36
Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Supporting Students with Disabilitiesfor

Academic Staff and Managers

Debbie JonesHumanitasJuly 2008

Page 2: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

SUPPORTING STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES

General knowledge considerations

2

Page 3: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

What Must I Know?

• Basic facts about the disability – general knowledge

• Basic facts about how the disability impacts the particular student – how the disability “manifests” itself.

• Awareness of types of accommodations that may assist the student including considerations of the use of technology

3

Page 4: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

What Must I Know?

• An awareness of your own perceptions and misperceptions about disability

4

Page 5: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Familiarize yourself with

disability-related terminology.

5

Page 6: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Person First Language

• What is person first language?– Person first language puts the person before

the disability and describes what a person has, not who a person is.

• A “person with a disability” and not a “disabled” person

6

Page 7: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Why Person First?

• Group designations such as "the blind," "the retarded" or "the disabled" are inappropriate because they do not reflect the individuality, equality or dignity of people with disabilities.

• Further, words like "normal person" imply that the person with a disability isn't normal, whereas "person without a disability" is descriptive but not negative.

http://www.dol.gov/odep/pubs/fact/comucate.htm

7

Page 8: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

LEGAL

Review of who is a person with a disability and legal requirements.

8

Page 9: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Who is a Qualified Person witha Disability?

• A physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of a person’s major life activities

• Whether a particular person has an impairment that satisfies this definition, and whether a specific accommodation is appropriate for a particular person, must be determined on a case-by-case basis

9

Page 10: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Legal Issues and Requirements

• Why Accommodate?– It’s the Law!

• Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Section 504… “No program receiving federal funds may deny or exclude…”

• Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act of 2004

• Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 - Title III

10

Page 11: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

SUSPICION OF DISABILITYWhat to do when you suspect a disability exists?

11

Page 12: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Referral for Suspicion of Disability

• Referral Forms– Orientation

• Student/staff

• Disability Coordinator

• Documentation– Observations/other

• Requirements– Are you obligated to assess for disability?

12

Page 13: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

REASONABLE ACCOMMODATION CONSIDERATIONS

Accommodation plans and process.

13

Page 14: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Reasonable Accommodation Process

• The interdisciplinary/ reasonable accommodation team (IDT) meeting must be an interactive process [involving the applicant/student]

• Collect/review documentation

• Develop plan• Distribute plan

– Who has a need to know?

• Monitor for effectiveness

• Review 45-60 days• Modify if needed

14

Page 15: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Accommodation PlansIDT works with applicant or student to determine accommodation needs

• Consider:– Physical– Medical– Emotional or

Psychological – Educational

• Accessibility– classrooms, career

technical work areas, dorms

• ALL areas on center

• Impact of meds

• Schedule adjustments

• TABE, GED, career technical certification…

15

Page 16: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Accommodation Plan Development

• What accommodations has the individual received in the past?– IEP/504 Plans– Vocational Rehabilitation Documentation

• What are the student’s strengths and weaknesses, learning styles, etc.?– Do the accommodations under consideration

make use of the student’s strengths and preferred learning style(s)? 16

Page 17: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Accommodation Plan Development

• Are they sufficient to provide the student access to all areas of the program?– If not, what additional accommodations are

necessary (e.g., in vocations, residential, other common areas)?

• Do those accommodations remain relevant to the current situation?

17

Page 18: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

ACCOMMODATIONS

Examples of assistive technology and other types of accommodation options

18

Page 19: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Technology Considerations

• Hi-tech– Text to speech– Voice dictation– Talking calculators/thermometers/tape

measures– Digital/variable speed tape recorders– “Live-Scribe” pen

19

Page 20: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

20

• “Paper Replay.”

• Notes and audio can also be uploaded to a PC where they can be replayed, saved, searched and sent.

• Additional applications available

• math problems

• definitions, voice output

• preprinted materials

• handwritten messages as emails

• spoken messages/written notes

Page 21: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

• Scan single words or full lines of text in seconds

• See dictionary and thesaurus entries

• Hear scanned words (including spelling), lines of text, definitions and thesaurus entries

• Test Mode allows blocking of access to the dictionary and thesaurus during tests

• Ergonomic and lightweight weighing only 3 ozs

• Optical Character Recognition at 97% (based on standard font)

21

Page 22: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Technology Considerations

• Lo-tech– Specialty paper (e.g., graph, colored,

textured)– Writing utensils & accessories (e.g., pencils,

highlighters, grips, etc.)– Organizers (e.g., planners, calendars, etc.)– Positioning tools (e.g., clipboards, slant

boards, velcro, etc.)22

Page 23: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Lo-tech examples

• Pencil grips

• Margin tape

• Highlighters

• Highlighter tape

23

Page 24: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Other Accommodation Examples

• Reducing number of items on assignment

• Chunking materials into segments

• Extended time

• Study guides

• Writing answers on same page as questions

• Masking/line guides24

Page 25: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

What works for one student with a disability may not work for another.

Determine individualized

needs.

If an accommodation is

not working, try something else.

25

Page 26: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

STRATEGIESInstructional and learning strategies

26

Page 27: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Memory Strategy Example

• 5

• 8

• 0

• 2

• 9

• 0

• 6

• 1

• 0

• 3

• What strategy or strategies could we use to help us remember this series of numbers?

27

Page 28: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Memory Strategy Suggestions

• Chunking– Phone number format

• (580) 290-6103

• Patterns– Repeating numbers

• “0” every third number

28

Page 29: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Memory Strategies

• Repetition

• Grouping

• Mental Picture

• Rhyming

• Acronym

• Abbreviation

29

Page 30: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Teaching Learning Strategies

• Assess the student’s awareness of the strategy to be used.

• Provide opportunities for students to discuss, reflect upon, and practice the strategies with classroom materials and authentic tasks.

• Provide feedback.30

Page 31: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Teaching Learning Strategies

• Gradually have the student select the learning strategy to use for a particular activity or assignment.

• Provide instruction, review, and provide feedback until the student is able to self-select and apply learning strategies effectively.

31

Page 32: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

RESOURCESDisability-related websites

32

Page 33: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Resource Organizations

• Division of Vocational Rehabilitation (DVR)– JC Program Instruction 99-03

• Job Accommodation Network (JAN)

• One-Stops – Disability Navigators

• Centers for Independent Living

• Other State Disability Service Agencies

33

Page 34: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

http://jcdisability.jobcorps.gov

Job Corps Disability Website

34

Page 35: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Supporting Students with Learning Disabilities Websitehttp://jccdrc.jobcorps.gov/ld

35

Page 36: Supporting Students with Disabilities for Academic Staff and Managers Debbie Jones Humanitas July 2008

Supporting Students with Mental Health Disabilities Website

http://jchealth.jobcorps.gov/health-topics/mhd

36