try to write a goal/ objective for each
    standard!!!!!!!!!!
  • An IEP is not meant to be the curriculum an IEP
    shows how students ACCESS the curriculum

72
The IEP
  • Instead, look for pivotal skills that will access
    the target standards. Examples-
  • Skills to indicate comprehension
  • E.g., point to select correct picture
  • Skills to synthesize learning
  • E.g., develop a report
  • Skills to gain information
  • E.g., ask a question find internet site
  • Core content to be taught to mastery
  • E.g., target vocabulary

73
The IEP
  • Review other priority needs
  • Functional goals
  • Therapy goals

74
The IEP will have
  • Goals to access general curriculum academic
    content
  • Functional goals
  • Therapy goals
  • Social goals
  • Etc.

75
Social Validation
  • Parent perspective
  • Student perspective

76
Questions and Review
  • What goes on the IEP?
  • What background planning was needed to write this
    standards-based IEP?
  • Why NOT one IEP objective per standard?
  • Your questions and comments (Last call!!)

77
  • There can be no acting or doing of any kind, till
    it be recognized that there is a thing to be
    done the thing once recognized, doing in a
    thousand shapes becomes possible.
  • Thomas Carlyle

78
  • We learn to do something by doing it. There
    really is no other way.
  • John Holt, Educator

79
  • Adventures dont begin until you get into the
    forest. That first step is an act of faith.
  • Mickey Hart, Grateful Dead Drummer

80
Contact Information
  • Diane M. Browder, PhD
  • Snyder Distinguished Professor of Special
    Education
  • Department of Special Education
  • University of North Carolina at Charlotte
  • 9201 University City Blvd
  • Charlotte, NC 28223
  • Dbrowder_at_email.uncc.edu
  • Project website
  • http//education.uncc.edu/access

81
New Resources
  • Browder, D.M., Ahlgrim-Delzell, L.,
    Courtade-Little, G., Snell, M.E. (2006). Access
    to the general curriculum. In M.E. Snell F.
    Brown (Eds.). Instruction of students with severe
    disabilities. Upper Saddle River, NJ Prentice
    Hall.
  • Browder, D.M., Spooner, F.H. (In press for
    2006). Teaching reading, math, and science to
    students with significant cognitive disabilities.
    Baltimore Paul H. Brookes.
  • Courtade-Little, G. Browder, D.M. (2005).
    Aligning IEPs to academic content standards.
    Madison, WI Attainment Co.
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