Special Education Today

30 November 2009

Red and yellow, black, and white…

Filed under: Deaf Kids, Kids Say — Sarah @ 7:43 pm
Nothing noteworthy happened today at school, so I will relay a story from about a month ago. I would have related it at the time but I was too busy railing against my job back then to be in the mood.

So we were reading a story called "Sees Behind Trees" about a Native American boy who can hardly see but needs to prove himself with a bow and arrow in order to become a man. Before reading any story, I start by tapping prior knowledge and building background. I didn't get very far before I realized my 8 fifth graders didn't know what "Native American" was.

At that point, I realized I had to define and give examples of "race". (I have two African American students, five Hispanic students, and one Caucasian student). So I gave examples using my students because they already know what "African American" is and what "Hispanic" is. I also said that different races and cultures are known for different things. Like Asians eat a lot of rice. And Hispanics eat a lot of tortillas. And... before I could go any further, an African American girl piped up in the back with "I LIKE FRIED CHICKEN!"

But it gets better, folks. I was pointing out which students were what (you know, to make sure everyone knew what "race" is. You can never be too explicit when you're dealing with kids with language impairments!). And I said: "Alice and Martha are African American. Jose, Norma, Gabriel, Luis, and Roberto are Hispanic". Then before I could say another word, my one Caucasian kid shouts out: "WHAT AM I? I know, I'm WHITE". And I said "White isn't really a race."

Then, he ventured: "....French?"

ESDM benefits toddlers

Filed under: Uncategorized — EBD Blog @ 7:27 pm
File this one in “things that work.” In a smallish-but-well-done study, Geraldine Dawson and colleagues reported in Pediatrics that the Early Start Denver Model (ESDM)—a variant of the behavioral methods that have often been found to be effective—produced salutary benefits for young children with Autism. The children who received the ESDM intervention had significantly [...]

Additional weak evidence about chiropractic treatment

Filed under: Uncategorized — LD Blog @ 6:26 pm
Over the holiday weekend, Liz Ditz sent me the reference to a study that I have now downloaded and read. I’m reporting my notes here. I see that she has a related post over on her blog, I Speak of Dreams. In “Developmental Delay Syndromes: Psychometric Testing Before and After Chiropractic Treatment of 157 Children,” Scott [...]

Nov 30

Filed under: Uncategorized — Leah @ 5:57 pm
I was reading the epilogue of "Watsons Go To Birmingham - 1963" with a small group. Unfortunately the reading level jumps from something they can handle to something way out of their league -- new vocab, long sentences, and it's history. It's the history of the Civil Rights Movement, written way over the students' heads. So we really had to study each sentence and discuss. Meanwhile, whose group went way over time? I just love history. But if this book wants to make an impact, which it clearly does, something has to be done about the Epilogue, Newbery Award or no Newbery award. It's not so difficult to think about students' reading levels when preparing text, but so much text is so far above so many students' heads.

IEPs to the rescue

Filed under: Uncategorized — Teach Effectively! @ 3:08 pm
Over on LD Blog last August I posted a note about how the educational system’s failure by one student serves as an illustration of the refusal to adopt effective teaching practices, favoring ideology instead. I pointed to coverage of a story about a boy named Miguel, a 12-year-old student to whom a local education agency [...]

New Poll – What Would You Change About IDEA

As many of you know, I am collecting your ideas for changes to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act when it comes up for reauthorization by the Congress. To further celebrate this quest we have launched a new poll as to this question. As always, our polls are not meant to be scientific in nature. But they are fun, and they give us an idea of what our readers are thinking, so please exercise your opportunity to vote! The poll appears on the lefthand side of the blog.

Now you may notice that the topic of this post definitely relates to my upcoming interview of Dr. Alexa Posny, the new Assistant secretary of Education. Unfortunately though the poll will not finish before the interview so I won't be able to utilize the results at the big interview.

