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Special Education

Special Education

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Special Education. Instruction. Success. WHAT/WHERE/WHEN/WHY? All classrooms (reg. ed., collaboration, resource); On all assignments (classwork, cooperative groups, tests/quizzes, homework, SOLs) Beyond the classroom; - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Special  Education

Special Education

Page 2: Special  Education

Success

Where ?

When ?

Why?

What ?

WHAT/WHERE/WHEN/WHY? All classrooms (reg. ed., collaboration, resource); On all assignments (classwork, cooperative groups, tests/quizzes, homework, SOLs) Beyond the classroom;Across all domains (physical, cognitive, social/emotional, communication, and adaptive); Self-Esteem, develop strengths, develop a sense of purpose, gain skills for real world challenges,

Instruction

Page 3: Special  Education

Opportunity

Achievable

Differentiated

Variety

Challenging

Provide Opportunities for Success; Provide a variety of differentiated activities

and assignments; Activities/Assignments must start at a level

where success can be achieved; Activities/Assignments need to be

challenging but achievable; Help must be woven into learning; Build on student’s strengths Give opportunities for students to use their

talents

Strategies for Success

Page 4: Special  Education

Motivating

Purpose

Meaningful

Assistance

Confidence

Give opportunities for students to use their talents;

Make learning relevant to their lives; Encourage students to take academic risks

(if at once you don’t success, try, try again); Set realistic expectations; Convey positive and high expectations (this

work is important, I know you can do it; I won’t give up on you);

If students experience failure (we all do) encourage, help, and guide them to success

Cont…

Strategies for Success

Page 5: Special  Education

Encourage

Evaluate

Reinforce

Realistic

Guide

Set clear expectations geared towards success;

Set High standards that are realistic; Evaluate the student’s progress; Help student develop personal goals; Students need to believe that success

(achievement) is possible; Help students believe that they are in control

of their success, not fate or luck or home environment;

Help students build positive self-images;

Cont…

Strategies for Success

Page 6: Special  Education

IEP

Accommodations

Modifications

Intervention

504 Plan

Use accommodations developed for each student;

Evaluate the success of those accommodations;

Change accommodations as needed; Modify the assignments (not content) as

needed; Assess why and where success isn’t

occurring;

Cont…

Strategies for Success

Page 7: Special  Education

Negativity

Failure

Giving In

Struggling

Inadequacy

Negative class atmospheres; Negative feedback; Identifying students weaknesses in front of

the class; Offhand remarks; Demeaning comments; Robbing students of the chance to think for

themselves; Ignoring Success; Punishing the student for failure; Refusing to acknowledge that a student’s

disability does affect his performance;

Cont…

Success Killers

Page 8: Special  Education

Definition

Sharing

Integragted

Effective

Team An effective team that works together; Equal partners in planning, teaching, and

assessment; Combined resources that strengthens

teaching, learning opportunities, methods, and effectiveness;

Goal is to provide students with appropriate instruction, classwork, homework, and assessments so that each student is learning and participating in the classroom process

Inclusion

Page 9: Special  Education

Roles

General Ed .

Special Ed .

Seamless Integration

Responsibility WHAT DOES EACH TEACHER BRING TO THE TABLE? General Education Teacher:

Content Specialization;Teaching Techniques;Knowledge of the Learning Process;Resources;Expertise in Many areas;

Inclusion

Page 10: Special  Education

Roles

General Ed .

Special Ed .

Seamless Integration

Responsibility WHAT DOES EACH TEACHER BRING TO THE TABLE? Special Education Teacher:

Assessment and Adaptation Specializations;

Teaching Techniques;Knowledge of the Learning Process;Resources;Expertise in Many areas;

Inclusion

Page 11: Special  Education

Effective

Challenging

Commitment

Seamless Integration

Successful

WHAT IS NEEDED FOR EFFECTIVE COLLABORATION? Teachers need to work together –

willingness to share responsibility and resources;

Equal partners; Administrative support – staff developments,

motivation, and guidance in setting goals; Joint and On-going Planning; Combined Resources; Commitment by teachers, principals, central

office, and the community;

Inclusion

Page 12: Special  Education

1Teach – 1Observe

Station/Rotation

Parallel

Alternative

1Teach-1Assist

One individual (generally the stronger of the two teachers in the content or subject being taught) handles all instruction while the other teacher floats or observes the class.

This model can be useful when completing student observations for IEPs or Functional Behavioral Analysis (FBA), but does not really allow both teachers to add to the classroom.

