Sunday, October 28, 2012

SERGE

SERGE (Special Education Resources for General Educators) is a valuable site for general educators striving to include students with special needs in their classrooms. SERGE poses Seven Essential Questions general educators might ask and then provides teachers with the short answer follwed by additional sub-questions and resources for further exploration. Since I am earning a dual license in general and special education, I was particularly interested in Question 5: "How do I collaborate to benefit my students?" Included under this question category were resources and links on co-teaching, progress monitoring, and partnering with parents. I also appreciated the links SERGE gave to official government websites when answering Question 7 about teacher responsibilities tied to legislation at the federal, state, and local levels. SERGE is an excellent resource since it not only offers a synthesis of information, but also offers links to primary sources for those who have more time to investigate.

Friday, October 12, 2012

Ways to Differentiate

Mindsteps is a company committed to helping teachers improve their praxis "today to
raise student achievement tomorrow." Part of their resource collection is devoted to ways educators can differentiate instruction to fit their students' various needs and abilties. Mindsteps classifies students into four categories: Low Content, High Process (LCHP); Low Content, Low Process (LCLP); High  Content, Low Process (HCLP); and finally High Content, High Process (HCHP). The Four Types of Students – Reference Guide offers suggested strategies for each of these four types in the areas of content, process, product, and environment. To further increase teachers' awareness of their students' diverse needs, Mindsteps has developed a Blank Differentiated Unit Planning Sheet to guide teachers as they develop their lessons. The website also offers links to sample units in three different disciplines (Englishhistory, and math) to serve as exemplars.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Technological Options for SPED

Special education does not lack for acronyms, and this week I discovered a new one: UAAACT. The Utah Augmentative Alternative Communicaiton and Technology Teams Project, supported by the Utah State Office of Education and the Utah State Office of Rehabilitation, provides professional links to over 30 sites related to technological adaptations and supports for individuals with disabilities. While some links were already familiar to me (e.g. The Arc and the Utah Parent Center), others expanded my awareness of available tools. Both Apple and IBM devote portions of their websites to describing product accessibility for those with special needs. Other businesses like RJ Cooper and Associates sell equipment that further extends access beyond what these brands offer.

The websites linked to from the UAAACT page varied greatly in design and credibility from individual educators assembling their preferred resource lists to companies attempting to market their products. Overall, I generally preferred sites associated soley with educational instituions (.edu) versus ones seeking profits (.com); the Enabling Devices catalog under the Toys for Children link was one major exception.

Exploring across several sites tonight, the options for adaptive equipment seem endless--limited only by human ingenuity. Happily, we've moved far beyond Stone and Bronze Age tools to technology capable of enriching the lives of those previously barred from full participation in society as a result of their disabilities.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

IDEA on IEPs: Supplementary Aids and Services

As mentioned in my first post a few weeks ago, the National Dissemination Center for Children with Disabilities (NICHCY) contains pertinent information related to IDEA legislation, including extensive details on IEP planning and execution. NICHCY explains IDEA's legalese with relevant examples of how the law has been interpreted, implemented, and expanded through subsequent reauthorizations. Under the umbrella of  "Contents of the IEP,"  NICHCY offers links to 13 sections that flesh out IEPs' component parts. Of the links, only two ("Extent of Nonparticipation" and "Service Delivery") do not contain the specific heading "IDEA's Exact Words," though both still quote the legislation.

Under the "Supplementary Aids and Services" heading, NICHCY offers a more comprehensive look at aids and services provided for students with disabilities than offered in the brief IDEA excerpt. While I initially associated supplementary aids with technological supports such as communication devices, the article broadened my definition of what types of supports can be given. Knowing the array of options as well as the process for explicitly defining them in a student's IEP will be indispensible information for me to possess as a special educator. 

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Resources from the Council for Exceptional Children


The Council for Exceptional Children’s website offers a plethora of resources for special educators. Under the “Support for Teachers” heading, instructors can access teacher-written articles related to streamlining SPED paperwork, collaborating and developing mentor/mentee relationships, co-teaching with general educators, retaining one’s initial passion for students with exceptionalities, and other topical issues related to special education. While these resources will continue to be beneficial to me, I can currently use them to augment what I am learning in class with perspectives of teachers already in the field. Below are three links to articles taken from the site:

My Dirty Dozen
by Sheila Amato, CEC Clarissa Hug Teacher of the Year 2008

Sheila was right: her title certainly piqued my interest. More importantly, however, her tips for both novice and experienced teachers rewarded my attention. Although I found all Sheila's tips helpful, number 11 was particularly memorable!

Co-Teaching 101: Lessons from the Trenches
by Marie Huggins, Jennifer Huyghe, and Elizabeth Iljkoski

Marie Huggins, Jennifer Huyghe, and Elizabeth Iljkoski's tone is less playful, but the information they share is no less pertinent. Grounded in their classroom experiences at the secondary level, their article provides a brief definition of co-teaching before delving into their own unique experiences as special and content area (biology and English) educators. Their stories gave life to the information about co-teaching offered in our Including Students with Special Needs text (p.76-79). One quotation from their article particularly struck me: "When arranging for co-teaching between general and special education in your schook, keep in mind that special education is a service, not a place." Too often—especially in the past—special education relegated students to a separate room instead of making them participants in a shared classrom. This sentence succintly sums up how I believe special education should be treated and delivered.

Five Strategies to Limit the Burdens of Paperwork
by Lynne Cook and K. Sarah Hall

Though I am dedicated to becoming a special educator, I am concerned about managing the paperwork it entails. Lynne Cook and K. Sarah Hall try to expedite the paperwork process while retaining its essential value. Their five strategies call for increased focus on student needs, using one source for a variety of contexts, reducing the amount of "informal" record keeping, understanding legal requirments, and finally encouraging student ownership of their IEPs by allowing students to participate in their IEP's development.