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Including Students with Significant Disabilities

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Individuals with significant disabilities are able to learn ... Picture It. Boardmaker. Digital and scanned photos. Scissors, glue and magazines. Final Thoughts ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Including Students with Significant Disabilities


1
Including Students with Significant Disabilities
2
Agenda
  • Introduction
  • Things to Consider
  • Curriculum
  • Types Access
  • Adapting curriculum
  • Strategies
  • Language Arts
  • Math

3
Things To Consider
  • Individuals with significant disabilities are
    able to learn useful academic skills
  • Never underestimate learning potential
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Different levels of academic learning
  • Consider both function and fun
  • Motivation
  • Why teach academics at all?
  • More meaningful lives
  • Independence - not dependence

4
Things to Consider
  • Special Education is a service, not a place
  • Least Restrictive Environment
  • interpreted differently nation and statewide
  • the environment that the IEP team decides will
    have the least negative impact on a students
    progress in school
  • Inclusion is not just where a student is placed
  • physical and academic supports are key
  • support from sped staff is key

5
Curriculum
6
Curriculum Types
  • General academic curriculum
  • general education content and/or environment
  • Regular adapted curriculum or streamlined
    curriculum
  • supported instruction, adapted curriculum
  • parallel curriculum emphasizing only selected
    components
  • Functional or limited academic curriculum
  • Focuses on skills a student will need to function
    in current and future environments
  • Generalization important for future
  • May be community based instruction
  • Can be embedded in the classroom academic
    curriculum

7
Curriculum Considerations
  • Relationship between IEP and curriculum
  • IEP written to functional and meaningful skills
    and goals
  • Curriculum focuses on individual goals and
    objectives from IEP
  • Access to general education curriculum
  • A right, not a privilege, under IDEA 1997
  • Adaptations, modifications and supports

8
Functional Curriculum
These areas should be addressed in each students
curriculum and IEP
  • Communication
  • Motor Skills
  • Social / Behavioral
  • Skills for a Healthy Life
  • Functional Academics
  • Leisure / Recreation
  • Community Skills
  • Vocational Skills

9
Adapting Curriculum
10
Tools To Use
  • IEP Matrix
  • collaborative planning tool
  • Discrepancy Analysis
  • student and classroom focused
  • includes strengths as well as challenges

11
IEP Matrix
  • Write goals / objectives down
  • shorten them, make them operational
  • focus on meaningful / functional activities
  • think about keeping track of progress

12
Example IEP Matrix
13
Discrepancy Analysis
  • Class Activity
  • Class Expectations
  • Target Student Expectations
  • Supports needed
  • physical, social, prompts

14
Example Discrepancy Analysis
15
Instructional Strategies
for Language Arts
16
I cant guarantee that every child with a
disability will learn to read and write just
because you provide accessible print materials in
the environment, but I can guarantee that if you
never provide children with disabilities the
opportunity to learn, they wont
--David Koppenhaver
17
Reading
There are a variety of techniques and strategies
that you already use. When teaching students with
disabilities, an eclectic approach can utilize
the strengths of the learner and the technique.
  • Sight Words
  • Phonics
  • Balanced Literacy
  • Whole Language
  • Language Experience Stories
  • Symbol Reading

18
Sight Words
  • Select meaningful words
  • Select age-appropriate words
  • Select words based on interest and need
  • Use Unit-based Vocabulary
  • Consider Match-Select-Name technique
  • Teach in various contexts for generalization

19
Phonics
  • Choose meaningful letters
  • name, family names, address, etc.
  • Teach phonemic awareness
  • Embed phonics in reading instruction
  • Word Families
  • Alliteration and Rhyme
  • Alphabetizing
  • Make it fun

20
Comprehension Skills
  • We want students to read for meaning and
    understanding.
  • Comprehension must be carefully planned and
    taught.
  • Need to use a variety of methods to help students
    express what they have read.

21
Writing
  • Everyone is a writer
  • Theres much more to writing than mechanics
  • Writing is part of balanced literacy
  • Writing is functional and recreational
  • Many ways to write
  • Incorporate the writing process

22
Writing Mechanics
  • Students deserve the opportunity to be taught
    handwriting skills.
  • Not all students will master handwriting
  • Teach name writing, but dont get stuck there
  • Name stamps and initials are okay
  • Sensible Pencil

23
Instructional Strategiesfor Teaching Math
24
Basic Concepts
  • Quantity
  • Time
  • Money
  • Measurement

25
Teaching Quantity
  • Use concrete, age appropriate manipulatives
  • Embed opportunities in everyday activities
  • Use games, computers and other activities
  • Use visual supports
  • Explicitly teach computation tricks
  • Support with rhymes and other language
  • If warranted, use one to one instruction

26
Teaching Time
  • Matching time on clock to activity schedule
  • Picture sequencing activities
  • Use games, computers and other activities
  • Visual supports
  • Classroom schedule, calendar, etc.
  • If warranted, use one to one instruction
  • Adaptations
  • Digital clocks and watches
  • Talking clocks and watches
  • Personal schedules

27
Adapting Materials
  • Its inevitable-You will have to create and adapt
    material for many of your students
  • HyperStudio
  • IntelliTools
  • Picture It
  • Boardmaker
  • Digital and scanned photos
  • Scissors, glue and magazines

28
Final Thoughts
  • No two students are the same, regardless of
    learning ability
  • Kids are more alike than different, however
  • Academic learning includes social and vocational
    components
  • Adapting curriculum is an art and a science
  • Students learn better together
  • students with and without IEPs

29
Questions?
www.sesa.org
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