presented by nancy a. snodgrass, m.a. bilingual special education resource teacher turlock unified...

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Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English Learner Programs (209) 667-2407 [email protected] [email protected] Part 1

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Page 1: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A.

Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher

Turlock Unified School District

Professional Development and English Learner Programs

(209) 667-2407

[email protected]

[email protected]

Part 1

Page 2: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

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Page 3: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

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Page 4: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

 

• An English Learner needs to be in school in the U.S. for at least a year before being assessed for special education services.

•  An English Learner who is demonstrating “difficulties” with acquiring English should not hear or speak his/her primary language at home.

• An English Learner will show more academic progress if receiving special education services (because of the individualized/small group instruction), even when the student does not truly have a learning disability.

   

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Page 5: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

 

• An English Learner can have a disability and/or language disorder only in English.

• If an English Learner is found to have a learning disability, then it is a priority for the student to receive special education services rather than EL services.

 • When an English Learner is identified as having a

disability, instruction should occur only in English so as not to confuse the student.

 

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Page 6: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

“There is disproportional representation of English Learners in some categories of special education disabilities in California schools.”

What does this mean?

J. Butterfield, 2010

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Page 7: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

K-4th grade—missed representation

Why?– “low” scores attributed only to second language

acquisition– arbitrary timelines for referrals (e.g. “EL must be in

school for at least 2 years before a referral can be made.”)

– assessment procedures

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Page 8: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

5th-12th—misrepresentation

Why?◦ “low” language skills in both languages◦ use of “medical model” (e.g. something is “wrong” with

the student)◦ lack of interventions◦ do not meet criteria for reclassification for RFEP◦ assessment procedures

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Page 9: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

• The student often needs to hear speech that is slower than normal.

• There is often a delay between the time a question is asked and a response is given.

• The student often needs to have questions and/or directions repeated.

• The student needs to sit in the front of the room.• The student learns better with visual input rather

than auditory.• A student appears to be nonverbal, but may

understand what is said.

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Page 10: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

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Page 11: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

When an English Learner is referred to the school site’s Student Study Team (SST):

1. The first step is to gather information regarding the specific difficulty the EL is experiencing.

2. The second step is to look at why the EL may be experiencing this difficulty.

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Page 12: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

When gathering information about the specific difficulty an English Learner is experiencing, there may be a tendency to describe general performance behaviors, such as:

“The student is not making progress.”

“The student is below grade level.”

“The student is having problems reading.”

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Page 13: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

Statements such as these do not describe the specific difficulty that has been observed, which then makes it difficult to design appropriate interventions.

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Page 14: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

In addition, not knowing the specific difficulty an EL is experiencing makes it a challenge to determine if the perceived weakness is due to extrinsic factors (e.g. inappropriate instruction, normal process of second language acquisition, lack of formal education, etc.)……………

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Page 15: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

…….or a possible intrinsic factor (such as a learning disability, language disorder, etc.)

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If an EL is experiencing difficulties only in English, but not in the primary language, then the problem could be due to extrinsic factors rather than an intrinsic disability.

Page 16: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

When describing the specific difficulty the English Learner is experiencing, the difficulty needs to be measurable and observable.

Describe before diagnosing!

Ask ”what” before “why.”

Why is this important?

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Page 17: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

Student………….

1) ……… is not picking up English. 2) ……… is below grade level. 3) ……… has difficulty doing multiplication and division problems.  4) ……… is very low academically. 5) ……… can decode well, but doesn’t understand what she reads.

6) ……… cannot remember multi-step directions. 

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Page 18: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

across different contexts (such as different subject areas)

in different environments (such as home and school)

and in both the primary language and English

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Page 19: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

SEVEN AREAS TO CONSIDER: 

1. LEARNING ENVIRONMENT (type of instruction, materials used, range of services offered, use of native language, assessment used, etc.)

2.  PERSONAL AND FAMILY (socio-economic status, expectations, experiential background, family dynamics, etc.)

3. PHYSICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL (medical conditions, social and emotional development, etc.) 

 

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Page 20: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

4. PREVIOUS SCHOOLING (amount and quality of previous schooling in both English and the student’s native language, attendance, mobility, etc.)

5. ORAL LANGUAGE AND LITERACY DEVELOPMENT (in both the native language and in English)

6. ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT (in both the native language and in English)

7. CROSS-CULTURAL (cultural differences and effect on learning)

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Page 21: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

The way we THINK (COGNITION) The way we INTERACT (BEHAVIOR) The way we COMMUNICATE (LANGUAGE) The way we TRANSMIT KNOWELDGE to the

next generation (EDUCATION)

C. Collier, 1988

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Page 22: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

1. Prior educational history:

* Look at the TOTAL number of days the student has attended school.

* Divide that number by 180.

* This number will give you the approximate maximum grade level at which the student may be achieving.

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Page 23: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

Ask the following questions:

a. Did the student attend school on a consistent basis or are there gaps?

b. Did the student move from schools on a traditional schedule to schools on a year-round schedule, and visa-versa?

c. Did the student complete one grade at one site?

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Page 24: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

According to research conducted with migrant students, for every move a student makes, he/she loses at least one month of instruction, even if moving from School A on Friday to School B on Monday within the same district.

Why?

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Page 25: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

d. How often has the student been absent?

Why?

Has the student ever been reported to SARB (School Attendance Review Board)?

A student may not learn if not in school.

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Page 26: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

• When students miss a day of school, it actually puts them two days behind their classmates.

