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Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

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Page 1: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Shelton Special Education

November 7, 2012

Molly Baasch

Page 2: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Special Education Program Guidance

• WAC 392-172A• Shelton Special Education Policies and

Procedures• Technical Assistance Papers (IDEA; Discipline)• Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP)

Page 3: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Special EducationWAC 392-172A-01175

• Special Education means specially designed instruction, at no cost to the parents, to meet the unique needs of a student eligible for special education, including instruction conducted in the classroom, in the home, in hospitals, and institutions and in other settings; and instruction in physical education.

Page 4: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Where Do we Begin?

• Birth to Three

Page 5: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Eligible Students Birth to age Three

• The early intervention system of services is provided under federal law, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Part C of the IDEA provides the federal mandate for services for young children with special needs, aged birth to three years.

Page 6: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Birth to Three

• Referrals from Lead Agency (Holly Ridge)• Provide Evaluations/Services• Natural Environment

Page 7: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

So Now What…

• Age three and beyond…

Page 8: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

FAPE

• WAC 392-172A-02000 Each school district, public agency, and residential or day schools operated pursuant to chapters 28A. 190 and 72.40 RCW shall provide every student eligible for special education between the age of three and twenty-one years, a free appropriate public education program (FAPE).

Page 9: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

FAPE cont.

• The right to FAPE includes special education for students who have been suspended or expelled from school.

Page 10: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Who, What, When, Where?

• Who?• Serve eligible students residing in the Shelton

School District.• Full-Time Students• Part-Time (Ancillary) Students• Private School Students

Page 11: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

What?• Student individual need as determined by IEP

Team

Page 12: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

When?

• Time frame determined by IEP Team

Page 13: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Where?

• School• Private School• Home• Hospital• Setting determined by IEP team

Page 14: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Three Prong Rule for Eligibility• Eligible Students - students ages 3 – 21 meeting the 3 prong test:• (1) Student has a disability in one of thirteen categories: (Intellectual

Disability* ; hearing impairment; speech impairment; visual impairment; emotional behavioral disability; orthopedic impairment; autism; traumatic brain injury; other health impairment; specific learning disability; deaf-blindness; multiple disabilities; developmental delay (kids 3 – 8).

• (2) The disability creates an adverse educational impact that cannot be addressed exclusively through general education with or without individual accommodations.

• (3) Requires specially designed instruction (SDI). SDI – adapting as appropriate to the needs of an eligible student - the content; methodology; delivery and/or instruction.

Page 15: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Special Education Eligibility Prong One

• Student has a disability in one of thirteen categories: (Intellectual Disability* ; hearing impairment; speech impairment; visual impairment; emotional behavioral disability; orthopedic impairment; autism; traumatic brain injury; other health impairment; specific learning disability; deaf-blindness; multiple disabilities; developmental delay (kids 3 – 8).

Page 16: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Special Education Eligibility Prong Two

• (2) The disability creates an adverse educational impact that cannot be addressed exclusively through general education with or without individual accommodations.

Page 17: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Special Education Requirement

• Students with disabilities must be taught and make progress in the general education curriculum.

• To the maximum extent appropriate in the general education environment with students who are non-disabled.

• Students with disabilities are held accountable to the same subject matter and skills children without disabilities are expected to learn.

Page 18: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Adverse Educational Impact

• The IEP Team’s determination of adverse educational impact shall be based upon the results of assessments and/or data sources determined by the team to be necessary to validate the effect of the disability on educational performance. In most situations, the IEP Team shall consider multiple assessments/data sources for determination of adverse effect.

Page 19: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Specially Designed Instruction

• SDI – adapting as appropriate to the needs of an eligible student - the content; methodology; delivery and/or instruction.

Page 20: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Do All Disabled Kids Qualify for Special Education Services?

•NO!• Must meet all three prongs for eligibility.

• All kids with disabilities are entitled to a 504 Plan – an accommodation plan that allows equal access for students that have a physical or mental impairment which substantially limits one or more major life activities. A student cannot have an IEP and a 504 plan simultaneously.

Page 21: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

What’s The Big Idea?

• The Shelton School District is required to serve the unique needs of the special education eligible student, birth to age 21, that result from the student’s disability and must ensure access to the general curriculum so that the student can meet the educational standards within the jurisdiction of Shelton School District that apply to all students.

• All at no cost to the parent.

Page 22: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Compliance

• 20 Indicators – see handout• Federal Reports • State Reports• Timelines• Determiner Levels – see handout• Paperwork, paperwork, paperwork!

Page 23: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Shelton Special Education

• 587 students currently receiving SDI (K-12)• 71 pre-school students receiving SDI (3-5)• 23 (0 – 3)• 37 Special Education Teachers• 5 School Psychologists • 6 SLPs – 292 kids• 2.2 Motor therapists (OT/PT) – 94 kids• 32.45 FTE Classified Para-professionals

Page 24: Shelton Special Education November 7, 2012 Molly Baasch

Questions?????

• Discussion