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Published byNorah Arnold Modified over 9 years ago
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Ontario’s Exceptional Students Agreement on generalities Disagreement on specifics Understanding each others’ perspectives Political overtones Definition determines identification and access to resources
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Ontario’s Student Population 1997 2, 12, 039 Total 194,140 (9.24%) Exceptional
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Elementary TotalExceptional Male716,15765,832 (9%) Female679,34236,653 (5%) 1,395,499101,485 (7%)
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Secondary TotalExceptional Male358,54354,936 (15%) Female340,03729,759 (8.8%)
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Elementary 1997 Male Female % ED614111237 Autistic 14734452 Deaf90011142 LD32,40316,02048 Speech430020006 Gifted8488654315
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Elementary 1997 Male Female % Dev Mild522740489 Dev D291719925 Blind332228.5 Deaf/Blind 4435- Other Physical 7845691 Multi282315324
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Secondary 1997 Male Female % ED34129155 Autistic549152.8 Deaf4085011 LD31,57814,35054 Speech17999253 Gifted9303744320
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Secondary 1997 Male Female % Dev Mild431431959 Dev13209843 Blind249164.5 Deaf/Blind 25- Other Physical367315.8 Multi16358123
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Provincial Schools Brantford-W.Ross Macdonald School for deaf and deaf/blind students Schools for deaf students: London-Robarts School Belleville-Sir James Whitney School Milton-Ernest C. Drury
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Demonstration Schools Amethyst School in London Sagonaska School in Belleville Trillium School in Milton For students with ADHD and severe learning disabilities Residential schools with small populations
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Demonstration Schools Centre Jules-Leger in Ottawa for deaf and severely LD in French
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412 Special Schools in 1997 Hospital Schools Care/Treat- MentCentr es Male5765070 Female4401874 Total10166944
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Service Delivery Three part process 1. Identify special needs 2. Choose most appropriate setting 3. Plan, implement and regularly evaluate an individualized program
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Identification Assessment- gathering/interpreting relevant information about the student Intelligence, abilities, strengths, needs, behaviors Health, psychological, behavioral profiles
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Who conducts assessments? Classroom teacher assesses strengths and needs in classroom Resource teacher Clinician’s such as educational psychologist
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Assessment Results Used in appropriate placement decision Guide development of an IEP
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Placement Regular classroom Self-contained classroom Combination of the two
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Placement by %-age of Exceptional Population Reg & suppor t Reg & WD aid PT SC & Reg SC Elem30331819 Sec5228129 Total41311514
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Program IEP Written plan of action Summarizes student’s strengths, interests and needs Transition plans for ages 14 and over
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IPRC Identification, placement and review committees Identification Placement May make recommendations for support Parental agreement Program begins
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Service Delivery Classroom teacher Assistant Resource teacher Consultants
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Service Delivery Special input from: Parents School teams Advisory groups Advocacy groups Social agencies Specialists
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Service Delivery What personnel are involved? How much support? For how long? Where? Primary responsibility? When and how reviewed?
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Service Delivery Schools manage Board-centered, e.g unique needs, blindness Integration of school and board
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School Team Common sense approach Cooperation and support Committee of staff members Supports special education Pre-referral opportunity
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Multi-disciplinary Team Educators and professionals Initial stage meetings to determine placement and programming Meet once or twice Ongoing delivery by certain members Management and organization issues
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