Recommended citation: Assessing Special Education Students SCASS (AA-AAS Study Group), 2008. Introduction to teaching literacy to students with cognitive.

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Presentation transcript:

Recommended citation: Assessing Special Education Students SCASS (AA-AAS Study Group), Introduction to teaching literacy to students with cognitive disabilities. Washington, D.C., Council of Chief State School Officers Module 1 of 6 Introduction to Teaching Literacy to Students with Cognitive Disabilities

Slide 2 of ___ Modules developed by Special Education Research Consultants under the direction of Lynn Ahlgrim- Delzell, Ph.D. with contributions by: Tracie-Lynn Zakas, M.Ed. Shawnee Wakeman, Ph.D. Pamela Mims, M.Ed. Katherine Trela, ABD Ella Glass and ASES SCASS AA-AAS Study Group Members

Slide 3 of ___ Content of the Modules Module 1 - Introduction to Teaching Literacy to Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities (SSCD)* Why we teach academics Summary of current research and evidence- based practices National Reading Panel (2000) & Put Reading First (2003) recommendations Theoretical foundation for literacy instruction Universal Design for Learning * Within these modules, SSCD refers to students with significant cognitive disabilities

Slide 4 of ___ Module 2 – Literacy Development and Symbolic Communication Stages of literacy development Phonemic awareness and phonics skills Levels of communication skills used by students with significant disabilities Embedding Alternative and Augmentative Communication (AAC) devices Content of the Modules

Slide 5 of ___ Module 3 - Elementary grade level literature Elements of a story-based lesson (SBL) for elementary students Ideas for adaptation of grade level books & using Alternative and Augmentative Communication (AAC) devices Module 4 - Middle and high school literacy Elements of a story-based lesson (SBL) for middle/ secondary students Adapting grade level books & using Alternative and Augmentative Communication (AAC) devices Content of the Modules

Slide 6 of ___ Module 5 - Literacy in the Individualized Education Plan (IEP) Lesson planning. Standards-based IEPs. Developing literacy lessons that align with general education content standards. Module 6 – Families What is literacy and why it is important. Literacy activities families can do at home. Homework. Content of the Modules

Slide 7 of ___ Purpose of the Modules Provide direction to educators in teaching literacy skills to students with significant cognitive disabilities (SSCD). States add eligibility criteria here.

Slide 8 of ___ IDEA Mandates IDEA (1997) first mentioned access to the general curriculum and alternate assessments. IDEA (2004) on Access to the General Curriculum. Evaluation procedures include information about involvement and progress in gen ed curriculum §614(d)(1)(A)(i)(II)(aa).

Slide 9 of ___ IDEA Mandates IEP includes information on how the disability affects involvement and progress in gen ed curriculum (§614(d)(1)(A)(i)(I)(aa)) Revise IEP to address lack of expected progress in gen ed curriculum (§614(d)(4)(A)(ii)(I))

Slide 10 of ___ No Child Left Behind of 2001 Schools accountable for ALL students, including students with disabilities (34 CFR §200.13(b)(7)(C)) Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) in Language Arts/reading, math, and science (34 CFR §200.2(a)(1)) Up to 1% of students in alternate achievement standards can be counted as proficient (34 CFR §200.13(c)(1)(i)) Alternate assessments are aligned to grade-level academic content expectations (34 CFR §200.6(a)(3)(ii)(A))

Slide 11 of ___ Historical Curricular Changes in Special Education* 1970s - “Developmental Model” for infant and early childhood curriculum, developmental stages, mental age 1980s - Functional life skills curriculum – Skills necessary for day-to-day living – Principals of normalization * Adapted from Browder, Flowers, Ahlgrim- Delzell, Karvonen, Spooner & Algozzine, 2004

Slide 12 of ___ Historical Curricular Changes in Special Education (con’t.) 1990s - Social inclusion & self-determination. 2000s - General curriculum access, academic content, and alternate assessment. Includes functional skills, social inclusion & self determination still important.

