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Q.Special Education?Related Search:
Other - Education
 I doing a project for college on special education. I have an apointment tomorrow with a rural school and would like to know what some good questions would be to ask the special ed. teacher.
A.what kind of behavior modification does she use? how does she deal with several grade/ability levels in one room? do they do varying exceptionalities? do they do inclusion? how does she feel about that? how much interaction with "normal" peers is allowed? what kind of paperwork is required by the school system? by the state? are the parents involved? how does she get them involved? how cooperative is administration? how supportive are they?
  

Q.What is a Special Education Generalist in the State of Colorado?Related Search:
Special Education
 I am a California Teacher and just received my credential for a move I am planning in CO, which came back as a CO Special Education Generalist. I am assuming that this would allow me to teach a broad spectrum of students with special needs. Any CO teachers out there that can fill me in on this?
A.The sites below are for out of state teachers with questions about becoming certified in Colorado.I have been a special ed teacher in Colorado for more than 30 years. Colorado has changed its classification program more than once. In general, the specialist allows you more latitude in whom you can teach. It used to be that we had one endorsement for learning disabled, another for students with limited intelligence, another for emotionally disturbed , another for students with visual or hearing impairments, etc. Now, I could have any or all of these kids on my caseload. Various school districts may have more stringent requirements. Choose an area in Colorado and check out the local school districts. Hope this helps. By the way, I am retiring next year , so there will be at least one special ed opening , lol.
  

Q.How much does a special education preschool teacher earn in California?Related Search:
Teaching
 I'm deciding whether to teach Special Education in the Elementary grades, or to go into Early Childhood Special Education; Does anyone know if both types of teaching pay the same salary? How much does a preschool special ed teacher make in California?
A.Not much in pre-school. But move up to kindergarden and it increases.
  

Q.What happens if the majority is special education students in the mainstream school?Related Search:
Special Education
 Would that be bad? Does that mean that there would be a lot of self-contained classrooms? Don't give me an answer that says "it will never happen". It could happen and when it does what happens? Does that mean that the majority don't have to take state exams? Special education students' standards are lower than general education students. Therefore No Child Left Behind Act would be completely useless. They have it on record at my high school of how many special education students they have in their school. Is it bad if it is a high number and why?
A.I guess 'anything is possible' as they say, but I highly doubt that ANY public school would EVER have MOSTLY special ed kids. Schools all over the country fight parents to no end to keep the children OUT of special ed. Schools take parents to court to keep from helping their child thru special ed, using the parents own tax dollars. They sometimes go thru every court , up to the highest one. Schools pay thousands and thousands of dollars to hire lawyers to fight the parents to keep their children out of special ed, when they could have used just a fraction of that money to just go ahead and help the child. Sure is funny how the educational field has the 'dumbest' people I've ever seen. No matter if the school has mostly sped kids or not, they still have to follow the federal special ed law IDEA and have every special ed child in the reg ed classroom with the other reg kids to determine if the sped child can progress in that setting. If the sped kid does not progress, THEN they are placed in the self contained classrooms, other schools, etc. Anywhere that would help them to progress. Some schools put the sped children in the self contained classrooms from the start and not even give the child a chance to see if they will progress in the regular ed class. This is illegal. From the common sense side of it (which is the opposite of the 'law' side of it LOL) ,, the child should be FIRST placed where they will progress no matter where that is, instead of automatically being in the reg ed classroom, especially when the parents and the school KNOWS the child will NOT progress in the reg ed classroom. I don't know for certain if sped kids do not have to take the NCLB state testing. I have heard yes and no. But I have never read the exact law stating this. I have read on front page of yahoo news that in GA the schools are not counting the sped kids scores so their scores will be higher so they can get more money, and the state dept of education is allowing this to happen with no repercussions. The whole NCLB crap has shattered education as a whole and I wish they would get rid of it.
  