Bar chart of the number (per 1,000 U.S. reside...Image via Wikipedia


I have whittled down your suggestions concerning changes to IDEA to the most popular ten. Here are the choices:
- Raise the Bar for FAPE
- Give Expert Witness Fees to Prevailing Parents
- Expand Role/Mission of OSEP
- Restrict Comp Ed/Reimbursement as Remedies
- Place Burden of Persuasion on School Districts
- Increase Transition Rights
- Allow Arbitration and More Mediation
- Assess Children with Disabilities at Instructional Levels for AYP
- Expand and Encourage Response to Intervention
- Regulate Seclusion/Restraints

There have been other suggestions and possibilities, these were just the top ten. Other frequent suggestions have included: Make the resolution session meetings confidential; clarify the educational rights of non-custodial parents; prohibit parents from representing themselves in federal court; allow systemic or class action style due process complaints; adopt the principals recommendation for a standard of care for each disability category; require IEP implementation to be material before constituting a violation of the law; and throw out the whole system and start again.

Please tell me what other changes you would like to see. IDEA will eventually be reauthorized - lets get our list together. Given our high level of credibility, I feel that we are being listened to by those who will be making the changes.


Why I decided to pursue a MEd

Filed under: MEd, The way I see it, life long learning, reflection about MEd courses — ehartjes2@sympatico.ca (Elona Hartjes) @ 1:00 am

schoolAs long as I can remember I have had a passion for learning. My Mom tells me as soon as I could speak, I drove everyone crazy with questions about everything. I needed to know why and why not. Fortunately all my years of formal education have not changed that. Living is still learning; learning is still living.

For quite some time now, the Internet has fueled my passion for learning. If I have a question, all I have to do is Google to find some of the answers I seek. Of course, that need to know extends to my teaching practice. I am always asking how can I better meet the needs of my students. Why are things the way they are? What can I do to change them? While I have found the internet useful for keeping up to date on current issues in education and for finding strategies and resources to improve my teaching practice, I have come to realize self directed study may not be the most efficient way to do this. That’s why I have decided to pursue a Master of Education, and that is why I am taking the course I am right now.

I have not been disappointed. The course I’m taking not only provides me with direction I seek, but perhaps even more importantly facilitates my learning by providing me the opportunity to be part of a learning community that reads, discuss, writes and reflects on a wide variety of topics related to education. I intend to share here some of my reflections that come from the readings and discussions we have had over the duration of the course.

I’m just finishing my final paper for this my first course. I’ll be honest and say I’m ready for a break.I’ll have some time so I’ll be able to blog more often. I’m not happy about cutting back on my writing here, but I can only do so much. The next course I’m takng starts in January. I’m looking forward to it even though it means I’m super busy.

photo thanks to  icelight

28 November 2009

Thanksgiving Dinner!

Filed under: life — Leila @ 5:09 am

Okay, I got my rant out earlier, now I can move on. In spite of everything, I had a great time. If I could just foot the whole bill and/or cater it for the day, things would be just fine. But, I digress.

Of course, since I did almost all the cooking, the food was spectacular, amazing, & whatever great adjective you can think of. This is the menu:

*Honeybaked Ham, *Honeybaked roasted turkey, baked Turkey, sweet potato cheesecake, pistachio cake, yellow cake with cream cheese icing, yellow cake with chocolate icing, strawberry cake, *red velvet cake, 20 lbs. of homemade mashed potatoes, homemade & store bought gravy, *green bean casserole, *greens, homemade dressing, sweet potato casserole, *black eyed peas, *mac n’ cheese, *scalloped potatoes, peach cobbler, sweet potato pies, *whole candied cranberries, jellied cranberry sauce.

Yes, we ate gooooooooooooood! As I write this, there’s half a sweet potato cheesecake and 1/4 of a red velvet cake in the fridge calling my name. My husband & children are soooooooo happy.

* Didn’t make it *


New Family Wanted

Filed under: life — Leila @ 12:26 am

Yes, dear readers, this is my rant for the month. I am so tired of my family’s antics. Most of them are so cheap. So, instead of running the risk of getting into a family feud with everyone picking sides, I will just do what I do best- blog about it.