Slide 13 of ___ What Teachers Need to Implement General Curriculum Access Understand what it means to teach general curriculum content aligned to grade level standards (Module 5) Examples of interventions to use for planning instruction (Modules 3 & 4) State examples of what they think teachers to implement state policy/practices

Slide 14 of ___ What Teachers Need to Implement General Curriculum Access (con’t.) Validation that academic goals and outcomes are valued and meaningful to students and their parents Relevance of the skills and how they can be applied in real life contexts Students may need longer to acquire these skills and may master less content over the course of their education Browder, Ahlgrim-Delzell, Courtade, Gibbs, Mraz, & Flowers, in press

Slide 15 of ___ Why We Should Teach Academics SSCD have not had the opportunity to learn Previously held low expectations for SSCD prevented us from teaching academics (Downing, 2006) When given expectations of becoming literate, students can become literate (Katims & Biklen, 2001) Previous lack of focus on reading for SSCD in teacher prep textbooks (Katims, 2000) Difficulty of making literacy materials accessible to SSCD results in fewer opportunities (Koppenhaver & Yoder, 1993)

Slide 16 of ___ Why We Should Teach Academics (con’t.) Students and their families value academics* Academics can also be functional Double standard; students without intellectual disabilities do not have to master functional skills to be eligible to learn to read *Browder, Ahlgrim-Delzell, Courtade-Little, & Snell, 2006

Slide 17 of ___ Why Teach Literacy? Allows SSCD opportunities to experience same rich reading experiences as their peers Literature provides information and ideas SSCD may not access in other ways – smaller social spheres – fewer life experiences Even if students do not become independently literate, reading can be fun Browder, Gibbs, Ahlgrim-Delzell, Courtade, Mraz, & Flowers, in press.

Slide 18 of ___ Why Teach Literacy? (con’t.) Literacy skills learned early can be applied to learning core content materials later such as science, civics, etc. Literacy skills can have functional applications such as reading Want Ads, filling out job applications, making a grocery list or following a daily schedule

Slide 19 of ___ State Policies and Practices Blank slide for states to insert specific relevant policy or practices related to aligning grade level content in reading/language arts

Slide 20 of ___ The Science of Reading Five essential components for learning to read (National Reading Panel, 2000) 1. Phonemic awareness - producing individual letter sounds, syllabication, segmentation, blending, rhymes 2. Phonics - Pairing sounds with letter-sound association and using this knowledge to decode unknown words 3. Vocabulary - Individual words easily read and comprehended 4. Comprehension of text - Understanding meaning of passages of text 5. Fluency with use of symbols/words - Rate and accuracy of reading words

Slide 21 of ___ Put Reading First (2003) Concentrate on only 1-2 types of phoneme manipulation when teaching phonemic awareness – Blending and segmenting recommended – Use letters when manipulating letter sounds Systematic and explicit phonics instruction makes a significant contribution to children's growth in reading

Slide 22 of ___ Reading Studies with SSCD 1975 – 2005 Browder, Wakeman, Spooner, Ahlgrim-Delzell & Algozzine (2006)

Slide 23 of ___ Literature Review Findings Most of the research focused on learning sight words (vocabulary) Effective instruction of sight words using – massed trials – systematic prompting and fading Comprehension of the sight words occurred in 1/4 of the studies – Students memorized words, but not meaning Few studies taught phonemic awareness or phonics needed in order to learn to read

Slide 24 of ___ Evidence SSCD Can Learn Phonemic Awareness & Phonics Acquisition of letter-sound correspondences (Hoogeveen, Smeets, & Lancioni, 1989; Hoogeveen Smeets, & van der Houven, 1987) Increase in: reading sounds, blending sounds into words, and word reading (Bracey, Maggs, & Morath, 1975) Decrease in word recognition errors using phonic analysis and error correction (Singh & Singh, 1985; Singh & Singh, 1988) Used Corrective Reading program to teach decoding (Bradform, Shippen, Alberto, Houchins, & Flores, 2006)

