Transcript Slide 1

Spring 2012 IEP
Writing Process Review
Today we will cover~
• Connecting the PLAAF,
FINDINGS and GOALS
• Data/tools to use to determine the
Findings and Measure Progress
What are the student’s unique educational
needs that must be considered in
developing the individualized program?
~ACADEMIC FINDINGS~
•
Unique Educational Needs = Skill
Weaknesses
Where to find this data?

MAP Descartes Skills Continuum Analysis ( all grades)


LLI pretests ( K5- 6th gr)


Especially for MATH
Running Records…other examples?
Writing Rubrics (Flannigan, MAP, PASS; HSAP)
2
Using MAP/ NWEA/ CBM
A. More training to come in March for HS
B. Drill down the data to skill sets: ( NWEA
handouts)




Breakdown by Goal ( Reading, Math, Writing)
Student Goal Setting Sheet
RIT Score Ranges…select the lowest/weakest
Review Goal Strands w Reg Ed Teachers to
prioritize
 Write Findings based on weakest strand
~ FUNCTIONAL FINDINGS~
•
•
•
•
Behavior Ratings Scales
Target Behaviors/ BIP Data
FBA’s
Study Skills/ Habits of an Independent
Learner
• Focus, Attending, Time Management, etc
• Transition Needs to Link with Post
Secondary Goal.
HINT……
• A well written, detailed Finding, will set up
your goal statement.
• Remember:”Finding” = Skill Specific
Weakness
• Prioritize…..if a student is passing their
academic classes and their reading/math skill
weaknesses are NOT impeding their
progress in the General Curriculum, the
COMMITTEE can decide NOT to have an
Academic Finding!!!
Findings =
Targeted Weak Skills to Address in
1 School Year
• The team ( you, parent, reg ed teachers) decide
which skill weaknesses to target in the Findings.
• The number of Findings need to be
reasonable……achievable within 1 school year
• LRE is determined by the number of Weak Skills
targeted.
• EX: RATE kids will have more skill weaknesses
ID’d than Diploma kids.
• Same for Moderate Resource vs Study Skills.
The 4 critical components of a well-written goal:
1. Timeframe is usually specified in the number of weeks or a
certain date for completion. A year is the maximum allowed
length for the timeframe.
•In 36 instructional weeks…
•By the end of 2012-13 school year…
2. Conditions specify the circumstances that prompt the child’s
performance of an observable behavior. Conditions are
dependent on the behavior being measured and involve the
application of skills or knowledge.
•When presented with 2nd grade level text…
•Given a mixed 4th grade level math calculation probe….
•Given a story prompt and 30 minutes to write…
Conditions may also integrate a related service:
•Given appropriate equipment……..
•Given assistive technology……..
3. Behavior clearly identifies the performance that is being
monitored, usually reflects an action or can be directly
observed, and is measurable.
•Sarah will read…
•Claude will write the correct solutions…
•Mary will score…
Chris will write……
Tom will participate in the group….
4. Criterion identifies how much, how often, or to what
standards the behavior must occur in order to demonstrate
that the goal has been reached. The goal criterion specifies
the amount of growth the child or youth is expected to make
by the end of the annual goal period.
•96 words per minute with 5 or fewer errors.
•85% or more correct for all problems presented.
•Earning 3 or better when graded according to the HSAP writing rubric.
What goals will enable the student to
achieve meaningful educational
benefit?
•
The Skill Weakness described in the
FINDINGS provides the foundation for the
Goal Statement.
EX: 10th grader:
PLAAFP: Justin's spring 2011 Math RIT score on MAP was 252 ,
which is above the mean score of 239.8 for 10th grade
level.
Justin has a spring2011 RIT score on the Measures of
Academic Progress (MAP) of 235 which is above the 10th
grade average of 225 in the area of reading. Justin scored
well in all areas. His lowest score was in Vocabulary.
QUESTION……..
Does Justin (10th gr) NEED
an ACADEMIC
FINDING listed on his
IEP??
ANSWER………..
NO !!
Why not??
What Will Justin’s Functional
Finding Be??
• Transition……
“Justin is interested in becoming a
electrical engineer but doesn’t know
where he wants to attend college or
how much its going to cost.”
How do we write his Annual
Transition Goal for 11th gr ?
Annual Transition Goal
• By then end of the 2012-2013 school year,
(timeframe) Justin will research (condition/behavior) 2-3
colleges that specialize in electrical
engineering, explore (condition/behavior) financial
aide options, and register (condition/behavior) for
appropriate pre-requisite classes he will
need for graduation / engineering as
evidenced by completing 3 out of 4 selected
items (criterion) on his College Transition
Checklist. (handout)
Reminder~
Write the Present Levels of
Academic Achievement and
Functional Performance
Statement……
Starting with the student’s
STRENGTHS
Strengths can be academic and/ or
functional or both!
 Related Arts, Exploratory, Electives, ExtraCurricular Activities, Clubs, etc ALL count as
areas of strengths.
Ex:
 Mary is in the marching band and excels at
playing the tuba.
 Bobby is in ROTC and demonstrates leadership
qualities among his fellow cadets.
PLAAFP Checklist
• Is the statement written in understandable language
& clear to everyone on the team?
• Is the PLAAFP precise enough to lead to
measurable annual goals?
• Does the statement describe how the student’s
disability affects educational performance?
• Does the statement explain how the student’s
disability affects his or her participation in general
education?
• Does the PLAAFP statement describe only the
unique needs that will be addressed in the IEP?
• Do all needs identified in PLAAFP statements lead
to an annual goal, special education service, or
both?
16
Measurable Annual Goals
• The purpose of a measurable annual goals
is to estimate what a student may
accomplish in a year’s time and then to
evaluate the success of a student’s special
education program.
• Goals should include academic and
functional areas if needed
• Goals should be directed at meeting a
student’s needs related to the disability so
he/she may be involved in and progress in
the general curriculum
17
Writing A Measurable Annual Goal
3 Prompting Questions to Ask:
1. What can the student currently do? ~
PLAAFP
2. What challenging, yet attainable, goal can
we expect the student to meet by the end
of this IEP period? ~ FINDINGS/SKILL
WEAKNESS
3. How will we know that the student has
reached this goal? ~ Progress Monitor
Quarterly
18
Let’s Check an Excent
IEP
• Review PLAAFP
• Review the Findings
• Review Annual Goals
• Anything need to change?