Wanted:

New family members to replace old family members. Must:

1.) enjoy participating in family functions,

2.) being on time.

3.) participate in potluck. If you say you’re going to bring it, then bring it.

4.) have everyone’s best interest @ heart.

5. know that Thanksgiving is not Takesgiving, where you arrive a couple hours late and load up on food that you did NOT bring.

Always remember- Absolutely NO sabotage is allowed.

If you are interested in replacing any old family members, you can reach me @ savemysanity.com. THAT MY DEAR READER is my rant for the month.

Thank you so much and do have a nice day!


27 November 2009

From Recipes to Rockets: AAC – Part 2

Filed under: Dynavox, Funding AAC, Medicaid Issues, assisitive technology — Lon @ 10:00 am
The process of funding a device, the SLP report, Medicaid applications, etc. can be daunting for some. Put on top of that, the time invested in the trials and matching an appropriate device, and you can be sure that when you see the device in a student's hands it is time for celebration.
I shared in Part 1, how we developed activities to get a middle-school boy using a Dynavox V.
We were discouraged after all our work, having Medicaid deny our claim. I have to say that all through this, the Dynavox team in Pittsburgh held our hand and the area consultant kept us in the loop as they did detective work to find what we needed to fix and re-submit our request for funding. Finally the word came back about August that we didn't do 2 things: the diagnosis for the student had a code number that had a .0 after it - we had not put it down. For example, 2145 would not be good enough. It HAD to be 2145.0! Then, for some reason, the screener of the claim wanted to not only see that there was an AT specilaist (me) overseeing the initial implementation and training, but they wanted the NAME of the AT specilaist in the description.
Past experience on everyone's part never showed that this had been necessary before - but - OK, we re-submitted and waited...
September came and went, October came and went, and then the first of November - at last! The device was approved and would be shipped out. We were ready to go down the next road, which is the set up and implementation piece.
I got a call this week from the family - they had the device and were SO excited. They wanted to know when I could come to help them get it set up. I drove over and met with them for a couple of hours and we built the student's user profile. I showed them how to edit buttons and some beginning strategies to get it up and going. Dad took a picture on his phone of his son with the device to send to the SLP that had done all the hard work of getting this boy this device (He had been transferred to new students in a new community in our region and would no longer be working with this student).
It was so exciting to leave the family with a device up and running so they could help their son express himself with his new voice for Thanksgiving break. I drove away with that great feeling that you get when you know you are in a career with some great rewards that are truly the non-financial and intangible kind. I was truly thankful.
I have another student waiting for his new device as well in another town. His didn't get denied, but we have been puzzle-piecing the funding from various sources and it has also come together in the past week or so - and he will be getting his for Christmas!
All the best to you!
Lon


