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Marty Kester, IDEA Partnership at NASDSE Dick McCorkle, IDEA Partnership at NASDSE

Marty Kester, IDEA Partnership at NASDSE Dick McCorkle, IDEA Partnership at NASDSE Alabama State Team: Dalee Chambers, Department of Education Linda Hames, Department of Rehabilitation Linda Graham, Children’s Rehabilitation Services Brian Burrows, Local Transition Partnership

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Marty Kester, IDEA Partnership at NASDSE Dick McCorkle, IDEA Partnership at NASDSE

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  1. Marty Kester, IDEA Partnership at NASDSE Dick McCorkle, IDEA Partnership at NASDSE Alabama State Team: Dalee Chambers, Department of Education Linda Hames, Department of Rehabilitation Linda Graham, Children’s Rehabilitation Services Brian Burrows, Local Transition Partnership Arizona State Team: Susan Voirol, Vocational Rehabilitation New Hampshire State Team: Anne Huff, Parent Emily Huff, Youth Advocate Pennsylvania State Team: Michael Stoehr, Pennsylvania Training and Technical Assistance Network Working Across States and Stakeholders to Build Interagency Bridges for Youth:  The IDEA Partnership’s Interagency Community of Practice

  2. Transition Communities of Practice Rationale

  3. Today’s Climate • Crisis of youth: • Drop out rates • Incarceration • Poor academic skills • Lack of education and employment. • There is a spirit of collaboration in the legislation that ensures equal access to employment and communities. • Interagency transition teams suggested as appropriate vehicle for planning and implementing transition services for students with disabilities. Johnson, L., Zorn, D., Yung Tam, B., LaMontagne, M., Johnson, S., 2003; DeFur, S., 1997; Repetto, J. & Weiss, K., 1997

  4. Transition “Communities of Practice” “Transition teams can be a strong force within the community. Their primary purpose is to assess how a community’s transition services system works and to develop policies and procedures to make this system work better. They can identify the best way to meet the needs of youth with disabilities leaving the local schools within their community. They can promote actions through school boards and other governmental entities in areas such as policy and funding.” deFur, 2002, p. 17

  5. A way of working Involving those who do shared work Involving those that share issues Always asking “who isn’t here?” A way of learning To create new knowledge grounded in ‘doing the work’ With those who can advocate for and make change The Spirit of Community: We Are In This Together!

  6. ‘Knowing’ isn’t ‘doing’! Practices often do not transfer across organizations. Practices often do not transfer across sites within the same organization. The Knowing and Doing Gap

  7. Sharing Supporting Learning Often organized as same level, role, site and/or issue Creating new knowledge across organizational boundaries Communities of Practice

  8. Learning how to move from ‘knowing’ to ‘doing’ Translating learning to policy Encouraging investments that will move the work Recognizing the value of all contributions to a more complete & effective approach Creating new relationships among policymakers, researchers, & implementers Communities of Practice

  9. Alabama Arizona California New Hampshire Pennsylvania Virginia Communities in States

  10. Alabama Communities in States

  11. Alabama • ADRS Jointly Funded Job Coaches • Local Transition Partnerships Grant • Auburn Transition Leadership Institute • Student Tracking Survey • Alabama Transition Conference

  12. Alabama Department of Rehabilitation Services Jointly Funded Job Coaches

  13. AlabamaLocal Transition Partnerships Grant Project Objectives: • To establish a Local Partnership Model. • To establish Capacity Building Strategies. • To extend the Local Partnership Model to other Local Education Agencies. • To evaluate Systems Change at the Local Level.

  14. AlabamaAuburn Transition Leadership Institute Institute Priorities: • Preparing highly qualified teachers; • Evaluating and researching programs and services; • Continuing education for practitioners; and • Initiating and developing innovative new programs.

  15. AlabamaLocal Transition Partnerships Grant In-School Version: • administered to students who are in the 11th grade. Post-School Version: • administered to students 1 year after exiting high school.