Q.How come there is a special education student who has an aide? Why does she need one?Related Search:
Special Education
 Is it because the school can’t find a special education program for her? Why are there some special needs children who have aides? The aide walks with the special education student to all of her classes. She doesn't have a physical disability. I don't understand.
A.More than likely, this is a case that has involved, active parents who have been able to wrangle a personal assistant from an IEP team. I say that because most students who have severe disabilities are often place in ESE classes and mildly involved students are included in regular ed classes with help from a co-teacher, who will have a number of students on her caseload. I am not saying that this is a bad thing, but it probably the case. Some students have behavioral difficulties regardless of their disability and often need assistance to be maintained in the regular classroom. They also may need assistance to find their way to class. Other students need extensive help with their assignments in order to get decent grades. This could include being able to give dictation to an assistant for writing assignments or helping the student stay on track by assisting with materials. Some disorders that require an assistant are people with severe learning disabilities, autism, traumatic brain Injury, emotional disturbance or mild mental retardation. I am currently working with a student who has TBI. He has a personal assistant in regular ed because his parent refused to have him in a special class. He is intelligent, but his social behaviors aren't very good so without his assistant he would not be able to stay in regular ed. His injury involved the frontal lobes of his brain and so it has wiped out his understanding of social cues and appropriate responses. In order to maintain his behavior, he has to have the assistant to do a star sheet all day long or he will act out disruptively. She also takes dictation. Personally, I don't see the reasoning for this because if they are doing this for socialization purposes, it obviously isn't working. He would be better off in a class in which social skills are part of the curriculum.
  

Q.What are the statistics of special education students?Related Search:
Special Education
 I am a teacher of students with emotional disabilities, I am also enrolled in classes since I am on an emergency license. I am doing a project where I need the statistics of special education showing the races of students. So, I need to know the breakdown of each race in special education. I know that information is out there (it just has to be) but I cannot find it. Any help would be very much appreciated!! Thanks!!
A.[Link]  The key words to search are: "overidentification," "African American," and also "Emotionally Disturbed" or "Special Education." Your professor probably wants you to address the disproportionate numbers of African American males identified as "Emotionally Disturbed," as well as in other Special Education programs. Looking at the statistics, it appears to be a case racism or a lack of understanding of non-Eurocentric cultures. School values students who sit, raise their hands to speak, etc., which is thought to be Eurocentric and not sympathetic to the diverse cultural backgrounds of at-risk student populations.
  

Q.How can I become a special education teacher in autism area?Related Search:
Special Education
 How can I get my teaching license in special education ( autism area)? Hi. I have a bachelores degree and want to work as a special education teacher in Autism ,anybody knows what the process is to get my teaching license in the state of Virginia? thanks for your help.
A.Basically you two ways of earning an alternative license in special education. One is to enter a program a full-time program that has your license completely finished in 15-18 months. Or, you can take the necessary courses and take a test or two, then be hired as a teacher while completing your coursework at night. [Link]  [Link] / (Since you have a BA or BS, look for alternative routes for teaching. One thing to note is there is no specific license for students with autism...at least not in VA (each state is different). You need to decide on your type of student. Do you want to work with students who are dually diagnosed with mental retardation? If so, you want the Special Education License for mental retardation. These teachers often have their own classroom. If you want to work with students in the general education classroom, you want the Special Education license for the general curriculum. This would involve working with students with learning disabilities, etc.
  
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 Encyclopedia Opens New Window.

This article is about educating students with disabilities or behavioral problems. For information about educating gifted students, see Gifted education.
"Special Needs" redirects here. For other uses, see Special needs (disambiguation).

Special education is the individually planned and systematically monitored arrangement of teaching procedures, adapted equipment and materials, accessible settings, and other interventions designed to help learners with special needs achieve the greatest possible personal self-sufficiency and success in school and community.

