1 / 24

SES 4.2

SES 4.2. Special Education Placement Process. Starts with a Referral. Can be from a parent Or school Teacher Counselor Universal screening. MDT. The team is responsible for determining if a student has a disability Does the students meet the criteria

nydia
Download Presentation

SES 4.2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SES 4.2 Special Education Placement Process

  2. Starts with a Referral • Can be from a parent • Or school • Teacher • Counselor • Universal screening

  3. MDT • The team is responsible for determining if a student has a disability • Does the students meet the criteria • The process flows as listed below depending on who initiates the evaluation

  4. Members of MDT Team • Parent(s) • Someone to interpret the testing results • Lea • Regular education teacher • Special education teacher

  5. MDT Process • Procedural Safeguards • Must have valid assessments • Team process

  6. Procedural Safeguards • Educational independent evaluation • Prior written notice in native language • Parent consent • Access to educational records • Opportunity to complain or initiate due process • Pendency during due process * • Payment for private school if team decides • Mediation • State level appeals • Civil action • Attorney’s fees • State complaint process

  7. Valid assessment • Appropriate to determine if there is a disability- later used to determine progress • Racially neutral • In appropriate language • Technically sound • Tailored to assess appropriate and specific needs

  8. Team process • The decision is not made by a single person • It follows four processes • Reviews existing data to determine if additional data is needed • The team gathers additional data to make sure they have everything the need to make the decision • The team makes a decision if the child has a disability • The team prepares report ( sometimes not done quite in that Manner, much of it done before meeting)

  9. Data teams • There are many types of data teams • Schoolwide – used to make decisions about instruction, curriculum and planning- now used for Getting results and School Improvement Plans • Problem solving Teams- these teams work on a problem with a small group of students, ESL, IEP • Child Study • IST Teams • MDT – Multi disciplinary • IEP teams

  10. Communicating with Parents • Have a shared goal and purpose • Easier said than done • Make sure everyone understands the process • This goes for staff and parents • Staff sometimes view it as what they need to do to get rid of a child • Parents feel they need to get all they can- like free food

  11. Communicating with Parents • Articulate the role of everyone. • Regular ed person • Special ed person • Meeting facilitator decide who before the start of the meeting • Large teams are difficult, sometimes everyone feels they need to say something

  12. Communicating with Parents • Try and balance structure and flexibility • Written agendas help, but be willing to stray, but try and stay on the agenda • Try to keep it on track • Can we discuss this later, lets try and finish this part then that • We will get to that • Listen to and respect everyone’s contribution • Make sure minority opinions are heard

  13. Communicating with Parents • Use objective data to guide decisions • Avoid opinions based on nothing, try to use data as much as possible • Work to ensure confidentiality • Difficult to regain trust once broken • Regularly evaluate team outcomes

  14. Communicating with Parents • Communicate with parents frequently- • Communicate early, do not let the first communication be when a child is having problems or being referred for testing • Provide frequent and accurate information • Communicate the child’s strengths as well as needs • Do not have meetings in which you admire the problem, sometimes venting, very difficult to sit through

  15. Communicating with Parents • Translate Assessment information • Primary language • Explain what it means- use a graph • Be aware of cultural differences and its impact on testing • Be sure you are aware of the differences

  16. Communicating with Parents • Schedule meetings to facilitate parent attendance • Explain purpose of activity and the tests • Use non technical language • Maintain a solution based approach

  17. Records • FERPA- Federal Educational Record Privacy Act • Parents can view and challenge all records regarding their child • In some places even private ones- Debatable

  18. Records • Some of these records include • Permission not needed if you do it for everybody like • Screenings • Vision • Hearing • Universal academic screenings

  19. Records Permission is needed if you do not do it for everybody -any that is devised to get specific diagnostic information) -attempt to verify information

  20. Records Who gets the records? Teaches that need to know the information can have access to a student records This usually means all of the teachers Many times managed from a central place Can’t be released to outside agencies with out permission or a subpoena

More Related