assistive technology webquest

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Teaching Teaching Students With Students With Special Needs Special Needs Navigating the World of Navigating the World of IEPs and Accommodations IEPs and Accommodations With No Fear! With No Fear!

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  • 1. Teaching Students With Special Needs Navigating the World of IEPs and Accommodations With No Fear!

2. Regular Teachers and Special Children

  • Regular education teachers are expected to teach special education students with as much passion as those who are considered regular education students.
  • Incorporating your special ed students into the positive community of your classroom is not hard!Sometimes you may need to make minor changes to assignments, procedures, or even the overall look of your classroom.
  • Using some of the techniques listed in this presentation will help you help your students.Use them with confidence and you will watch your students succeed!

3. Qualifying for an IEP

  • Students who have an IEP have a variety of disabilities:
    • ADD/ADHD
    • Autism
    • Hearing/Visual Impairment
    • Speech/Language Impairment
    • Mental Retardation
    • Development Delay
    • Emotional/Behavioral Disorder
    • Other Health Impairment (OHI)

4. IEP Lingo

  • Least Restrictive Environment
    • Students with IEPs are now generally served in the regular classroom, resource classes only being offered to those with extreme disabilities.They are entitle to the same education and social opportunities as their non-disabled peers.
  • Inclusion
    • This is the term used to describe including special ed students into the regular population.They attend the same classes as other students, but may receive additional support from inclusion teachers and receive accommodations.
  • Accommodations
    • This term is used to describe the changes educators are expected to make in the childs daily educational routine.

5. Decoding Typical IEP Accommodations

  • Presentation:
    • Large Print
      • Providing a large print dictionary for students when defining terms
      • Enlarging worksheets to a larger font
      • Providing students with a copy of power points with blanks for key words
    • Oral Instructions
      • Go over instructions with students to ensure comprehension
      • Ask students to then explain to you what they are supposed to do

6. Decoding Typical IEP Accommodations

  • Response
    • Verbal Responses
      • Allow students to verbally answer discussion questions
      • Allow tudents to type responses
      • Allow students to record answers in test booklet instead of bubbling their answers
  • Timing
    • Frequent Breaks
      • Give students broken up versions of long assignments, requiring them to get the next part from you
    • Extended Time
      • Students may need more time to complete assessments

7. Decoding Typical IEP Accommodations

  • Setting
    • Preferential Seating
      • Place student near your desk
      • Avoid open windows
    • Minimal Distractions
      • Do not over decorate your classroom with posters and colors
      • Place animals at the back of the classroom

8. Decoding Typical IEP Accommodations

  • Testing
    • Modify the test
      • Large font
      • Reduce choices
        • Use two/three choices instead of four in multiple choice questions
        • Break large groups of matching down- Groups of five instead of twenty
      • Include more white space on each page
    • Separate setting
      • Allow students to test in the library or another teachers room during their planning

9. Assistive Technology

  • ALDs
    • Essentially a hearing aid with boost to help filter our background noises and poor acoustics
  • Computerized Speech Recognition
    • Changes spoken speech into computer text
  • Closed Caption TV
    • Provides text to all movies/videos shown in the classroom

10. Assistive Technology

  • Mac is introducing many new technologies that will help students with disabilities in the classroom:
    • VoiceOver: Screen reader for visually impaired students
    • Screen Magnification
    • Touch Technology for low motor skilled students
  • Digital Textbooks
    • By using the above technology, students may read and complete assignments in the same aspect as regular ed students

11. Other Good Ideas

  • Use a homework folder or agenda to write down assignments
  • Ask special education teachers for help
    • General questions
    • Advice for modified instruction
    • Look over assessments, Is this correctly modified?
  • Email parents to report progress and keep communication constant

12. Other Good Ideas

  • Give hyperactive students a stress ball or beaded bracelet to keep in hand
  • Give pencil tappers a sponge as a tapping surface
  • Write all oral directions on the board for students to reference
  • Give students with motor skill difficulty large pencils or markers to write with
  • Trade your typed/neat notes for your students messy notes

13. Other Good Ideas

  • Talk to former/current teachers for techniques they use(d) for a particular student
  • Talk to the student ask them what they need or what would help them in class
  • Teach study/note taking skills

14. Resources

  • http://kidshealth.org/parent/positive/learning/iep.html
  • http://kidshealth.org/parent/medical/learning/adhd.html#a_ADHD%20in%20the%20Classroom
  • http://www.ldonline.org/article/8022
  • http://www.examiner.com/x-13056-West-Palm-Beach-K12-Education-Examiner~y2009m6d14-Assistive-technology-in-the-classroom-for-ADHD-students
  • http://www.asha.org/public/hearing/treatment/assist_tech.htm
  • http://www.tsbvi.edu/technology/principles.htm
  • http://www.apple.com/education/resources/
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Least_Restrictive_Environment