Students with special needs, such as learning differences, mental health issues, specific disabilities (physical or developmental)[1] , and giftedness are those whose needs are addressed within the classroom setting. [2] However generally, the term "special education" refers specifically to students with learning disabilities, mental conditions, and other disabling conditions. Beginning in 1952, Civitans were the first to provide widespread training for teachers of developmentally disabled children.[3]

Contents

[edit] Provision

The provision of education to people with disabilities or learning differences differs from country to country, and state to state. The ability of a student to access a particular setting depends on the availability of services, location, family choice, or government policy. Special educators have historically described a cascade of services, in which students with special needs receive services in varying degrees based on the degree to which they interact with the general school population. In the main, special education has been provided in one, or a combination, of the following ways:

  • Inclusion: Regular education classes combined with special education services is a model often referred to as inclusion. In this model, students with special needs are educated with their typically developing peers for at least half of the day. In a full inclusion model, specialized services are provided within a regular classroom by sending the service provider in to work with one or more students in their regular classroom setting. In a partial inclusion model, specialized services are provided outside a regular classroom. In this case, the student occasionally leaves the regular classroom to attend smaller, more intensive instructional sessions, or to receive other related service such as speech and language therapy, occupational and/or physical therapy, and social work.
PS 721, a Special Education school in Brooklyn, New York
  • Mainstreaming: Regular education classes combined with special education classes is a model often referred to as mainstreaming. In this model, students with special needs are educated with their typically developing peers during specific time periods.
  • Segregation (Self-Contained): Full-time placement in a special education classroom may be referred to as segregation. In this model, students with special needs spend no time with typically developing students. Segregated students may attend the school as their neighbors, but spend their time exclusively in a special-needs classroom. Alternatively, these students may attend a special school.
  • Exclusion: A student who does not receive instruction in any school is said to be excluded. Such exclusion may occur where there is no legal mandate for special education services. It may also occur when a student is in hospital, homebound, or detained by the criminal justice system. These students may receive one-on-one instruction or group instruction. Students who have been suspended or expelled are not considered excluded in this sense.

With increasing experience over the past few decades in the field of special education, the concept is shifting away from the student's level of disability as the prime determinant of physical placement (i.e., the degree of exclusion/segregation s/he experiences) toward the challenge of modifying teaching methods and environments so that students might be served in typical educational environments. In the US, the President's National Council on Disability has called for special education to be regarded less as a "place" and more as "a service, available in every school." [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]

Modifications can consist of changes in curriculum, supplementary aides or equipment, and the provision of specialized physical adaptations that allow students to participate in the educational environment to the fullest extent possible.[9] Students may need this help to access subject matter, to physically gain access to the school, or to meet their emotional needs.

Support is targeted to the needs of the individual student and can be short or long term. In the United States, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act requires that special needs students be included in regular education activities as much as possible. In Scotland the Additional Support Needs Act places an obligation on education authorities to meet the needs of all students in consultation with other agencies and parents.

In England there are support services available which can help parents in particular with the educational provision of their child. Parent Partnership Services are support services which ensure the involvement of parents in the planning and delivery of their child's educational provision.

[edit] Abbreviations

In North America special education is commonly abbreviated as Special Ed, SpecEd, SPED, SpEd, in a professional context.[10]

In England and Wales the initialism SEN is most commonly used when discussing special education needs. The term is used to denote the condition of having special educational needs, the services which provide the support and the programmes and staff which implement the education.[11] In Scotland the term Special Educational Needs (SEN), and its variants are not official terminology although the very recent implementation of the Additional Support for Learning Act means that both SEN and ASN (Additional Support Needs) are used interchangeably in current common practice.[12]

In England SEN PPS refers to support services SEN Parent Partnership Service. SENAS refers to the assessment service which is part of the Local Authority. SENCO refers to a special educational needs co-ordinator which ususally works with schools and the children within schools who have special educational needs.

