Title: Community Integration: ProductivityAccess Education
1Community Integration Productivity/AccessEducati
on
- Roberta DePompei, Ph.D.
- University of Akron
- 330-072-6114
- rdepom1_at_uakron.edu
2Adult Transition Goals
Road through Adulthood
Sustains TBI
Employment Independence Relationships Quality of
Life
Return to previous or optimal or acceptable
lifestyle
3Youth Transition Goals
Childhood
Sustains TBI
School Activities Relationships Quality of Life
Return to previous or optimal childhood
TRANSITION to Adulthood
Adult Identity Employment Independence
Relationships Quality of Life
4Individuals with Disabilities Act(IDEA)
- Mandates transition services for students with
disabilities at age 16. - Specifies the services are to be a coordinated
set of activities designed to promote movement
from school to post-school activities including
post secondary education, vocational training,
integrated employment, continuing and adult
education, adult services, and independent living
or community participation.
5Individuals with Disabilities Act(IDEA)
- Plan for transition services is to be included in
the Individual Education Program (IEP). - Student, parent, school should plan transition
together.
6Transition Services IDEA
- Mandated, but not funded
- Students with TBI are under-identified for
special ed and transition services - Focus is often on graduation
- Transition services are highly variable from
district to district, disability to disability,
severity of disability
7Transition Services IDEA
- Academic or Life Skills Track
- Not combined
- Either write resume and visit post secondary
training sites OR - 3 to 4 years of supported employment, life
skills, bus training, self-advocacy, social
skills, experience in independent living
8Post Secondary Outcomes for Students with
TBITransition Experiences
- Bonnie Todis, Ph.D.
- Ann Glang, Ph.D.
- Teaching Research
- Eugene, OR
9Post-Secondary Outcomes Project (PSO)
- 8-year study of transition outcomes
- Funded by OSEP and NIDRR
- 90 students in Oregon and Washington
- Recruited at exit from high school
- Interviews with Parent and Youth every 6 months
10PSO Participants
- 77 had severe injuries
- only 2/3 were on IEPs
- Half were injured while in high school
- 2/3 male
11Life Transition Planning
At initial interview
12Written Transition Plan
At initial interview
13Person Who Helped Plan Transition
At initial interview
14Other PSO Findings
- Receipt of special education services had no
impact on transition outcomes - Those who received rehabilitation services were
more likely to live at home - Severity of injury was not a factor
15Other PSO Findings
- Those with higher ratings on emotional adjustment
were more likely to live independently - Those with higher ratings on executive function
were more likely to be enrolled in post-secondary
training/education
16National Transition Longitudinal Study (NTLS)
- 10-year study of transition outcomes
- Funded by OSEP
- 11,000 students
- 12 disability categories
- NTLS1(1996) did not include students with TBI
- NTLS2 (2005) included students with TBI
17NTLS Employment
18NTLS Post-secondary Education
19NTLS Living with Parents
20Summary of Findings
- Students with all disabilities are working and
going to school at lower rates than peers in
general population (62 employed and 55 in post
secondary education). - Students with TBI were participating at less than
the rate for all disabilities employed at 50
rate and in post secondary education at 22.
21Summary of Findings
- What parents say about what their students with
TBI need after leaving high school
22NTLS Needs Life Skills
23NTLS Needs vocational services
24NTLS Needs additional services
25Points to Consider
- Transition continues well beyond high school
graduation - The service system youth with TBI enter is the
same one that produces 40 employment for adults
with TBI
26Implications for Practice
- Special education interventions for students with
TBI should - Target emotional adjustment and executive
functioning - Work with students to address barriers to
post-secondary enrollment
27Implications for Practice
- Transition services should recognize the role of
family support - Connect families with community based resources
- Provide information on financial assistance for
post-secondary training - Connect youth and family with post-secondary
disability services
28Implications for Practice
- Young adults with TBI need improved
post-secondary community supports - Vocational training, placement, supports
- Life skills training and supports
- Post secondary education supports
- Consider existing programs such as Youth
Transition Program (Collaboration of Departments
of Education, Vocational Rehabilitation Services
and local school districts)
29Challenges for Post Secondary Education
- Young adults with TBI need improved assistance in
post-secondary educational settings - Community colleges and universities have little
experience with how to accommodate students with
TBI - Accommodation models are unavailable
- Types of supports for students that will make a
difference are not yet identified through
evidence based research.
30References
- Todis, B., Malec, J., Gillett, J. (2007).
Promising practices for youth with TBI
Transitioning to Adulthood. Brain Injury
Professional, 3(4) 30-33. - Wagner, M., Newman,L.,Cameto, R. et al
(2005)After high school A first look at the
postschool experiences of youth with
disabilities. A report from the longitudinal
study-2 (NLTS2) Menlo Park, CA SRI
International.
31References
- Glang, A., Todis, b., Bullis, M. (2003)
Resilience in students with TBI A longitudinal
investigation. NIDRR Grant H133G030179. - Bullis,M., Fredricks, HD. (2002). Providing
consultation and technical assistance. In
Vocational and Transition Services for
Adolescents with Behavioral and Emotional
Disorders. pp. 173-184. Champaign, ILResearch
Press.