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Announcements Early Childhood Education Application Meeting Following Class in Graves Rm 3 Chapter 12 quiz in lab Clickers to Channel 41.

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Presentation on theme: "Announcements Early Childhood Education Application Meeting Following Class in Graves Rm 3 Chapter 12 quiz in lab Clickers to Channel 41."— Presentation transcript:

1 Announcements Early Childhood Education Application Meeting Following Class in Graves Rm 3 Chapter 12 quiz in lab Clickers to Channel 41

2 Indicate that you are in attendance today. A.I am in attendance, Jan. 30 th for BER 450 Lecture

3 Discussion Introduction of Clinical Experience Ethics RA Chapter 1 Practice Quiz National Dissemination Center for Children with Disabilities http://nichcy.org/research/ee/assessment- accommodations

4 Chapter 12 Practice Quiz Question

5 1. According to PL 94-142, which of the following is an essential responsibility for a teachers of students in an inclusive setting? A.Gathering information used to determine eligibility B.Developing an IEP C.Implementing an IEP D.All of the above

6 Assessing Students with Special Needs in an Inclusive Setting McMillan Chapter 12 6

7 Assessment of ALL Students “When students have the desired knowledge and skills, but have difficulty showing what they have learned through a particular mode of assessment, teachers have an obligation to remove the barriers for these students” (Taylor & Nolen, 2008). 7

8 Assessment of ALL Students Fair and Accurate Accommodations and/or Modifications for: “Gray” area students Culturally Diverse students English Language Learners (ELL) Limited English Proficiency (LEP) Students w/ specific, defined disabilities 8

9 Who Receives Special Services? Individuals - birth through age 21 Students w/ comprehension, auditory, visual, language (ELL/LEP), physical, behavioral, attention difficulties (ADD/ADHD), and mental illness Gifted Students Students may be identified and served at some point in their academic career, but not the entire time 9

10 Response to Intervention (RTI) What is it? Using the model to identify students with learning disabilities Using the model to provide effective, evidence-based instruction to all students – Ongoing data collection of instructional effectiveness

11 RTI Tiered Approach Tertiary Prevention Secondary Prevention Primary Prevention 80% 15% 5%

12 Assessment Specific Accommodations Traditional Assessment Alternative Assessment – Performance Assessment – Portfolio Assessment

13 Assessment Specific Accommodations Traditional Assessment – description of Pros/Benefits teachers don’t typically need to make out a special test students know what to expect can be used in an alternative testing location may work better for some students who don’t do well with a more abstract form of academic measure – portfolio, reflection, projects, etc...

14 Assessment Specific Accommodations Cons/Problems takes more time may require an aide textbook tests not tailor made to fit students needs Students with visual impairments may find font on a TA to be too small; Vocabulary and sentence structure can be too complicated for comprehension of items.

15 Assessment Specific Accommodations Types of Typical Accommodations/Modifications for TA – Accommodations- ELL students needs a translation dictionary, physical disabilities may need someone to write for them – Modifications- similar content but with less-sophisticated level make test out to be plain and simple – (not visually distracting) – Eliminate volume on a longer assessment – Provide breaks for longer assessments

16 Modification Examples Similar Content – Standard Item: Compare and contrast the livability of a rural and an urban community. – Modified Item: Compare and contrast the livability of a rural and an urban community. Compare by telling how the two communities are alike. Give 2 examples. Contrast by telling how the two communities are different. Give 2 examples.

17 Modifications Command Words and Definitions (Table 12.4)

18 Assessment Specific Accommodations – Modify test/item format provide word banks use a larger font create a simple design on the page line up items vertically down the page aid students in checking for missed/skipped items. – Change testing location and allow for retesting or “starting over” – Similar formatting on 1 st page for all students and monitor all students using a similar manner – Oral administration and/or oral response

19 Assessment Specific Accommodations Alternative Assessment – Performance Assessment Description of... – Pro/Benefit – All students are assessed – No stress or test anxiety – Special learning objectives stated in IEP can be met – Not traditional » Helps with social skills » Can be individualized to show progress – Learning occurs DURING the assessment – More engaging and encourages self-assessment

20 Assessment Specific Accommodations – Cons and Problems: – must follow IEP accommodations, must use only necessary adaptations – can entail a large amount of reading or writing – can ask students to move outside their “comfort zone” – leading to frustration and embarrassment – mobility issues can prevent students from being able to participate, some activities will exclude these students

21 Assessment Specific Accommodations Alternative Assessment Types of Typical Accommodations/Modifications for PA – Longer time – Dictation of written parts to a voice recognizer or note taker – Translation dictionary – Provide clear, short, simple directions – Teacher goes over students’ projects before final assessment

22 Assessment Specific Accommodations Alternative Assessment – Portfolio Assessment Description of... Pros – allows ongoing assessment across environments – promote critical thinking through the self- evaluations – provides a way to examine a student’s performance from a variety of perspectives – individualized documentation of growth

23 Assessment Specific Accommodations Alternative Assessment – Cons » become bulky and difficult to manage and store » time consuming » can take up to much time to compile » omit traditional standardize evaluation tools. » very subjective in nature » organization can be problematic

24 Assessment Specific Accommodations Alternative Assessment – Portfolio Assessment Types of Typical Accommodations/Modifications for PA – using rubrics that match w/ IEP goals – focusing on specific goals – evaluate portfolio for individual goals rather than whole class comparison – Based on work generated by the individual instead of being compared to others. – Aid students with organization – Aid students with self evaluation


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