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PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

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Page 1: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

PUT TITLE HEREDeveloping Effective IEPSSlide Deck No. 3

Ministry of Education, 2009

Page 2: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Developing More Effective IEPs

This deck takes the information garnered from the Provincial Individual Education Plan (IEP) Collaborative Review to share ways on how to improve IEPs. Special emphasis is placed on the program section of the IEP to demonstrate how to make the learning expectations in the IEP ‘measurable and observable’. Actual wording from school board IEPs is used to support discussion. The deck has a number of hands-on activities. It also includes links to ministry resources as well as other related websites.

Page 3: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Goals of the Presentation

• Collaborative review model

• Highlight connections - within the IEP - among the IEP, evaluation and reporting to parents

• Focus on student achievement

• Enhance competence and confidence in writing measurable learning expectations

Page 4: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Collaborative Review Model

Field Services Branch

District School Boards

Provincial Schools

School Authorities

Peer Reviewers

Parents

Special Education Policy andPrograms Branch

IEP Colllaborative

Review2006 – 2007

Page 5: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Key Elements of the Review

• Template• Assessment Data• Areas of Strength and Areas of Need• Accommodations• Program Section• Transition Plan• Parent/Student Consultation• Link to Provincial Report Card

Page 6: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Key Connections within the IEP

• Assessment Data →

• Areas of Strength and Areas of Need →

• Accommodations

• Program Section• Baseline Level of Achievement →• Annual Program Goal →• Learning Expectations

Page 7: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Template – What we looked for

• Content consistent with Individual Education Plan Standards

• Logical sequence – assessment data → areas of strength and need → accommodations → program section

• Clear language easily understood by parents and older students

Page 8: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Template – What we found

• One third of samples – capacity to be populated with required information

• Two thirds of smaples – sections missing; no logical sequence; extraneous/ redundant entries → lack of clarity and readability

Page 9: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Knowing Your Students

Personalization is…. • Knowing your students• Knowing where they are at in their learning• Knowing where they need to go in their learning

• Knowing how to get them to where they need to go in their learning

Page 10: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Knowing Your Students Continuous Assessment Process

• The assessment process is multi-disciplinary and occurs in a continuous cycle that is fully integrated in to the teaching-learning process

• Accurate assessment and evaluation are critically important to teachers who are committed to enhancing student achievement for all students, including those with special education needs

Page 11: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Assessment Data – What we looked for

• Current and relevant assessment information, e.g., behavioural, psycho-educational, educational, medical/therapy, as appropriate

• Succinct results in plain language

• Documentation of need for special education program and/or services in IEP

Page 12: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Assessment Data – What we found

• Variable quality• Some samples– limited to diagnosis• Other samples – too detailed; too many

entries• Dated assessments• Unnecessary inclusion of specific sub

scores and percentile scores• Notable lack of educational assessment

data

Page 13: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Activity: You decide – yes or no?

• Canadian Achievement Test (CAT 3) 2002

Math: 69th %ile; Total language: 69th %ile; total battery: 86th %ile

• Speech and language assessment 2005: Severe receptive language delay; moderate expressive language delay

Page 14: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

You decide – yes or no?

• Pediatrician 2004: suspects one or several learning disabilities

• Psychological assessment 2002: overall cognitive ability within average range; average visual memory/visual learning skills; very weak verbal memory/verbal learning skills

Page 15: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

You decide – yes or no?

• _____Child Development Clinic 1999: Confirms diagnosis of Autism Spectrum Disorder

• Psychological Assessment 2005: Autism Spectrum Disorder with evidence of severe difficulty in the areas of oral communication, social interaction and self-control

Page 16: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Areas of Strength and Areas of Need What we looked for

• Consistency with assessment data

• Areas of strength – focus on preferred learning style/modality, processing skills and/or previously acquired learning skills, e.g., visual memory skills

• Areas of need – focus on broad cognitive and/or processing challenges or skill deficits, e.g., organizational skills

Page 17: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Areas of Strength and Areas of Need What we found

• Many areas of strength – appropriate

• Some – do not describe student as a learner, e.g., likes board games; supportive parents; athletic and has a job

