Solution Manual for Including Students with Special Needs: A Practical Guide for Classroom Teachers, 8th Edition
Preview Extract
Chapter 2: Special Education Procedures and Services
Chapter-At-A-Glance
Main Topics
Who are the
professionals in
special education?
Instructorโs Resources
Key Terms & Concepts
o Inclusion facilitator
o Itinerant teacher
o Transition specialist
o Job coach
o Intervention specialist
o Related service providers
o Self-determination
Activities: 1, 2
How do you decide
Key Terms & Concepts
whether a student need o Universal screening
might be a disability?
o Unmet needs
o Chronic patterns
o Simple interventions
Activities: 9
How do students
Key Terms & Concepts
obtain special
o Prereferral team
services?
o Intervention assistance team
o Response to intervention
o Tier 1 and tier 2 interventions
o Multi-tiered systems of support
o Multidisciplinary team
o Parentsโ rights in special ed
o Components of assessment
o Individualized education program
o Annual reviews
o Three-year reevaluations
o Due process; mediation
Activities: 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
What is an
Key Terms & Concepts
individualized
o Present level of performance
education program?
o Annual goals
o Short-term objectives
o Services and modifications
o Behavior intervention plan
o Transition plan
Activities: 8, 10
What services do
Key Terms & Concepts
students with
o Special education
disabilities receive?
o Related services
o Supplementary aids and services
o Placement
o Educational environment
o Resource programs/rooms
Activities: 11
Media Resources
o
American Academy of Special
Education Professionals:
http://www.aasep.org
o
Beach Center on Disability:
http://www.beachcenter.org/default.asp
x?JScript=1
Center for Parent Information &
Resources: The Short-and-Sweet IEP
Overview
http://www.parentcenterhub.org/iepoverview/
o Understood for Learning and Attention
Issues: Due Process Rights
https://www.understood.org/en/schoollearning/your-childs-rights/disputeresolution/due-process-rights-what-youneed-to-know
o
o
Center for Parent Information &
Resources: All About the IEP
http://www.parentcenterhub.orgschoola
ge/iep
o
Center for Parent Information and
Resources: Placement, Short-and-Sweet
http://www.parentcenterhub.org/reposit
ory/placement-overview/
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Instructorโs Overview and Outline
Chapter 2 provides information about the range of professionals who are involved in the special education
of students with disabilities. The chapter details procedures general education teachers follow when they
suspect one of their students may have a disability. It explains how students obtain special services, what
types of special services students might need, and how a studentโs individualized education program is
developed and monitored. The chapter also discusses the crucial role of parents, their rights, and due
process procedures for resolving disagreements between parents and school professionals about their
childโs special services.
A. Who are the professionals in special education?
1. General education teachers
2. Special education teachers
3. Related service providers and other specialists
4. Parents and students
B. How do you decide whether a student need might be a disability?
1. Analyze unmet needs
a. What are specific examples of unmet needs?
b. Is there a chronic pattern negatively affecting learning?
c. Are the unmet needs becoming more serious as time passes?
d. Is the studentโs learning or behavior significantly different from that of classmates?
e. Do you discover that you cannot find a pattern?
2. Communicate your observations and try your own interventions
a. Contact the parents
b. Contact colleagues
c. Try simple interventions
d. Document the unmet need
e. Reflect on your understanding of and responses to the student
C. How do students obtain special services?
1. Initial consideration of student problems
a. Prereferral team
b. Response to intervention
c. Multi-tiered systems of support
2. The special education referral and assessment process
a. Parentsโ rights
b. Components of assessment
3. Decision making for special services
4. Monitoring special education services
a. Annual reviews
b. Three-year reevaluations
c. Additional reviews
d. Due process
D. What is an Individualized Education Program?
1. Required components of an IEP
a. Present level of performance
b. Annual goals and short-term objectives
c. Extent of participation in general education
d. Services and modifications needed
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e. Behavior intervention plan
f. Date of initiation and frequency and duration of service and anticipated modifications
g. Strategies for evaluation
h. Transition plan
2. The value of IEPs
E. What services do students with disabilities receive?
1. Special education and other services
2. Student placement and educational environments
a. Regular (general education) classes
b. Resource programs
c. Separate classes
d. Separate schools
e. Residential facilities
f. Home and hospital settings
Learning Outcomes
1. Analyze the roles and responsibilities of the individuals who may participate in educating students
with disabilities.