  16. AlabamaAnnual Transition Conference Conference Objectives (a) Increase the participant's knowledge of transition problems, issues, resources, and programs, especially as they pertain to Alabama; and (b) Expand and strengthen the network for all persons interested in Alabama's youth and young adults with disabilities who are in transition from school to work and community.

  17. Arizona Communities in States

  18. Arizona Interagency Agreement: Division of Development (DDD), Vocational Rehabilitation (VR), Exceptional Student Services (ESS) and Department of Education • Cooperation and Collaboration • Joint Programming

  19. Arizona Transition/School to Work Agreement between VR and School Districts: • VR counselor working in the High School • Building rapport and networking

  20. Arizona Successful Programs with a Joint Effort: • Work Bridge: A high school class where students gain knowledge, skills, training and employment • Youth Employment Training Program (YETP): A summer program for students to gain work skills and work experience • Youth Transition Program (YTP): A class in high schools where youth learn life skills, work skills and all needed transition services

  21. Arizona Parent Information Network (PIN) • Contractors with Arizona Department of Education (ADE) • Seven parents in AZ run this network; All have special needs children • PIN works with educators, agencies and parents to provide information to help folks advocate for themselves, remaining neutral at all times • Website: www.ade.az.gov/ess/pinpals

  22. Arizona Giving Voice to the Future 2005 Transition Conference in Arizona September 20-22, 2005 www.ade.state.az.us

  23. California Communities in States

  24. California California Transition Summit June 23, 2005

  25. New Hampshire Communities in States

  26. New HampshireGuiding Principles • Support and maintain the secondary education and transition initiatives that are occurring throughout the state • Identify effective and evidence-based practices occurring on local, state and national level • Leverage our secondary education and transition initiatives resources • Build local community capacity • Establish cross partnership connections • Interagency partnerships: DOE including Special Ed and VR, and DHHS (Bureau of Children’s Mental Health)

  27. New HampshireWhat are the benefits from participating in the Community of Practice (CoP)? • We learn about the national initiative and perspectives from Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP) and National Association of State Directors of Special Education (NASDSE) • Provide unique opportunities for a small state like New Hampshire i.e., National Disability Mentoring Day • We learn expand our “learning loop” to include state to state initiatives and state to other agency initiatives • The monthly CoP conference calls gives us the chance to share our progress with other states, as well as learn from one another so that we might replicate practices and activities that are successful in other states.

  28. New HampshireWhat has been happening as a result of our participation in the Community of Practice (CoP) • Mentoring Grant • Technical Assistance Grant • Identified the need to Reach out to Juvenile Justice and Division of Children, Youth and Families (DCYF) • New Hampshire and Pennsylvania Collaboration • The Parent Information Center has designated a representative to NH’s team • Thirty-three transition initiatives are currently underway in NH. Our CoP is promoting the value of collaboration and sharing information by submitting articles for publication in newsletters • Training opportunities are posted on websites

  29. New HampshireWhat are the barriers • There is no coordination of transition initiatives in the state. Each agency or bureau has its own plan. No one agency has been given the charge to develop a statewide plan • There is no vehicle to help us tap into the expertise area of each agency. We are working on getting partners “at the table” to ensure we are including all agencies involved with transition services • There is no central clearinghouse for secondary education and transition initiatives around the state. We tend to know the initiatives within our own area of expertise • Each agency does not speak the same language

  30. Pennsylvania Communities in States

  31. PennsylvaniaImpact on Students and Families History tells us that: • All too often, youth and parents must start over after the youth leave schools. • Weak link between youth services and the adult service system. • Fragmented service delivery system. • An overlap in service definitions. • Multiple funding bases. • Varying models of service delivery.