• Some areas of need – appropriate

• Others – include accommodations, i.e., need for program or personnel

• Often too many entries

Page 18: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Accommodations – What we looked for

• Key strategies, supports, individual equipment/technology that enable student to learn and demonstrate learning

• Logical flow from areas of strength and areas of need

• Accommodations unique to individual student

• Accommodations for EQAO testing

Page 19: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Accommodations – What we found

• Accommodations unique to individual student in some cases

• Others – generic, e.g., practice; praise; dictionary

• Many – too numerous or redundant• EQAO information not consistently

provided• Over 60% of secondary IEPs –

accommodated only

Page 20: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Activity: Strength, Need or Accommodation?

• Visual learner• Social skills• FM equipment• Expressive language skills – writing• Braille• Anger management skills• Use of a computer with spell-check • Buddy/peer tutoring

Page 21: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Program Section

• Core of the IEP

• Link between the Ontario curriculum and the Provincial Report Card

• Plan for student achievement → accountability to parents

• Classroom teacher is key

Page 22: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Program Section Components

Current Levelof Achievement

Link to previous June report card

Annual Program Goal

Learning ExpectationsMOD or ALT

Teaching Strategies

Assessment Methods

Page 23: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Let’s Review Terminology

• Modified – from Ontario curriculum

• Alternative – not from Ontario curriculum, e.g., social skills; K courses, etc.

Page 24: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Current Level of Achievement

• Starting point or benchmark from which to determine current annual program goal and measure future progress

• Modified subjects/courses – letter grade/mark and curriculum grade level from previous June Provincial Report Card

• Alternative skill areas – comment from previous June alternative report

• Unchanged for duration of school year or semester

Page 25: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Annual Program Goal

• Clear indication of what student is expected to achieve by end of school year or semester

• For language, mathematics and alternative skill areas – stated in observable and measurable terms

• For other subject/course areas – stated in observable terms

Page 26: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Activity: Annual Program GoalsYes or no?

• Increase understanding of text

• Will complete 50% of the Grade 5 language curriculum in each of the four strands: oral communication; reading; writing; media literacy

Page 27: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Activity: Annual Program GoalsYes or no?

• Will display more appropriate conduct during peer interaction

• Will express anger and frustration without physical contact 8 out of 10 times, and without abusive language 5 out of 10 times

Page 28: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Learning Expectations

• Measurable performance tasks, leading to assessment/ evaluation/reporting by term

• Modified subjects/courses – distilled by teachers from learning expectations of Ontario curriculum policy documents

• Notation of curriculum grade level/course

• Alternative skill areas – specific tasks

• Revision by term

Page 29: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Learning ExpectationsWhat we found in the Review

• Not written as measurable performance tasks

• Modified – often general statements from Ontario curriculum policy documents

• Alternative – often general statements

• Inconsistent evidence of revision by term and curriculum grade level/course

• Usually identified as area for improvement by boards

Page 30: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Activity: Learning Expectations Measurable – yes or no?

• Increase ability to focus on required daily work and routines

• Read a variety of texts from diverse cultures, including literary texts

• Will watch speaker in small group for up to 3 minutes, 3 times a day

• Will write a summary of at least 5 sentences in length for each chapter of Charlotte’s Web

Page 31: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Learning ExpectationsMeasurable – yes or no?

• Demonstrate an understanding of the passage of time

• Bring completed homework and required materials to class 80% of the time

• Express their thoughts and share experiences

• Produce maps to show 10 popular tourist destinations and related transportation routes from the capital city in both China and Canada

Page 32: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Secondary Schools“Let’s Talk!”

