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Getting the Most out of your Child’s IEP
Anne M. Howard, PhDEducation Department Fitchburg State College
Many thanks to the FCSN and MA DOE for graphics and other material included here.
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Agenda
1. Who is here?
2. Basic Assumptions
3. How does General Curriculum interface with the IEP?
4. A few key components of IEP Vision PLEP – A Current Performance > Goals >
Objectives
5. Questions
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Parents . . . finding the right balance
• Team Member
• Expert
• Questioner – thoughtful Colombo
Parent roles
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ASSUMPTIONS . . .
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What is the relationship between the IEP and the General
Curriculum?
IEP General Curriculum
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General Education CurriculumGeneral Education Curriculumand the IEPIEP
• Federal law requires that ALL children have access to the general education curriculum.
• General Curriculum = MA Frameworks+ District Specific
Curriculum
• There is no need to repeat the curriculum in the IEP.
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School
General Curriculum -Curriculum Frameworks
Other Curriculum Areas
Life of the SchoolSchool
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IEP should have skillsskills focus, rather than curriculum focus.
• The goal of the IEP process is not to have the student master an isolated Framework/standard, but to master skills impacted by the disability.
• The focus of the goal must help the student develop skills to access, participate and make progress in the general curriculum and the life of the school.
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There is no one right way to organize an IEP.
• There are many wrong ways, but really good IEPs can look quite different.
• Different districts. . .different practices. • Different schools. . . Different practices.
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IEP 1
1. Parent and/or Student Concerns
2. Student Strengths and Key Evaluation Results
3. VISION STATEMENT
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Start with the VISIONVISION
• Classic quote from Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland:
“If you don’t know where you’re going, any place will do.”
• KNOW WHERE YOU WANT THE STUDENT TO GO!
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Student Centered VisionVision• Consider next 1-5 years, longer for
older child.• Ideally, this should be a shared, team
vision. • beginning no later than the first IEP in
effect when the student is 16, the vision statement must reflect the student’s preferences and interests, including desired outcomes in adult living, post-secondary and working environments.
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Examples of Vision Statements• The team would like to see Elena enter an
integrated kindergarten program when she reaches age 5.
• By the time Katie is in 2nd grade, we can see her taking the yellow school bus to school and walking independently through the school building.
• Pedro wants to be a reporter on the school newspaper and wants to take as many courses as possible to improve his writing skills.
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Examples of Vision Statements (cont.)
• While it is ideal to have a shared vision statement from the team, if there are multiple perspectives be clear about the various perspectives.
SAMPLE: Becky’s parents want to see her master more of the basic skills she seems to have missed in earlier grades. They also want her to have more friends to do things with outside of school. Becky wants to play soccer and would like to go to the same college that her cousins go to.
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Present Levels of Educational Performance (IEP 2 & 3)
GENERAL CURRICULUM and OTHER EDUCATIONAL NEEDS
• Impact of disability on progress• ACCOMMODATIONS• SPECIALLY DESIGNED INSTRUCTION
• Content• Methodology/Delivery of Instruction• Performance Criteria
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Present Levels of Educational Performance A: General Curriculum IEP2
Check all that apply.
General curriculum area(s) affected by this student’s disability(ies):
English Language Arts
Consider the language, composition, literature (including reading) and media strands.
History and Social Sciences
Consider the history, geography, economic and civics and government strands.
Science and Technology
Consider the inquiry, domains of science, technology and science, technology and human affairs strand.
MathematicsConsider the number sense, patterns, relations and functions, geometry and measurement and statistics and probability strands.
Other Curriculum Areas
Specify:
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How does the disability affect progress?
1. Skill weakness
2. How weakness impacts success
3. Address each component of the disability
4. Other Considerations—organization, attention, anxiety etc.
INFORMATION in this section should support choice of accommodations and modifications.
IEP pages 2 & 3T3, Trans
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Think about how these statements point toward the
selection of accommodations
and modifications.
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How does the disability affect progress?
• Jorge takes a long time to complete any written assignment so that it is difficult for him to get his work done in time allocated. He has difficulty maintaining his pencil/pen grip.
• Matt’s difficulty with oral expression makes it difficult for him to participate actively in small group activities.
• Sarah has trouble staying in her seat for more than 10 minutes so that she often leaves lectures.
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• Becky has difficulty with decoding and as content material becomes more complex, she is having more difficulty with reading comprehension.
• Paul has particular difficulty when there is time pressure / response constraint. Her generally legible handwriting deteriorates substantially when she is tired or under time pressure.
How does the disability affect progress? (cont.)
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What types of accommodations, if any, is necessary for the student to
make effective progress?
• Do not involve modifying the material content.– Whatever is being covered in the general education
classroom/curriculum remains the same.
• Do allow students to receive information in a more effective manner.
• Do allow students to demonstrate knowledge in a more effective manner.