[edit] Criticism

  • Special education has been a field in which large, empirical studies have been difficult to implement, given the differences in service delivery models. In a meta-analysis of special education, researchers found no significant effect size when examining the relationship between student outcomes and inclusion in special education (see Kavale, K. A., Glass, G. V (1982) The Efficacy of Special Education Interventions and Practices: A Compendium of Meta-Analysis Findings. Focus on Exceptional Children, v15 n4 p1-14).
  • Beneficial classrooms designed for special education students, sometimes called resource rooms, are targets for those who seek to include a heterogenous group of students without consideration of the myriad of learners. Students with disabilities require individualized instruction--as mandated by an IEP--and thus full inclusion or "push in" servicing is not viable for school districts.
  • Special education as implemented in public schools has been criticized because the qualification criteria for services are extremely variable from one education agency to another. In the United States, all Local and State Education Agencies must use classification and labeling models that are aligned with the federal definitions, outlined the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).
  • At-risk students (those with educational needs that are not associated with a disability) are often placed in classes with students with disabilities. Critics assert that placing at-risk students in the same classes as disabled students may impede the educational progress of people with disabilities.
  • The practice of inclusion has been criticized by advocates and some parents of children with disabilities because some of these students require instructional methods that differ dramatically from typical classroom methods. Critics assert that it is not possible to deliver effectively two or more very different instructional methods in the same classroom. As a result, the educational progress of students who depend on different instructional methods to learn often fall even further behind their peers without disabilities.
  • Parents of typically developing children sometimes fear that the special needs of a single "fully included" student will take critical levels of attention and energy away from the rest of the class and thereby impair the academic achievements of all students.
  • Some parents, advocates, and students have concerns about the eligibility criteria and its application. In some cases, parents and students protest the students' placement into special education programs. For example, a student may be placed into the special education programs due to a mental health condition such as OCD, depression, anxiety, panic attacks or ADHD, while the student and his parents believe that the condition is adequately managed through medication and outside therapy. In other cases, students whose parents believe they require the additional support of special education services are denied participation in the program based on the eligibility criteria.
  • An alternative to homogenization and lockstep standardization is proposed, using the Sudbury model schools, an alternative approach in which children learn at their own pace rather than following a chronologically-based curriculum.[13][14][15][16][17] Proponents of unschooling have also claimed that children raised in this method do not suffer from learning disabilities.
  • Gerald Coles, in his book, The Learning Mystique: A Critical Look at "Learning Disabilities", asserts that there are partisan agendas behind the educational policy-makers and that the scientific research that they use to support their arguments regarding the teaching of literacy are flawed. These include the idea that there are neurological explanations for learning disabilities.[18]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ What is special education? - Ministry of Education
  2. ^ The School of Choice - Gifted Education is Special Education
  3. ^ Armbrester, Margaret E. (1992). The Civitan Story. Birmingham, AL: Ebsco Media. pp. 74–75. 
  4. ^ National Council on Disability. (1994). Inclusionary education for students with disabilities: Keeping the promise. Washington, DC: Author.
  5. ^ Swan, W.W., & Morgan, J.L. (1993). Collaborating for comprehensive services for young children and their families. Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes.
  6. ^ Rainforth, B., York, J., & Macdonald,C. (1992. Collaborative teams for students with severe disabilities. Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes.
  7. ^ Stainback, W. & Stainback, S.(Eds.) (1990). Support networks for inclusive schooling: Interdependent integrated education. Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes.
  8. ^ Gaylord-Ross, R. (Ed.) (1989). Integration strategies for students with handicaps. Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes.
  9. ^ Special Education Inclusion
  10. ^ [1]
  11. ^ [2]
  12. ^ [3]
  13. ^ Greenberg, D. (1992), Education in America, A View from Sudbury Valley, "Special Education" -- A noble Cause Sacrificed to Standardization.
  14. ^ Greenberg, D. (1992), Education in America, A View from Sudbury Valley, "Special Education" -- A Noble Cause Run Amok.
  15. ^ Greenberg, D. (1987), Free at Last, The Sudbury Valley School, Chapter 1, And 'Rithmetic.
  16. ^ Greenberg, D. (1987), Free at Last, The Sudbury Valley School, Chapter 5, The Other 'R's'.
  17. ^ Greenberg, D. (1987), Free at Last, The Sudbury Valley School, Chapter 19, Learning.
  18. ^ Gerald Coles (1987). The Learning Mystique: A Critical Look at "Learning Disabilities". Accessed November 10, 2008.
  • Wilmshurst, L, & Brue, A. W. (2005). A parent's guide to special education. New York: AMACOM.

[edit] External links



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