2. Apply to your planned teaching role the steps teachers should take in deciding whether an identified
student need might indicate the presence of a disability.
3. Describe the process through which a student may become eligible to receive special education
services, including the role that parents play throughout that process.
4. Name the components of individualized education programs (IEPs) and provide examples of them.
5. Outline the types of services that students with disabilities may receive and the settings in which they
may receive them.
Key Terms and Concepts
Adaptive physical educator
Annual goals
Annual review
Bilingual special educator
Due process
Inclusion facilitator
Individualized education program (IEP)
Intervention assistance team
Intervention specialist
Itinerant teacher
Job coach
Mediation
Mobility specialist
Multidisciplinary team (MDT)
Occupational therapist
Paraprofessionals
Physical therapist
Placement
Prereferral team
Related services
Residential facilities
Resource programs, resource rooms
Resource teacher
Response to Intervention (RtI)
Self-determination
Short-term objectives
Supplementary aids and services
Three-year reevaluation
Tier 1, 2, or 3 interventions
Transition plan
Transition specialist
Universal screening
Activities and Discussion Questions
1. Why do some schools use the term intervention specialist rather than special education teacher?
What does this say about the history of the field of special education? Have small group or wholegroup discussions about the pros and cons of chosen terminology.
9
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2. Provide Handout 2-1 to students. Below are ways you might use this handout.
๏ท Activity One: Ask students to complete the matrix about the IEP team (professionals in special
education) as homework. At the next class meeting, divide students into small groups and assign
one IEP team member role to each group. Provide groups with poster paper and colored markers.
The task is to provide a visual representation of the assigned team member. When the task is
complete, each group explains their visual to the class. Facilitate a discussion re: how the visuals
do or do not support their learning.
๏ท
Activity Two: Divide students into small groups, assigning one IEP team member role to each
group. They might talk to students preparing in those disciplines or talk to practicing
professionals. They might supplement their information with articles from the appropriate
professional literature/web sites. One suggested product from this assignment is a one-page
profile of each profession using a standard format. Duplicate these profiles for all students to add
to their files on special education.
3. Discuss with students the importance of prereferral procedures and RtI procedures. Discuss a
common complaint among general education teachers that this process can feel like a hurdle to slow
down getting assistance for students who need it. Ask them to generate pros and cons of the process,
including how they would respond to the complaint just noted.
4. Guest speaker: If a local school uses a Response to Intervention (RtI) model, invite a member of the
special education staff to describe the process as it is used in the school. If possible, ask the guest
speaker to show examples of Tier 1, 2 and 3 interventions (or whatever tiered system used) and
describe how different staff members are involved.
5. Some preKโ12 students referred for screening or assessment are determined not to be eligible for
special education. However, general education teachers sometimes worry that these students โshould
beโ in special education because they need assistance. This topicโthe responsibility of general
education teachers for meeting the needs of students who are not eligible for services yet who have
special needsโlends itself to class discussion and builds the theme that general education teachers
have significant responsibilities for all of their students.
6. Ask students to share their perceptions about why IDEA contains so many protections for
parents/families related to the process of identifying students and planning and delivering their special
education services. Have students search the web for historical perspectives that explain why the
protections were included in the law. As an alternative, invite a representative from the local chapter
of the Arc or another longtime advocacy group to describe changes that have occurred over the past
three decades. Ask students to research Arc online (https://www.thearc.org/) before the speaker visits
your class.