• Modifications and secondary credits• K Courses vs. modifications• The role of the principal• Transition plan from elementary school• Transition plan from secondary school• Communication with parent(s)/student• Policy, myth and practice

Page 33: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Teaching StrategiesWhat we looked for

• Only teaching strategies different from those used with other students in class

• If provided, alignment with each learning expectation

Page 34: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Teaching StrategiesWhat we found

• Evidence of good teaching practice, but not unique and therefore unnecessarily recorded

• Inconsistent alignment with each learning expectation

Page 35: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Assessment MethodsWhat we looked for

• Variety of appropriate assessment methods

• Alignment with each learning expectation

Page 36: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Assessment Methods – What we found

• Variety of assessment methods generally included

• Inconsistent alignment with each learning expectation

• Over-reliance on ‘observation’ without checklist or rubric

Page 37: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Transition Plan What we looked for

• Plan for all students 14 years of age or older unless identified solely as gifted*

• Long-range cumulative plan for transition to post-secondary activities

• Collaborative involvement of student, parent(s), school and community partners

Page 38: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Transition Plan – What we found

• Provided for most students, as required • Few entries• Generic • Address activities in secondary school instead of

post-secondary activities• Inconsistent evidence of collaboration• Lack of evidence of detailed planning for

students with significant challenges

Page 39: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Parent/Student Consultation What we looked for

• Evidence of parent engagement in IEP development process

• Inclusion of student 16 years of age or older

• Record of outcomes/feedback from parent/student

Page 40: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Parent/Student ConsultationWhat we found

• Completed log not always provided

• Minimal entries, e.g., IEP sent home

• Parental feedback generally not recorded

• Lack of evidence of student involvement

Page 41: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Link to Provincial Report Card (PRC)What we looked for

• IEP box on PRC checked for modified subjects/courses

• Required statement from PRC Guide included for modified subjects/courses

• Comments that reflect achievement of learning expectations in IEP

• Reporting of achievement in alternative skill areas on PRC or alternative format

• No indication on PRC if ‘accommodated only’

Page 42: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Link to Provincial Report CardWhat we found

• IEP box checked for modified subjects/courses• Required statement included• Comments on PRC not always related to

learning expectations in IEP• Some – excellent alternative reporting formats• Others – no reporting of achievement in

alternative skill areas• IEP box sometimes inappropriately checked if

‘accommodated only’

Page 43: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Let’s Write Measurable Learning Expectations: Tips for Teachers

1. Whom are you teaching? – Know your student.

2. What should you teach? – Know your curriculum.

3. For whom are you writing? – For parents and older students; use clear language.

Page 44: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Tips for Teachers (cont’d)

4. How many learning expectations for each modified subject and/or alternative skill area? – Decide on a reasonable number achievable for the term.

5. How do you modify curriculum? Reach back or reach forward:

- grade level- level of difficulty- quantity - complexity

Page 45: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Tips for teachers (cont’d)

6. How do you express a performance task in measurable terms? – Consider:

- describing the activity in specific terms

- delineating steps involved in concept or skill development

- including quantitative language

- specifying content and/or titles.

Page 46: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Remember• The IEP is a working document for planning,

communication and accountability

• Measurable learning expectations are the heart of the IEP

• Measurable learning expectations → appropriate assessment/evaluation → accountability re achievement, and

• Know your student

Page 47: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Supports for the Development and Implementation of Effective IEPs

• Education Act, Regulation 181/98

• Individual Education Plans: Standards for Development, Program Planning, and Implementation (2000)

• The Individual Education Plan (IEP): A Resource Guide (2004)

• IEP Collaborative Review 2006/07 Provincial Report: Common Trends

• Provincial Electronic IEP Template (2007)

• Shared Solutions A Guide to Preventing and Resolving Conflicts Regarding Programs and Services for Students with Special Education Needs (2007)

• Sample IEPs (2008/09)

• LDAO parent/student IEP website (2009)

Page 48: PUT TITLE HERE Developing Effective IEPS Slide Deck No. 3 Ministry of Education, 2009

Related Websites

• Ontario Ministry of Education, Special Education http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/general/elemsec/speced/speced.html

• Sample IEPs - http://www.ontariodirectors.ca/IEP-PEI/index.html

• IEP Template https://iep.edu.gov.on.ca/IEPWeb/

• EQAO Guide for Accommodations, a Special Provision and Exemptions http://www.eqao.com/pdf_e/08/Accom_Guide_ENG_Gr36_2008_web.pdf

• Special Education Advisory Committee Information Program http://seac-learning.ca