Pros – Minimal coordination or collaboration is needed when planning; Allows the stronger teacher to

Inclusion Models

Co-Teaching

Page 13: Special  Education

1Teach – 1Observe

Station/Rotation

Parallel

Alternative

1Teach-1Assist

Pros:• Minimal coordination or collaboration is

needed when planning; • Allows the stronger teacher to deliver quality

instruction without interruption;• Can conceal weaknesses on behalf of a

weaker partner in general or on a particular subject

Cons:• Does not fully utilize each instructional

specialist;• Can create behavior/authority issues;• Can create frustration or contempt issues

among peers

Inclusion Models

Co-Teaching

Page 14: Special  Education

1Teach – 1Observe

Station/Rotation

Parallel

Alternative

1Teach-1Assist

One teacher instructs the class while the other teacher manages behavior or assists individual students as needed.

Pros: Allows a teacher who may be instructionally strong to deliver instruction without interruption

Cons: Does not make full use of two instructional specialists; can establish one teacher as the ‘bad cop’ resulting in negative feeling towards the behavior manager

Example: While one teacher delivers the lesson, the other teacher walks around rewarding, prompting, redirecting, helping

Inclusion Models

Co-Teaching

Page 15: Special  Education

1Teach – 1Observe

Station/Rotation

Parallel

Alternative

1Teach-1Assist

Each teacher plans and is responsible for a different aspect of the lesson, or for a different lesson entirely .

There may also be independent work provided for the students. Students are divided into two or more groups depending on how many 'stations' are available, and either students travel from center to center or students stay in one position and a teacher or work travels to them .

Inclusion Models

Co-Teaching

Page 16: Special  Education

1Teach – 1Observe

Station/Rotation

Parallel

Alternative

1Teach-1Assist

Pros: Each teacher can independently plan for an

area or lesson of strength;Each student is exposed to similar material,

but groups can be differentiated by level;Makes good use of two teachers for

management purposes; Cons:

Requires excellent timing, which takes practice;

Requires management of students working independently;

May be logistically difficult depending on your classroom space

Inclusion Models

Co-Teaching

Page 17: Special  Education

1Teach – 1Observe

Station/Rotation

Parallel

Alternative

1Teach-1Assist

The class is split in half and each teacher takes a half of the class to teach the same lesson.

Students all receive the same material..• Pros:

• Provides a smaller group and thus more individual attention

• Can provide control for socially-based behavior problems between students

• Cons: • Requires excellent timing, which can take

practice;• Requires collaborative planning• Can be difficult to invisibly differentiate in a

smaller group• Requires that each teacher be equally strong

in the material to be presented

Inclusion Models

Co-Teaching

Page 18: Special  Education

1Teach – 1Observe

Station/Rotation

Parallel

Alternative

1Teach-1Assist

One teacher teaches the main lesson to a larger group of students while the other teacher works with the smaller group of students on an entirely different lesson.• Pros:

• Provides excellent differentiation opportunities;

• Provides a chance for remediation or enrichment for students who need it;

• Can provide behavior control in the smaller group

Inclusion Models

Co-Teaching

Page 19: Special  Education

1Teach – 1Observe

Station/Rotation

Parallel

Alternative

1Teach-1Assist

One teacher teaches the main lesson to a larger group of students while the other teacher works with the smaller group of students on an entirely different lesson.• Cons:

• Must not 'pigeonhole' one group of students by consistently pulling them together

• May reduce the efficacy of inclusion by separating students with special needs

• May reduce students' exposure to the general education curriculum

Inclusion Models

Co-Teaching

Page 20: Special  Education

1Teach – 1Observe

Station/Rotation

Parallel

1Teach-1Assist

Both teachers plan and deliver instruction together, with each teacher equally responsible for the material in the lesson. This can be scripted or spontaneous.• Pros:

• Models an excellent respectful working relationship between adults;

• Allows both teachers to provide perspective on a topic;

• Can allow teaching of two strategies or ideas simultaneously;

• Promotes respect for both teachers;

Inclusion Models

Co-Teaching

Alternative

Page 21: Special  Education

1Teach – 1Observe

Station/Rotation

Parallel

1Teach-1Assist

Cons :• Requires a rapport that cannot be rushed or

faked;• Requires meticulous planning together, which

can be time-consuming

Inclusion Models

Co-Teaching

Alternative

Page 22: Special  Education

Content Delivery

Quality Instruction

LRE

We are required to provide students with LRE;