• Students who are absent an average of 15 days a year miss a year’s worth of school before their senior year.

• Students who miss eight days or more a year may not be on track to graduate.

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Page 27: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

 • Infrequent schooling• Inconsistent schooling• Inferior schooling• Interrupted schooling• Insufficient schooling

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Page 28: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

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Grade Dates School # of days absent/present

K 10/10/05- Wakefield 8/19

K 12/14/05- Hughes 0/2

K 1/13/06- Wakefield 9/63

K 2/1/06- Chatom ?/?

K 4/20/06- Burbank 2/25

1st 8/28/06- Fremont 0/3

K 8/31/06- Fremont 10/70

K 1/30/07- Beard 1/6

1st 8/7/07- Wakefield 11/49

2nd 11/26/07- Wakefield 15/105

2nd 8/20/07-3/31/09 Wakefield 23/143

Page 29: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

2. Report cards:

a. What progress did the student make in specific subjects for previous grade levels?

b. Has the student received consistent ELD, SDAIE and/or L1 instruction?

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Page 30: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

3. Prior referrals/comments in cumulative file:

a. Interventions:

Is there documentation of any interventions?

If so, is there data indicating how long the student received the intervention, along with pre- and post-assessment data?

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Page 31: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

b. SST:

Has the student previously been referred to the Student Study Team?

If so, what were the concerns, what was the “Action Plan,” and what were the results of the plan?

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Page 32: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

c. IEP:

Has the student ever been tested for special education?

If so, did he/she not qualify due to a lack of discrepancy or no processing deficit, or both?

What instructional recommendations were made?

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Page 33: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

4. Health history:

a. Vision tests:

Has the student always passed the vision tests?

When was the last test given?

Were tests given for both near and far distance?

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Page 34: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

b. Hearing tests:

Has the student always passed the hearing tests?

When was the last test given?

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Page 35: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

c. Health inventory: If a health inventory was completed by the parent, look for the following information:

Was the student born premature?

Did the student need oxygen at birth?

At what age did the student first begin to speak?

Did the parent note any specific health problems?

Did the parent note any problems with the student’s speech?

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Page 36: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

5. Tests: Look at the progress made on standardized tests, such as CST, CELDT, etc.

a. On the CST, has the student stayed at the same “level” each year in each subject?

b. Has the student shown progress on the bar graph for the reading and writing portions of the CELDT?

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Page 37: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

There is nothing as unequal as the equal treatment of unequals.

Oliver Wendell Holmes

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Page 38: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

Should this student be referred for special education assessment?

Why or why not?

Which factors influenced your decision?

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Page 39: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

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1) Attended school in U.S. for kindergarten and first grade (a different school for each grade)

2) Attended school in Palestine for 2nd and 3rd grades

3) Did not know any English when he began kindergarten and was “limited” in his oral Arabic language skills

4) At the beginning of 1st grade scored “Early Advanced” in listening and speaking on the CELDT

5) This school year scored at “Intermediate” level for listening, “Early Advanced” for speaking, and “Beginning” for reading and writing

Page 40: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

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6) Current oral skills in Arabic considered “Fluent”

7) Informal reading and writing skills in Arabic considered “fluent”

8) Report cards from 2nd and 3rd grade in Palestine indicated average to above average grades in all subjects

9) Received private tutoring in Palestine to learn more Arabic

10) Interventions: tutoring from: America Reads tutor, ROP students and parent volunteers (current)

11) Just got glasses for reading

Page 41: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

1) Currently in the 8th grade

1) Began school in the U.S. in the middle of 2nd grade

1) Did not attend school in Mexico

2) Attended the same elementary school from 2nd-6th grade with no attendance problems

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Page 42: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

5) Current CELDT: Intermediate for Listening and Speaking, Beginning for Reading, and Early Intermediate for Writing

6) Attended summer school four different times

7) Received additional “pull-out” literacy instruction in 2nd-5th grades

8) “Read 180” intervention class for 7th grade

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Page 43: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

Additional questions for the Student Study Team and assessors to consider prior to making a referral of an EL for special education assessment:

1) Has the student received intensive interventions using appropriate materials and strategies designed for ELs, and have they been implemented with fidelity over time and the student still demonstrated little or no progress?

2) Does the team have data regarding the rate of learning over time to support that the difficulties are most likely due to an intrinsic disability rather than extrinsic factors?

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Page 44: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

3) Has the team consulted with the family members regarding learning patterns and language use in the home?

3) Are the error patterns seen in L1 similar to the patterns seen in L2 (if student has sufficient primary language skills)?

4) Are the learning difficulties and/or language acquisition patterns manifested over time similar in different settings and in different contexts?

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Page 45: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

IF THERE IS A LACK OF PROGRESS AND ALL APPROPRIATE GENERAL EDUCATION INTERVENTIONS HAVE BEEN EXHAUSTED…………………….

……… then a referral is considered for special education assessment IF the student’s “difficulties” are NOT due to:

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Page 46: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

1. a lack of opportunity to learn

2. a lack of English

3. attendance/mobility

4. environmental or economic disadvantage

5. cultural factors

6. a lack of instruction in ELA and math

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Page 47: Presented by Nancy A. Snodgrass, M.A. Bilingual Special Education Resource Teacher Turlock Unified School District Professional Development and English

IT’S WHAT YOU LEARN AFTERYOU KNOW IT ALL ………..

………..THAT COUNTS.

JOHN WOODEN

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