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26 November 2009

From Recipes to Rockets: Building a Fun Foundation for AAC use

One of my biggest thrills is getting to be there when students get their "voice". It is extra special when it happens over the holidays, making them ones to remember. I have been working with a speech pathologist and a family for over a year trialing devices and doing activities to develop skills with a middle school boy in order to have a speech device. We decided on the Dynavox V, and designed activities for him to use coordinating communication boards we designed.
This student had a history of short attention span, getting bored quickly with everything. I had tried working with specialists through elementary years to design a binder, picture exchange systems, use recordable symbol boards like with a Go Talk, but he would refuse an nothing could be developed.
So... last year, in a new school in a new district, we embarked on the Dynavox trials. Our first activity was building a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Since food is the way to a middle school boy's heart, we graduated to a build a pizza activity as well. As we did these, we had a partner for the student be a helper and we set out all the ingredients. We had a folder in a snacks category that was "Build a Sandwich" or "Build a Pizza". We had all the ingredients pictured and listed with voice output and also had directive buttons labeled and pictured with a sequence of tasks to complete the activity. We went through all the items and directions with the students and checked him out on them by having him show us and "tell" us each button.
Then he used the buttons to tell the partner what to get and what to help him do to finish the recipe and then the reward...eat the finished product.
We video-taped each of these and with permission from the family, showed them to the fellow-SLP's in staff meetings.
Last spring our culminating activity for the year was pretty ambitious. We bought a simple beginner level rocket kit and took digital photos of all the parts and sequences to building it. We built pages in his school/classes/science area and followed the same process of teaching him the parts identification, labeling and sequences to the finished product. We then took him out with his class to the football field to launch the rocket. We even had the countdown and lift-off ready for him to use on the device.
We saw a boy that never would use a device to communicate, begin to get the connection that this could be fun and be used to do things and work together. It went beyond the usual run-of-the-mill buttons we tend to use at school - "I'm thirsty", "I'm done", "when is recess?", "I need to use the bathroom" - with the picture of the toilet on the button - how exciting!
We began the actual funding piece with awesome support from the Dynavox team in Pittsburgh, and our area consultant. We applied to Medicaid, got the SLP report, all essential pieces in the packet and off it went.
About July, we heard back that Medicaid had denied the claim and we were back at square-one having to re-submit the claim. Summer turned to fall and still no device. There had been 9 months of school dedicated to training and trialing, we had all our ducks in a row, but still no device.
Was all our labor in vain? I received emails from the rep and the company that they were trying to find out why Medicaid denied it and we just had to sit tight until we knew what was wrong so we could correct it.
Part 2 is coming up with the end results...

All the best,
Lon

Happy Thanksgiving!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Maria Angala @ 12:20 pm
Hoping for a great time ahead, when all of us will be together...
cheers to us for all the blessings!

Happy Thanksgiving!

Filed under: life — Leila @ 3:38 am

Happy Thanksgiving everyone. Eat your ham, turkey, greens, dressing, sweet potato pies, cakes, etc. Just remember to wear loose pants or pants or skirts with elastic waistbands.


25 November 2009

Happy Thanksgiving

Filed under: Uncategorized — Jim Gerl @ 10:06 pm
Please have a happy Thanksgiving. This is a time to count our blessings and to be thankful. It is one of my favorite holidays. As you may have noticed, I'm taking some time off from the blog this week to spend time with my family.

In the meantime, please keep thinking of ideas for my upcoming interview with Alexa Posny.

And enjoy the turkey.
Sent from my BlackBerry wireless device from U.S. Cellular

Jennifer: Mission: Literacy

Jennifer Reading instruction and assessments have been at the forefront of my mind lately. I am currently taking a course for a second credential specific to the various methods of reading instruction, including read-alouds, shared reading, literacy circles, and so on. This is a repeat class for me because my units from one university didn’t carry over. I got an A in it the first time, so I thought it would be a piece of cake. I was so wrong.



When we take the quizzes on what each lesson structure is, I get a good grade . . . no sweat. But when I go into detail about how I actually use the different methods in my classrooms, the “alterations” that are necessary to meet the needs of my kids either cause huge confusion or deviate from the structure so much that, really, I’m just teaching reading my own way. But what else can I do? My students have needs that require changes to be made.

For example, for Shared Reading Instruction and Guided Reading, I need to do everything digitally. I have to make PowerPoint/KeyNote presentations in order to help my students focus on the front of the room and be able read the text. For some of my students, text that is too close requires more movement to scan, which requires more muscle control, which takes away from focus and comprehension of the text altogether. Also, our “Word Wall” is done the same way so I can also put it on my students’ computers and make frequent changes.

Oh, and their books? Those are on their computers as well. I take pictures of the illustrations and type the text into a program called Clicker 5 so the students can read the text, have the text read to them while they follow along, and turn the pages by clicking the “next” button.



Despite all this, assessment forms such as a Reading Record don’t even come close to truly illustrating my students’ comprehension and reading capabilities. This is because there is also a communication component involved in my class, and my students aren’t always able to express what they have read or what they don’t understand because they are simultaneously progressing in their ability to use their communication devices and switches.



