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Needs Assessment

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Needs Assessment & UDL - and what you need to know Today What is it? Why and how a needs assessment works What needs to be considered The assessor, their role? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Needs Assessment


1
Needs Assessment UDL
- and what you need to know
2
Today
  • What is it?
  • Why and how a needs assessment works
  • What needs to be considered
  • The assessor, their role?
  • When and where

3
There ain't nothin' worse than being stuck. ?
Butch, in Living in the State of Stuck
4
What success looks like
  • http//youtu.be/Kg2wcklkDBY

5
Needs Assessment
  • What is it?
  • A systematic process for the collection of
    information upon which to base an accurate
    description of abilities, strengths and support
    requirements of an individual
  • It is about becoming unstuck

6
Needs Assessment? Why?
  • Because its a Systematic process!
  • Matching students to all essential aspects of the
    course
  • Identifies potential gaps in performance
  • Psychological reports, OT speech and language
    assessments
  • Identifies accommodations/supports required
  • Forms basis for planning ahead
  • Fulfills legal obligations

7
Assessment of Need
8
How does a Needs Assessment Work?
  • 3 Main Elements
  • Program of Study content
  • Needs identification
  • using relevent professional reports
  • Statement of needs report

9
1. Analysing what needs to be done
  • Review course content
  • Actual skills required
  • Communication skills
  • Cognitive Skills
  • Physical Demands
  • Environment
  • Other Influencing factors
  • Fatigue
  • Memory

10
2. Needs Identification
  • Identify any gaps
  • Any difficulties being experienced
  • Effect of these difficulties
  • What specific accommodations are required
  • What strategies have worked in the past
  • What resources are available

11
3. Statement of Needs Report
  • Candidate details
  • Contact details
  • Considerations when contacting them eg texting
  • Assessment of impact of disability against course
    elements summary

12
Report
  • Recommendations
  • This can be a separate sheet for the students use
  • This is what most people are interested in
  • The what I need to know
  • Considerations around recomendations
  • Contract for recording devices
  • Principles for using technological aids
  • Review as it is a continuous process

13
Report
  • Confidential
  • Shared with those who needs to know as agreed
    with student
  • Responsability for this can lie with student
  • Consultative
  • involves and includes the student

14
Report
  • Facts not opinions in a Standarised format
  • Challenging for professional areas
  • Fact versus conjecture
  • Fact Belgium hold the most Tour de France
    victories of any country except France
  • Conjecture Belgium will wear the yellow jersey
    this year!

15
Report
  • Individualised
  • Each students is different
  • The impact of dyslexia for one student is
    different to another
  • Accurate
  • A snapshot in time may need to be revisited
  • Student agrees with it
  • Professional (non-therapeutic relationship)

16
From a students point of view
  • http//youtu.be/g6myoXl0aQc

17
Examples of Accomodations
  • Allowing note-taking at meetings
  • Verbal instructions where there is difficulty
    following written instructions
  • Consider how someone needs to get from place to
    place
  • Assistive technology can raise standard of
    performance
  • Gives greater freedom and independence
  • Enables person to compete on an even footing

18
  • Cases studies

19
Universal Design For Learning
  • An outgrowth of the UD model, Universal Design
    for Learning (UDL) uses UD principles, to design
    courses
  • to be usable by all people, to the greatest
  • extent possible, without the need for adaptation
  • or specialized design.

20
Universal Design
Accommodation Approach
  • The system/environment is designed, to
    thegreatest extent possible, to be usable by all
  • Proactive Access
  • Inclusive
  • Access, as part of the environmental design,
    issustainable
  • Access is achieved through accommodations
    and/orretrofitting existing requirements
  • Retroactive Access
  • Special treatment
  • Access must be reconsidered each time i.e. is
    consumable

21
Disability Services
Old
New
  • Disability Support Services Problems
  • The terms support and services are more
    medical model terms.
  • Imply that students with disabilities need
    support
  • Keep the focus on the student as the problem
    rather than the focus on the environmental
    barriers.
  • Disability Resource Center
  • a resource to students and to the campus
    community - provide services to both.
  • Assist the campus community in creating more
    usable and inclusive environments..
  • Disability as an aspect of diversity that is
    integral to the community of learners

22
Who is the assessor?
  • A Professional Filter
  • A counsellor for staff and students and
    employers
  • A listener
  • A communicator
  • Somebody who tells students
  • You can win all you need is khud ye kapeen

23
(No Transcript)
24
A thought....
  • The problem is not how to wipe out all
    differences, but how to unite with all
    differences intact
  • - RabindraNath Tagore

25
References
  • www.ahead.ie
  • NC State University http//www.ncsu.edu/dso/genera
    l/universal-design.html
  • University of Arkanas, Little Rock
  • http//www.ualr.edu/pace/index.php/shift/
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