We are required by VDOE to have teachers at the MS and HS to be endorsed in the content they are teaching (very few are);

Combined resources that strengthens teaching, learning opportunities, methods, and effectiveness;

We need to increase the number of special education students passing SOLs (modified diploma is being eliminated);

Disabled students have the same right to quality content instruction as nondisabled students

Reasons For:

VDOE

SOLs

Consistency

Page 23: Special  Education

Content Delivery

Quality Instruction

LRE

We need to have high expectations for our special education students as wells as our general education students; being in general education classrooms give a special education student the feeling that they are expected to learn what every other student learns;

Special Education students are able to learn the same content that general education students learn;

Not everyone learns content in the same way (disabled or nondisabled); however everyone learns the same content;

There is no teaching in a segreated setting that cannot be provided in a general education setting;

What would be a legitimate reason to separate students from instruction in the general education setting;

Reasons For:

VDOE

SOLs

Consistency

Page 24: Special  Education

Content Delivery

Quality Instruction

LRE Being in a general education classroom also builds a student’s positive self-image; a lot of special education students do not have a high self-image, a lot of them feel that because they are segregated they are not as capable of learning the same things that other students learn:

No student wants to be singled out or identified a “different”, less worthy, or incapable of learning content that everyone else is learning;

Bullying, teasing, making fun of students due to their disability is on the rise;

Reasons For:

VDOE

SOLs

Consistency

Page 25: Special  Education

Content Delivery

Quality Instruction

LRE All students, excluded from the general education settings, become vulnerable to discriminatory treatment. Inclusion helps all students learn to be aware, sensitive, and tolerant of differences in the people around them. It helps them learn that all people have abilities and disabilities and that they need to work together;

We need to remember that everyone has disabilities in some form or fashion;

Reasons For:

VDOE

SOLs

Consistency

Page 26: Special  Education

Content Delivery

Quality Instruction

LRE Research shows, that student’s in an inclusive setting, which provides appropriate instruction and support, learn more than they do in segregated setting;

Why do you think that education no longer has tracking and ability grouping;

Special education resource and self-contain programs is a type of ability grouping;

Reasons For:

VDOE

SOLs

Consistency

Page 27: Special  Education

Content Delivery

Quality Instruction

LRE It’s the LAW:

All students have the right to learn together; Least restrictive environment; Students should not have to face discrimination

because they are placed in a pull-out program; Human Rights;

Reasons For:

VDOE

SOLs

Consistency Special education students need to learn how to build relationships with a diversified group of people to help them prepare for

life in the ‘real world;’

Page 28: Special  Education

Content Delivery

Quality Instruction

LRE Special Education students are not that different from general education students; most of us would not know whether a student was disabled if you were not notified of that fact;

Look around the classroom; for every special education student that does not complete an assignment on time, doesn’t do homework, or fails a test there is a general education student that does the same thing (usually the reason for this is different but the outcome is the same);

Reasons For:

VDOE

SOLs

Consistency

Page 29: Special  Education

Content Delivery

Quality Instruction

LRE

All courses need to be taught by a teacher that is endorsed in the specific content area that they are teaching; Special Education teacher programs do not endorse teachers in specific content, they endorse teachers to use a variety of strategies to instruct students in all content areas;

Special education students have the right to be taught by teachers that are specialists in content the same as any other student;

It is then the job of the special education teacher to reinforce or perhaps reteach the content using varied strategies if students are struggling in learning the information presented to them by the content teacher-this helps both disabled and nondisabled students; they can also collaborate with the content teacher in helping that teacher provide diversified lessons;

Reasons For:

VDOE

SOLs

Consistency

Page 30: Special  Education

Increase

Models

Limitations

Scheduling

- Ideas Generated

BRAINSTORMING

Page 31: Special  Education

Flexibility

Blend Models

Limitations

Scheduling

RECOMMENDATIONS

Changes: Service times for collaboration services on IEPs will no longer be for the entire class period but will be cut in half or less depending on the IEP team;

Ideas to Ponder: One teacher can rotate between 2

classes during one class period to provide needed services;

Most K-2 students can be in the general ed setting with minimal pull out services;

If assignments are modified, some students can be in gen. ed. Classrooms without collaboration;

Page 32: Special  Education

Flexibility

Blend Models

Limitations

Scheduling

RECOMMENDATIONS

Ideas to Ponder: Consider staggering scheduling times

regarding content areas between grades;

Brainstorm with specialists