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Special Education Who is eligible, When to refer, and What do I do? Who are these students? • Special Education services are available to students with disabilities, when that disability interferes with their learning in a way that cannot be remedied with general education supports. Special Education Categories • Specific Learning Disability • Speech or Language Impairment • Mental Retardation • Emotional Disturbance • Other Health Impairment • Multiple Disabilities • Hearing Impairment • Orthopedic Impairment • Autism • Visual Impairment • Traumatic Brain Injury • Developmental Delay • Deaf-Blindness Specific Learning Disability • Most common category for Special Education students (51%) • ". . . a disorder in one or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in using language, spoken or written, that may manifest itself in an imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do mathematical calculations, including conditions such as perceptual disabilities, brain injury, minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia, and developmental aphasia." Types of Learning Disabilities • Oral Expression • Listening Comprehension • Basic Reading • Reading Comprehension • Math Calculations • Math Reasoning • Written Expression • Reading Fluency LD – What to look for Student’s with LD vary tremendously……. • A student who is having difficulty learning in a specific subject. • A student who is having difficulty learning in general, even though you believe he has the cognitive ability to learn the material. How do you assess for LD? • In the past, Texas used a 16 point discrepancy model. • Many people hated this model. – Felt like it failed the “slow learners” and let children fail before help was given to them. Response to Intervention • Eligibility based on whether or not the student responds positively to other programs and interventions before Special Ed. Referral is made. • Data is collected before, during and after the general education interventions and programs. • Student demonstrates a pattern of strengths and weaknesses. Why didn’t my student qualify? • Not enough data collected to make a determination (think Excel, not Word). • No pattern of strengths and weaknesses. • Difficulties are caused by another factor (vision, language, hearing, behavior, etc.). • LD Review Committee recommended that eligibility criteria had not been met. Understanding Standard Scores Average = 95 to 115 Mental Retardation • Significantly sub-average general intellectual functioning existing concurrently with deficits in adaptive behavior and manifested during the developmental period that adversely affects a child’s performance. MR – What to look for • Students who are significantly behind in their cognitive functioning than their peers. • Students whose social and self-help skills are significantly behind their peers. What Assessment is Done? • Adaptive Scales – Both parent and teacher scales must be significantly delayed • Intellectual Testing – Full Scale IQ score falls below 71. – This equates to the lower 2% of the population. Why Didn’t My Student Qualify? • The IQ score was to high. • One of the adaptive scores was to high. Other Health Impaired • Students who qualify OHI have a variety of health issues that are not covered under other headings. • Examples are Asthma, Attention Deficit Disorder, Diabetes, Epilepsy, Heart Conditions, Hemophilia, Lead Poisoning, Leukemia, Nephritis, Rheumatic Fever, or Sickle Cell Anemia. OHI – What to Look For • Many issues are identified by medical personnel before it reaches special education. • Raise health concerns with parents during conferences. A Word About ADHD • NEVER say to a parent that you feel that their child has ADHD. This is a medical diagnosis, and you and I are not qualified to make that diagnosis. • Most ADHD students are handled by 504 programs, and these programs must be attempted, with progress documented, before Special Education referral started. What Assessment is Done? • Medical records review. • Intellectual • Achievement – Educational Impact must be assessed. – Just having a condition that is covered under OHI does not necessitate special education services. Why Didn’t My Student Qualify? • No Educational Need. • General Education remedies are sufficient. • General Education remedies have not been attempted. Autism • A developmental disability significantly affecting verbal and nonverbal communication and social interaction, generally evident before age 3, that adversely affects educational performance. Autism – What to Look For • Difficulty developing relationships with people. • Delayed speech acquisition and inability to use speech once it is developed. • Repetitive and stereotypical behavior. • Lack of imagination. • Good rote memory. • Obsessive insistence on sameness of routine. • Normal physical appearance. What Assessment is done? • • • • • • Intellectual testing. Achievement testing. Psychological testing. Speech and language testing. In class and recreational observations. Parent and teacher questionnaires. Why Didn’t My Student Qualify? • Autism evaluation ruled out Autism as a cause for difficulties. Emotional Disturbance • Exhibits one or more of the following over a long time and to a marked degree: – An inability to learn that cannot be explained by intellectual, sensory, or other health factors. – Inability to build or maintain satisfactory interpersonal relationships with peers or teachers. – Inappropriate types of behavior or feelings under normal circumstances. – A general and pervasive mood of unhappiness or depression. – A tendencies to develop physical symptoms or fears associated with personal or school problems. ED – What Assessment is Done? • Intellectual Testing • Achievement Testing – These tests are mainly used to rule out learning problems as being the cause of the behavior exhibited. • • • • Psychological Tests determined by LSSP. Observations Questionnaires for parents and teachers. Several meetings with the student by the LSSP. Why Didn’t my Student Qualify • • • • Lack of Marked Degree. Lack of Prolonged Time Period. Lack of Educational Need. Testing revealed other things (LD, ADHD, Adjustment Disorder) that could not be ruled out as cause for behavior. • Social Maladjustment.