Educating Special Needs Students


Course Description

This course is designed for all educators and related providers who work with students with learning disabilities, attention deficits (with or without hyperactivity), developmental delays, behavior problems or other distinctive disorders. Participants will also gain understanding of students with dyslexia, autism and multiple disabilities. Federal laws will be explored: IDEA, No Child Left Behind (NCLB), and Section 504 of the Rehabilitations Act of 1973, along with many required applications to the classroom.
Participants will develop a clinical eye toward all students (with or without an IEP) and will be able to apply classroom accommodations, developmental teaching techniques and designed modifications. Each course participant will organize and complete a case study based on one selected student. We will review symptoms, describe individual deficits and customize an educational plan that will accommodate that student's weakness. That plan will be put into effect and monitored as per course assignment. Various group activities will be utilized to maximize learning and provide interactions among participants.

Objectives

  • Acquire a solid foundation of knowledge relating to students with learning disabilities, attention deficit disorders, dyslexia, autism and many other disabilities
  • Understand Federal laws that drive curriculum and classroom management throughout the grades
  • Facilitate learning for all students (with or without the IEP) by applying academic accommodations and specific modifications
  • Interpret student documents (IEP, Psychological) and learn how they can help you understand your student and his capacity to learn
  • Strategize on how to work effectively with support staff (Resource, Speech, OT, PT, Psychologist, Social Worker) and develop partnerships that will benefit everyone
  • Update and organize Internet sites to provide easy access for course research
  • Develop a case study based on one student's collected data, present a profile analysis and a plan of action that will be implemented in the classroom
  • Empower educators with tools, strategies and knowledge that will allow them a clinical view of all students in class
  • Inspire course participants to perceive all students as unique and special, needing advocates in those they call teachers

Curriculum Design & Time Requirements
Educating Special Needs Students is a 3 credit graduate level or forty-five hour professional development course taught on weekends or over five full days. The teaching methodology behind this course will empower participants with a strong knowledge base while providing them with necessary tools and strategies to identify and teach students with special needs. Participants will apply course curriculum to a student case study that will be developed throughout the sessions and presented to instructor as a final project.

Course Materials
The required textbook for this course is Commonsense Methods for Children with Special Educational Needs- 4th Edition (Strategies for the Regular Classroom), written by Peter Westwood and published by Routledge Falmer Press, London and New York. In addition, other readings will be assigned during the course to enhance learning.

Session Outline
Session 1: Special Education in the Classroom

Objective: To introduce the history of special education including regulations and developments; to define the role of classroom teachers within those parameters

Contents:

1. Definition and history of Special Education
2. IDEA law and regulations
3. Least Restrictive Environment (LRE)
4. Mainstreaming
5. Necessary documents (The IEP and Psychological Report)
6. District/Teacher responsibilities
7. Common integration models

Session 2: Eligibility for Special Ed. Services and Possible Categories Therein

Objective: To outline procedures that identifies and assists students with special needs; to review all categories of disabilities

Contents:

1. Criteria for eligibility
2. Developmental delays
a. Physical development
b. Cognitive development
c. Communication development
d. Social/Emotional development
e. Adaptive development
3. Categories of Disabilities (13)

Session 3: Learning Disabilities

Objective: To review the study of learning disabilities; to allow educators opportunities as diagnosticians

Contents:

1. Types of Learning Disabilities
2. Classroom teachers as diagnosticians
3. Symptomatic checklist to facilitate educational diagnosis
4. Establishing a profile and developing a clinical eye
5. Group project

Session 4: Behavior Problems in the Classroom

Objective: To introduce the full gamut of behavior problems and facilitate plans for improvements

Contents:

1. Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD)
2. Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD)
3. Conduct Disorder
4. Oppositional Defiant Disorder
5. Childhood depression
6. Section 504 (Of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973)
7. Medication
8. Behavior Improvement Plan (BIP)
9. Behavior modifications

Session 5: Autism and Other Distinctive Disorders

Objective: To review and distinguish the difference between Autism and other forms of PPD; to outline a plan for a student case study

Contents:

1. Autism and PPD (Pervasive Developmental Disorder)
a. Definition
b. Criteria
c. Social issues
d. Communication concerns
e. Stereotypical Behaviors
f. Intervention/teaching method
2. Other distinctive disorders
a. Tourette's Syndrome
b. Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
c. Selective Mutism
d. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)


Session 6: The Referral Process

Objective: To provide a timeline for making referrals and establishing criteria within that timeline

Contents:

1. School-Based Intervention Team (SBIT)
2. Elementary and Secondary pre-referral strategies
3. The Special Ed. Referral timeline
4. The Committee of Special Education (CSE)
5. Being prepared, developing your file and presenting your case at CSE
6. Voting members and possible outcomes


Session 7: No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB)

Objective: To introduce regulations and provisions of NCLB; to review changing roles and accountability for all educators

Contents:

1. Facts and mandates
2. Student testing
3. National Assessment of Educational Progress (Nation's Report Card)
4. Adequate yearly progress (AYP)
5. Aligning Special Education with NCLB
6. New requirements for teachers and paraprofessionals

Session 8: Adapting/Modifying Curriculum

Objective: To provide educators with plans and strategies for modifying curriculum of all special needs students

Contents:

1. Alternative ways of teaching
2. Suggestions for academic/related accommodations
3. Testing Modifications: Purpose and Eligibility
4. Modifying the Classroom
5. Practical Academic Strategies
6. Group project

Session 9: Building Partnerships

Objective: To strategize opportunities for cooperative partnerships that will strengthen and support all educators

Contents:

1. Working with parents
2. Administrators lend a hand
3. Getting help from special care providers and support staff
4. Collaborative Teaching
5. Aides and Paraprofessionals

Session 10: Becoming Advocates

Objective: To offer opportunities for educators to become clinicians and advocates for all students

Contents:

1. Developing sensitivity towards the special-needs student
2. Remember to honor the IEP
3. Rebuilding self-esteem
4. Protecting the vulnerable student

Student Requirements

1. Attend all class sessions, and participate in all class activities for the requisite number of hours.
2. Complete all readings, reaction forms based on those readings and assignments in a timely fashion.
3. Develop a case study based on one selected student with special needs. This study should include academic history, described deficits/disabilities, social and behavioral observations, and relevant, update testing. In addition, the study will include an educational plan that will accommodate the specific weakness of that student.
4. Pass a final exam.


Grading

  Assignment Points   Grading Scale  
  Group & Classroom Participation   30  
   100 – 93
A
  Reading Assignments   20  
    92 – 85
B
    Case Study
  30
   
84 – 77
C
   
  Final Exam   20       
  Total Points 100    

Student Academic Integrity
Participants guarantee that all academic class work is original. Any academic dishonesty or plagiarism (to take ideas, writings, etc. from another and offer them as one's own), is a violation of student academic behavior standards as outlined by our partnering colleges and universities and is subject to academic disciplinary action.

Register
To register to take TEI's Educating Special Needs Students graduate course, go to the Course Registration page.

 

Home | Graduate Courses | Professional Development | Class Schedules | Class Login | Course Registration
Pay Balance | Join Our Mailing List | Frequently Asked Questions | About TEI | Contact TEI

© 2003 Teacher Education Institute®. All Rights Reserved.