  32. PennsylvaniaImpact on Students and Families • Interagency coordinating teams have emerged in literature and practice as nucleus of change in communities attempting to work collaborative to serve children with special needs and their families. • As members of the transition community, it is essential to recognize the urgency to work as a team with mutual interest in and a shared vision of all students to live and work in their community as productive citizens. Lehman, C., Hewitt, Clark, Bullis, M., Rinkin, J., Castellanos, L., 2002; Wischnowski, M. & McCollum, J., 1995; Repetto, J. & Weiss, K., 1997

  33. PennsylvaniaCompliance to Commitment • Over time, we transformed into a project-oriented team, by planning cross-system training and youth and young adult-focused activities. • We developed trusting relationships and used the team as a forum to problem-solve around systems issues. • We evolved into a transition community of practice to promote our shared vision for the successful outcomes of youth and young adults with disabilities. • As a state team, we develop cross-system strategies to support the strengthen and expand local transition coordinating councils and teams’ impact on youth and young adult outcomes.

  34. PennsylvaniaGuiding Principles: How we Progressed to Make the Changes... • Mutual Respect • Building networks and relationships across "systems" and audiences • Valuing one another's perspectives • Creating transition strategies and activities based upon the bigger picture • Building the foundation...collaborate, cooperate, and communicate. • A SHARED VISION

  35. PennsylvaniaOld Way of Doing Business: Separate Pages in Separate Books Dept. of Education • Professional Development • Policy & Regulation Development • Strategic Planning • Service Delivery Systems • Assessment • Service Planning • Service Delivery • Program Initiatives & Allocation of Resources • Data Collection Dept. of Labor & Industry Dept. of Public Welfare Dept. of Health

  36. PennsylvaniaThe Shift: From Isolated, Single Agency Activities to Cross-Systems Efforts

  37. PennsylvaniaProfessional Development: Integrated Model • Capacity Building Events • Training • Transfer of Learning in Language of Agency • Contextual Framework • Eliminate Duplicative Cost of Development and Provision of Training

  38. PennsylvaniaTransition Communities of Practice: Communication Network and Support Structure

  39. PennsylvaniaWorking Smart: Program Initiatives & Allocation of Resources • Parent Education Network (PEN) - PEN's transition activities  - Parent involvement in the transition process • Bureau of Special Education Mini-Grants • - Linked to Team requirements through the Conference

  40. PennsylvaniaWorking Smart: Program Initiatives & Allocation of Resources • Office of Vocational Rehabilitation Transition Projects • Financial Memorandum of Understanding Funding Mechanism • 24 Types of Cross-system Partnerships in 40 Local Program Initiatives • 2 Statewide Projects • Capacity Building • Needs Assessment

  41. PennsylvaniaWorking Smart: Program Initiatives & Allocation of Resources • Office of Mental Retardation • Transition Employment Pilot Coalitions • Office of Mental Health • Transition Pilot Projects • Office of Children, Youth & Families • Independent Living Grants: Growing Number of Youth to Serve -- Importance of Developing Collaborative Partnerships • Dept. of Health • Transition Checklist

  42. Pennsylvania Transition Healthcare Checklist • Health Care and Personal Skills • Arranging to move from Pediatrics to Adult Doctors • Insurance Coverage • Eligible Programs

  43. PennsylvaniaKeeping up with Growth • September 2003 - Started with 7 people including parents and 4 agencies • July 2004 - Grew to 27 people with 7 families and 11 agencies-Panel of 9 people representing parents and all major systems • October 2004 - 9 teams of 9 people were convened for 9 presentations across PA • February 2005 - Interest has grown in PA systems and nationally

  44. PennsylvaniaExpanding our Capacity through the IDEA Partnership State to Federal…Federal to State State to State • Professional Development • Opportunity to Impact Federal Policy • Expanding Youth and Family Leadership • Issue Focused Practice Groups

  45. Pennsylvania Action Strategies for the Future • Expand State to Local and Local to State Communication Network and Support Structure • Agency Driven Cross-Systems Initiatives • 4th Annual PA Transition Conference: Strengthening Transition: Achieving Results

  46. Pennsylvania Action Strategies for the Future • Creating Linkages and Focus Among PA’s various Family Support Groups • Further develop Youth Leadership and Self Advocacy • 5 Year Strategic Planning for State and Local Teams

  47. Communities in States Virginia

  48. Virginia Virginia State Transition Meeting March 14-16, 2005 Williamsburg, VA

  49. Communities in States • Welcome ! • Delaware • And • District of Columbia

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