• Can be provided by general educators.
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Accommodations. . . .
LEVEL the playing field, but they don’t change the game.
Miriam K. Freedman
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Examples of Accommodations** tremendous number of disability specific
resources on WWW
• Pencil grip• Alphasmart• Preferential seating (specify WHERE and WHY)• Slant board• FM System (enhanced audio)• Rug on floor• Large type• Fewer problems on each page
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What type(s) of specially designed instruction, if any, is necessary for the
student to make effective progress?
MA IEP divides specialized instruction into three areas:
• Content
• Methodology/Delivery of Instruction
• Performance Criteria
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Specially Designed Instruction: CONTENT
EXAMPLES:
– Student working on key concepts only
– Only as many problems as necessary
– Content level reading materials should be at 3rd grade level.
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Specially Designed Instruction: CONTENT (cont.)
• If you are working with HIGH SCHOOL student, be careful to make sure content is not being modified so much that student will not receive credit toward graduation.
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Specially Designed Instruction: Methodology/Delivery of
InstructionWhat is unique about the way that instruction should
be provided? Different from anything delivered in general education classroom?
- Provide help at the start of any new, unfamiliar activity
- Ask for directions to be repeated back to assure understanding
- Provide ongoing praise and periodic activity-time reward for work completion
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Specially Designed Instruction:
Methodology/Delivery of Instruction (cont.)
- Use of Velcro picture schedule.
- Mayer-Johnson symbols to be used with all print directions
- Check for splinter skill development rather than solid mastery.
- Reinforce use of self-initiated adaptations.
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Specially Designed Instruction: Performance Criteria
- Grades for written products will combine original and edited versions. Oral tests for key course content.
- Test only on vocabulary and concepts included on study sheets; have a series of grading options/activities to choose from at the completion of every major curriculum unit.
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Specially Designed Instruction: Performance Criteria
If your child is in general education classroom and usreceiving a modified curriculum, make sure you know how grades will be determined.
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IEP2 . . . PLEP-General Curriculum
• This is the most crucial page for general educators to have and understand.
• Always ask how information about your child will be communicated to the general educator(s).
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While accommodations level the playing field, modifications can change the game.
Don’t worry so much about which section the information goes in, just make sure it is on the page.
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On to IEP 4 . . .Current Performance Levels /Measurable Annual Goals
•Exactly what can student do NOW?Current Performance Level
• What is it we want him to know or be able to do at the end of a year? Measurable Annual Goal
• What will student need to do to complete that goal? Skills to acquire? Objectives
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Current Performance Levels (CPL)
How is this different from PLEP?
CPL
•Specific
•Limited to goal area
•Focused on skill building
•Used to write a goal
PLEP
•General
•Focused on progress in the general curriculum
•Used to write accommodations and modificationsIEP page 4
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Current Performance Levels/Measurable Annual Goals (IEP4)There must be a direct correlation between the annual goal(s) and the present level
of educational performance
Goal #
Specific Goal Focus:
Current Performance Level: What can the student currently do?
Measurable Annual Goal: What challenging, yet attainable, goal can we expect the student to meet by the end of this IEP period? How will we know that the student has reached this goal?
Benchmark/Objectives: What will the student need to do to complete this goal?
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Current Performance Levels - written for each goal (IEP 4)
What can student currently do?• Should be written in as quantitative,
specific terms as possible.
• Serves as a baseline against which to measure future progress.
• Should support your choice of goals & obj.
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CPL EXAMPLE – 4th grader with diagnosed learning disability
Becky can independently write clearly and coherently using short (2-4) word sentences and 1-2 syllable words. She is just beginning to use topic sentences and multiple paragraphs. She has difficulty translating her good ideas into written products. She can form letters in both print and cursive, but displays inconsistent spacing and when she is tired, her cursive writing can be very difficult to read. Becky has trouble spelling multisyllabic words, but will consistently attempt to use a personalized dictionary. Becky works well from a writing model, and when provided with one by the teacher, Becky can use a graphic organizer to help structure her thoughts and writing.
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CPL Examples
• Jill typically interrupts the work of others 2 or 3 times in any five minute period of quiet work time. She interrupts when she requires teacher assistance.
• Lisa has the physical capacity to produce speech sounds. She has a 10 word verbal vocabulary. When she speaks, she most commonly uses the words: yes, hi, no. She can also use eye gaze and single switches to communicate with others. Her combined vocabulary using all three methods of communication totals 18 words.
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GOALSGOALS• Stay focused on SKILLS student needs:
• to access and progress in the general curriculum;
• to fully participate in the life of the school; and
• to move toward vision – consider adult life.
(DOE 2/03)
• What will make the biggest difference?
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Goals (cont.)
• Is goal supported by current level of performance?
• Always ask how will student' progress be measured??
• How will you know if goal has been met?
• Beware of rewriting the curriculum.