And one more thing: I always need to consider that motivation factor that is so integral to helping students realize and reach their potential. Some of my students are in 6th and 7th grade. They honestly don’t want to read about Sam and Ann looking for apples. Yes, they need the “short /a/” lesson, and it may be written at an appropriate level. But reading takes time and if it is boring then they are reluctant to participate, making assessment very difficult.



. . . So I write new books. Is that so wrong? I write about things they might actually like, including themselves—little biographies (that include the short /a/ sound) that encourage them to read because they are the main characters and quite frankly they want to see what’s going to happen to them next. I consider these “teacher-made tests” for most purposes, but I could never use them for a Reading Record in my class because it is not part of a regular curriculum. The problem is that my students just don’t perform the same way on assessments that bring them back to Sam and Ann and their great apple-picking escapade.



I test my students based on their comprehension answers to texts. I test my students based on their correct identification of sight words, even if it is out of a field of three. I test my kids based on what I know they will be able to participate in. I completely support my district in its need to present progress data to the state, but this state never really tested my ability to handle this teaching situation. I had a sink-or-swim lesson in special education literacy instruction.



“OK, what’s your point, Jen?” All teachers take the same Reading Instruction Competency Assessment (RICA), but I have yet to see a case study that includes a child with special needs. Every student deserves effective reading instruction, and every teacher deserves to be prepared to reach any child. A physical impairment does not necessarily mean there is also a cognitive impairment, and if a student has a communication impairment that hinders reading assessment it should not be assumed that he or she cannot retain reading instruction.



Teachers who are ready to accept those capable students and work with them so their education is adequate are so needed right now, both in special education and in general education. I do see the incredible value of structured literacy lessons . . . but I think it is important that up-and-coming teachers (particularly in special education) realize how many accommodations may be necessary in order to make reading truly accessible to all students and feel comfortable taking that initiative to deviate a little from what they’ve been taught. It’s great to have a variety of approaches to teaching in your back pocket, but it is also great to know that you can be flexible. Yes, there is an “order” to how lessons are designed to be taught, but the bottom line is that the students’ needs must be met.



By the way, if you have seen a RICA case study that includes a child with special needs, please let me know. I am learning and trying to grow as much as possible, and I appreciate all the insight I can get from other professionals in this field.

Three Assistant/Associate Professors of Special Education -Illinois State University

Filed under: Uncategorized — SpedPro @ 2:51 pm
One of the Largest Special Education Program in U.S. Seeks Three Assistant/Associate Professors The Department of Special Education at Illinois State University, a large public university with nationally recognized teacher preparation programs, invites applications for three tenure track positions to be filled at the rank of ...

24 November 2009

Some not-helpful fluency strategies

Filed under: Uncategorized — Teach Effectively! @ 5:41 pm
Over on CDL there’s a brief explanation about why round-robin reading and silent reading are not effective methods for improving fluency in reading. It’s a summary by Jan Hasbrouck, a consultant who has done a fair bit of work in the area of special education, assessment (e.g., progress monitoring measures), reading, and related aspects of [...]

Meds plus behavior management for Autism

Filed under: Uncategorized — EBD Blog @ 5:41 pm
Michael Aman and co-authors (and there are at least 25 of them) reported that a combination of medication and parent training in behavior management was more effective than medication alone in reducing behavior problems. They assigned families randomly assigned to receive either risperidone as well as parent management training or risperidone alone. After 24 weeks, [...]

Nov 24

Filed under: Uncategorized — Leah @ 12:38 pm
Today was such a rewarding day. Even though I was assigned four students, none of whom I would characterize as really engaged with the material usually, all four were just wowed by the chapter we read. We ended in a place in which you're not sure whether one character lives or dies. They were all arguing with eachother about what they thought happened and begged to read on after they were supposed to go back to class! It was so rewarding for a teacher, I started thinking about how we can harness and use this kind of energy. One of the quietest students actually asked me to read aloud to them from the next chapter when we got back to class and found that not all the other groups had finished. It was amazing to see them talking with such animation about school work!
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