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By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community Partnerships Matter Bureau of Indian Education FACE National 2012 Portland, Oregon

By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

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Page 1: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs

Division of Performance and Accountability

*****Coordinated Services*****Community Partnerships Matter

Bureau of Indian Education

FACE National 2012Portland, Oregon

Page 2: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

Purpose: To provide an overview of Child Find

To provide strategies and techniques for developing successful:

- Child Find events- Coordinated Service Plans- Memorandums of Understanding- Community Network Directories- FACE Information and Referral Process

Page 3: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

What is Child Find? Systems used by school districts and states

to:

- identify- locate- evaluate

all children with disabilities, aged birth to 21, who are in need of early intervention or special education services. (Sec. 300.111 Child find.)

Page 4: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

Target populations Infants and Toddlers Preschoolers (ages 3–5) School-age children (6–16) who are

suspected of having a disability even though they are advancing from grade to grade

Youth age 17–21 who have dropped out of school or who are at risk for dropping out

Highly mobile children with disabilities—migrant children, homeless children

Page 5: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

Child Find ResponsibilitiesIdentify, Locate and Evaluate Children with Suspected Disabilities

State Education Agency

Develop comprehensive statewide plan

Coordinate services & delivery of free and appropriate public education (FAPE)

Monitor effectiveness of system

Report number of children eligible

Local Education Agency

Public awareness activities Parental/Community

Outreach Effective Screening

Methods Pre-referral systems for At-

Risk students, including optional early intervening services

Page 6: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

Conduct appropriate child find activities with school programs

Arrange for parents and children to get to Child Find locations

Coordinate with other outside entities and resources

Child Find (Sec. 300.111 Child find.)Identify, Locate and Evaluate Children with Suspected Disabilities

Page 7: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

DVD: Together We’re Betterproduced by the Hilton/Early Head Start Training Program in 2002

Page 8: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

“Together We’re Better” What stood out for you in the definitions of

“teams”?

What were some of the themes that the families and service providers shared about their working together for infants and toddlers with disabilities and their families?

What examples did you hear or see of people working together to support the inclusion of infants and toddlers with disabilities and their families?

Page 9: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

“Together We’re Better” Are there any collaborative strategies that

you have used in your work with community partners?

What ideas did you hear that might be helpful in your work with community team members?

Page 10: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 11: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

Resources of SupportInformal Systems of

Support

Formal Systems of Support

Informal systems of support are those that are free or are bartered – for example, “I do this for you and sometime you’ll do something for me.”

Formal systems of support are those that are paid for, often have set hours of operation, and involve professional service providers

Page 12: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 13: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 14: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

How does FACE support Child Find?Each child is provided appropriate screening (Child Find)

Ages & Stages Questionnaire (home-based)

Ages & Stages Questionnaire – Social Emotional (center-based, if needed)

Health Screening (vision & hearing)

Work Sampling System (center-based)

Page 15: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 16: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 17: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 18: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 19: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

Coordinated Services Resources Tribal Early Intervention Directors/Coordinators *State Part C Coordinators (ages birth – 2 yrs. old)

*State 619 Coordinators (3 yrs. old– 5 yrs. old)

*Check for updates to contacts at NECTAC: National Early Childhood Technical Assistance Center

http://www.nectac.org/ Click on Part C and/or Section 619 for your specific State.

Page 20: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 21: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 22: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 23: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community
Page 24: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

0.

No Awareness

1.

Awareness

2.

Communication

3.

Cooperation

4.

Collaboration

Service providers are not aware of other systems that provide services.

Service providers are aware of other programs or services, but organize their own activities solely on the basis of their own program and make no effort to connect with other systems.

Service providers actively share information and communicate on a formal basis.

Service providers modify their own service planning to avoid service duplication, improve linkages, and develop policies and procedures to support cooperative efforts.

Service providers jointly plan, share resources, conduct training, and address barriers that effect collaboration and quality services among service systems.

Where are you in this matrix?

Page 25: By: Angela Martinez Education Specialist - Early Childhood Programs Division of Performance and Accountability *****Coordinated Services***** Community

Thank-you