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TARGET BEHAVIOR - The skill or behavior in need of change.
Condition - Circumstances under which the target behavior is to occur.
Criteria - Acceptable level of performance of the target behavior.
IEP page 4
Measurable Annual Goal Components
Created collaboratively by MA DOE &
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MA currently requires GOALs to be measurable
Examples:
Behavior condition criteria
John will follow school rules as described in the school handbook by walking down the halls without incident.
Using 3rd grade level books with six chapters, Kim will be able to consistently silently read and correctly answer questions about name, idea and supporting details.
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Nadia will WRITE A SIX SENTENCE PARAGRAPH using four types of sentences scoring 45/50 on the district writing rubric.
When given a topic in History, Social Sciences, English Language Arts or Science and Technology, Carlos will be able to independently WRITE A THREE-PARAGRAPH ESSAY containing the required elements; introduction, supporting details, and conclusion.IEP page 4
Examples
Measurable Annual Goals
TARGET BEHAVIOR Condition Criteria
Created collaboratively by MA DOE &
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Examples
Measurable Annual Goals
Monday through Friday, Jillian will USE THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM TO GET TO AND FROM HER JOB PLACEMENT, independently arriving at work on time, for any five consecutive days.
IEP page 4
TARGET BEHAVIOR Condition Criteria
Created collaboratively by MA DOE &
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OBJECTIVES and Benchmarks
• What will the student need to do to reach goal?
• Although MA expects measurable goals, most special educators have been trained to write measurable objectives.
Make sure GOALSGOALS or /and OBJECTIVESOBJECTIVES are measurable!
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One strategy. . .
GOAL: (general – non measurable) Joey will show increased vocational skills by meeting the following objectives:
OBJECTIVES: (specific - measurable)1. Given 100 flyers, Joey will place one flyer in
each mailbox in no more than 5 minutes.2. Given a set of no more than 10 pages to copy
and written directions for collating and stapling, Joey will complete the task in no more than 10 minutes.
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Objectives vs. Benchmarks – use what makes the most sense!
• OBJECTIVES – focus is on what SKILLS the student needs to reach the goal.
• BENCHMARKS – written in terms of TIME. What will student be able to do by December? April?
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•By the end of the first quarter, accompanied by an adult, Jillian will walk to the bus stop, ride the bus to work, and get off at the correct work bus stop.
•By the end of the second quarter, Jillian will be able to identify the steps she will follow to independently travel to work.
•By the end of the third quarter, Jillian will independently walk to the bus stop, ride the bus to work and get off at the correct work bus stop.
Examples of Measurable BenchmarksMonday through Friday, Jillian will USE THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM TO GET TO AND FROM HER JOB PLACEMENT, independently arriving at work on time, for any five consecutive days.
IEP page 4 Created collaboratively by MA DOE &
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ANALYZE what skills the student needs to learn
• What are the key components?– Answering orally? Answering in writing?– How long should she read independently?
• What about strategies to improve her reading comprehension?
• E.g., summarizing orally, stopping to ask herself questions at the end of each chapter?
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GOAL: Using 3rd grade level books with six chapters, Kim will be able to consistently silently read and correctly answer questions about name, idea and supporting
details.
OBJECTIVES:1. Given 3rd grade level chapter books, Kim will read
silently for 30 minutes, 4 out of 5 opportunities.2. After each chapter, Kim will independently write the
names of characters, one main idea, and at least two supporting details.
3. After having read two chapters from 3rd grade level book, Kim will correctly answer 4 out of 5 questions about name, idea, and supporting details.
4. After silently reading a complete….book, Kim will correctly, orally answer written questions, 9 out of 10.
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GOAL: Matt will increase his math skills needed for daily living.
OBJECTIVES:1. Matt will recognize all coins and paper
money by their name and value.2. Matt will further develop his ability to use
the calendar including stating the months of the year in order.
3. Matt will tell time to the hour.
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These Areas are Easier to Picture as Needing Skill Building
I Need
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These are Harder to Picture as SKILLS: Reading, Writing, and Math
If the student needs to develop skills in reading, writing and math in order to access,
participate and progress in the general curriculum or the life of the school, then they
move from curriculum to SKILLS.
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Tools to Assist in Skill Identification & Curriculum
Adaptation • Cross curriculum areas• Look to special education
assessment results
• Massachusetts DOE (Fall 2006). Resource Guide to the Massachusetts Curriculum Frameworks. http://www.doe.mass.edu/mcas/alt/resources.html
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Learning Progressions: A Model for Teaching, Learning, and
Assessment
Learning Standards (as written)
Entry Points
Access Skills
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History and Social Science
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Don’t lose sight of the VISION
for the student!
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Martin Luther King said:
“I have a dream.”
He did not say,“I have an annual
plan and quarterly goals and objectives.”
(Inclusion News, 1997-8)
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