7. Guest speaker: Ask a hearing officer or local special education director with due process hearing
experience to explain the mediation process and hearings. It is especially important for such a guest
speaker to stress the role of general education teachers in providing appropriate accommodations to
students with disabilities in their classes.
8. Ask students to bring to class IEP forms from local school districts. Small groups of students could
compare and contrast forms and identify each required part of the IEP. [If your state uses standard
IEP forms, students may go online and find sample IEP forms from various states or districts.]
Students may also rate the forms according to their ease of understanding for general education
teachers, for parents, for students. Note whether the forms are available in different languages.
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9. Handout 2-2 could be used as a large-group or small-group activity to give students the experience of
completing paperwork to receive input and assistance for a student who might have a disability or
other special need. The form could also be compared to actual forms from local school districts.
10. Guest speaker: If possible, invite a parent (and student) to share his/her experiences participating in
IEP meetings. Local schools, parent advisory committees, the Arc, or other support agencies may be
able to provide access to guest speakers.
11. Arrange a class debate on the proposition that the intent of the Least Restrictive Environment (LRE)
is or should be to do away with diverse placement environments in favor of having all children in the
general education classroom at all times (with supports and services provided only in that setting).
Web-Based Content Resources
โข Beach Center on Disability (affiliated with the University of Kansas) provides many resources for working
effectively with families: http://www.beachcenter.org
โข Annual Reports to Congress: The reports provide statistics about students with disabilities and how they receive
services. http://www.ed.gov/about/reports/annual/osep/index.html
โข IDEA is the US Department of Educationโs web site about IDEA: https://sites.ed.gov/idea/
๏ท
LD Online: http://www.ldonline.org/ (Search the site for a series of articles about Response to Intervention.)
๏ท
National Center on Response to Intervention: http://www.rti4success.org/
๏ท
Intervention Central (resources about RTI): http://www.interventioncentral.org/
๏ท
RTI Action Network (resources for early childhood, elementary, middle school and high school):
http://www.rtinetwork.org/
Additional Readings
Bradley, R., Danielson, L., & Doolittle, J. (2007). Responsiveness to intervention: 1997 to 2007. Teaching
Exceptional Children, 39(5), 8โ12. NOTE: This issue of Teaching Exceptional Children (volume 39, issue
5) is a special issue dedicated to the topic of Responsiveness to Intervention (RTI or RtI).
Byrd, E. S. (2011). Educating and involving parents in the Response to Intervention process. Teaching Exceptional
Children, 43(3), 32โ39.
Horner, R., Cazrr, E., Halle, J., McGee, G., Odom, S., & Wolery, M. (2005). The Use of Single-Subject Research to
Identify Evidence-Based Practice in Special Education. Exceptional Children, 71(2), 165-179.
Madaus, J. W. (2005). Navigating the college transition maze: A guide for students with learning disabilities.
Teaching Exceptional Children, 37(3), 32โ37.
Mason, C. Y., McGahee-Kovac, M., & Johnson, L. (2004). How to help students lead their IEP meetings. Teaching
Exceptional Children, 36(3), 18โ25.
VanDerHayden, A., Witt, J., & Gilbertson, D. (2007). A multi-year evaluation of the effects of a Response to
Intervention (RTI) model on identification of children for special education. Journal of School Psychology,
45(2), 225-256.
Weishaar, P. M. (2010). Twelve ways to incorporate strengths-based planning into the IEP process. The Clearing
House, 83, 207โ210.
Wood, W. M., Karvonen, M., Test, D. W., Browder, D., & Algozzine, B. (2004). Promoting student selfdetermination skills in IEP planning. Teaching Exceptional Children, 36(3), 8โ16.
Ysseldyke, J., Burns, M. K., Scholin, S. E., & Parker, D. C. (2010). Instructionally valid assessment within
Response to Intervention. Teaching Exceptional Children, 42(4), 54โ61.
11
Copyright ยฉ 2019, 2015, 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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