Slide 25 of ___ Translating the “Science” for Students Who Are SSCD & Non-verbal Current practices for teaching these skills requires verbal fluency For SSCD who are nonverbal – We need to translate these skills for use with AAC devices – Various adaptations for nonverbal responding (See Module 2) Fluency may not be applicable to students with physical or oral motor difficulties

Slide 26 of ___ Model for Literacy Instruction for Students with Severe Disabilities This conceptual model of literacy instruction is the guide used throughout the modules as a theoretical basis for providing literacy instruction Two components – Increased Independence as a Reader – Lifelong Access to Literature Browder, Gibbs, Ahlgrim-Delzell, Courtade, Mraz & Flowers (in press)

Slide 27 of ___ Increased Independence as a Reader Focus on learning to read in elementary grades using phonics instruction adapted for student responding (Module 2) - Explicit phonics instruction Focus on functional application of reading in middle/secondary adapted for student responding (Module 4) - Phonics instruction occurs in the context of a reading activity

Slide 28 of ___ Lifelong Access to Literature Focus for all students to access age and grade-level appropriate literature continues throughout life (Module 4) Type of material changes Level of abstraction changes Type of reading activity changes

Slide 29 of ___ Universal Design for Learning* Provides jumping off place for us to begin thinking about adapting and modifying grade level curriculum for SSCD Calls for flexibility in curriculum for ALL students by means of: - Representation - Expression - Engagement *Center for Applied Technology, 1999.

Slide 30 of ___ Flexible Representation Alternative modes to present information Reduce perceptual barriers - Digital text that can be altered in size, color etc, - Audio with captions - Adding images/graphics Reduce cognitive barriers - Summaries of “Big ideas” - Providing background knowledge and links to prior learning - Embedding applied behavior analysis based instructional strategies in lessons

Slide 31 of ___ Flexible Expression Alternative modes to demonstrate learning Reduce physical barriers – Alternatives to pencil and paper – Alternatives to verbal barriers Reduce cognitive barriers – Conspicuous learning strategies Center for Applied Technology, 1999.

Slide 32 of ___ Flexible Engagement Alternative modes for SSCD to participate in the learning environment Consideration of individual culture, experience, motivation Flexible alternatives for – Balancing support and challenge – Balancing novelty and familiarity – Balancing age-relevant and cultural interests – Student input into curricular materials Center for Applied Technology, 1999.

Slide 33 of ___ Covered in Module One: Why we teach academics Summary of current research and evidence-based practices National Reading Panel (2000) & Put Reading First (2003) recommendations Theoretical foundation for literacy instruction Universal Design for Learning

Slide 34 of ___ References Bracey, S., Maggs, A., & Morath. P. (1975). The effects of direct phonics approach in teaching reading to six moderately retarded children: Acquisition and mastery learning stages. Exceptional Child, 22, Bradford, S., Shippen. M., Alberto, P., Houchins, D., & Flores, M. (2006). Using systematic instruction to teach decoding skills to middle school students with moderate intellectual disabilities. Education and Training in Developmental Disabilities, 41, Browder, D., Ahlgrim-Delzell, L., Flowers, C. (2004). Parent Survey on the Impact of Alternate Assessment. Unpublished manuscript.

Slide 35 of ___ Browder, D., Ahlgrim-Delzell, L., Courtade-Little, G., & Snell, M. (2006). General Curriculum Access. InM. Snell & F. Brown (Eds.), Instruction for students with severe disabilities (6 th ed., pp ). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Merrill Prentice Hall. Browder, D. Flowers, C., Ahlgrim-Delzell, L., Karvonen, M., Spooner, F., & Algozzine, B. (2004). The alignment of alternate assessment content with academic and functional curricula. The Journal of Special Education, 37, Browder, D. Gibbs, S. Ahlgrim-Delzell, L., Courtade, G., Mraz, & Flowers, C. (in press). Literacy for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities: What Should We Teach and What Should We Hope to Achieve? Remedial and Special Education. References (con’t.)

Slide 36 of ___ Browder, D., & Spooner, F. (Eds.) (2006). Teaching language arts, math & science to students with significant cognitive disabilities. Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brookes. Browder D. Wakeman, S. Spooner, F., Ahlgrim-Delzell, L., & Algozzine, B. (2006). Research on reading for individuals with significant cognitive disabilities. Exceptional Children, 72, Brown, L., Nietupski, J., & Hamre-Nietupski, S. (1976). Criterion of ultimate functioning. In M. A. Thomas (Ed.), Hey, don’t forget about me! Education’s investment in the severely, profoundly, and multiply handicapped (pp. 2-15). Reston, VA: Council for Exceptional Children. References (con’t.)

Slide 37 of ___ Center for Applied Special Technology [CAST]. (1999). Three essential qualities for universal design for learning. Retrieved February 27, 2003, from Brown, L., Nietupski, J., & Hamre-Nietupski, S. (1976). Criterion of ultimate functioning. In M. A. Thomas (Ed.), Hey, don’t forget about me! Education’s investment in the severely, profoundly, and multiply handicapped (pp. 2-15). Reston, VA: Council for Exceptional Children. Center for Applied Special Technology [CAST]. (1999). Three essential qualities for universal design for learning. Retrieved February 27, 2003, from References (con’t.)

Slide 38 of ___ Downing, J. (2006). Building literacy for students at the presymbolic and early symbolic levels. In D. Browder & F. Spooner (Eds.), Teaching language arts, math and science to students with significant cognitive disabilities (pp.39-92). Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brookes. Hoogeveen, J. Smeets, P., & Lancioni, G. (1989). Teaching moderately mentally retarded children. Research in Developmental Disabilities, 10, Hoogeveen, F. R., Smeets, P. M., & van der Houven, J. E. (1987). Establishing letter-sound correspondences in children classified as trainable mentally retarded. Education and Training in Mental Retardation, 22, Individuals with Disabilities Education Act Amendments of 2004, 20 U.S.C. §1400 et seq. References (con’t.)

Slide 39 of ___ Katims, D. S. (2000). Literacy instruction for people with mental retardation. Historical highlights and contemporary analysis. Education and Training in Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, 35, Kliewer, C., & Biklen, D. (2001). "School's Not Really a Place for Reading": A Research Synthesis of the Literate Lives of Students with Severe Disabilities. Journal of the Association for Persons with Severe Handicaps, 26, Koppenhaver, D. A., & Yoder, D. E. (1993). Classroom literacy instruction for children with severe speech and physical impairments (SSPI): What is and what might be. Topics in Language Disorders, 3(2), -15. References (con’t.)

Slide 40 of ___ National Institute for Literacy. (2001). Put reading first: The research building blocks for teaching children to read. Washington, DC: Author. Retrieved April 25, 2005, from Rbooklet.pdf National Reading Panel. (2000). Teaching children to read: An evidence-based assessment of the scientific research literature on reading and its implications for reading instruction. Washington, DC: U. S. Department of Health and Human Services [NIH Pub. No ]. No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, Pub. L. No , 115 Stat (2002). References (con’t.)

Slide 41 of ___ Wehmeyer, M. L., Sands, D. J., Knowlton, H. E., & Kozleski, E. B. (2002). Self-determination: Curriculum augmentation and student involvement. In M. L. Wehmeyer, D. J. Sands, H. E. Knowlton, & E. B. Kozleski, Teaching students with mental retardation: Providing access to the general curriculum (pp ). Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brookes. Wolfsenberger, W. (1972). Normalization; The principal of normalization in human services. Toronto: National Institute for Mental Retardation. References (con’t.)

End of Module 1