Title: A missing element in individualized education plans Quality
1A missing element in individualized education
plans Quality!
- Kristie Pretti-Frontczak
- Kent State University
- Early Childhood Intervention Program
- kprettif_at_kent.edu
- http//fpsrv.dl.kent.edu/ecis/Web/Research/Nationa
l20Survey/nsurvey1.asp
2Logic
- Quality IEP goals and objectives lead to.
- Stronger links between key program processes,
- which leads to.
- Individualized intervention,
- which leads to.
- Improved child outcomes
3Recommended Practice/Changes
- Shorter IEPs
- Oriented to individualized and family-centered
outcomes - Less staff oriented
- Better linked to the general curriculum
- Huefner, D. S. (2000). The risks and
opportunities of the IEP requirements Under IDEA
97. The Journal of Special Education, 33(4).
195-204. - Clark, S. G. (2000). The IEP process as a tool
for collaboration. Teaching Exceptional Children,
33(2), 56-66
4Past Findings
- Individualized Education Plans (IEPs)
- Contain missing mandated components (Carri, 1985
Peterson Odom, 1995 Schenck Levy, 1979) - Target non-functional skills (Downing, 1988
Weisenfeld, 1986) - Contain little information regarding how goals
will be generalized or what performance criteria
will be used (Lynch Beare 1990) - Emphasize pre-academic skills versus real-life
skills (Goodman Bond, 1993) - Include goals and objectives that do not address
a childs area of identified delay or need (Smith
Simpson, 1989)
5Goals v. Objectives
- Pretti-Frontczak and Bricker (2000) found that
aggregated mean percent scores for objectives
were consistently higher than for goals - Notari and Drinkwater (1991) also found that
interventionists were able to write higher
quality objectives than goals - Billingsley (1984) and Tymitz (1980) indicated
objectives were more difficult to write.
6Terminology
- 12 month skill
- General Broad (has components or subskills)
- Represents generalization of behavior
- Represents independence or spontaneity
7Terminology Continued
- Short Term Objectives (STOs)
- Intermediate steps discrete skills components
- 3-6 month skill
- Major milestone likely a different
- behavior building blocks
8Participants
- Sample came from a national survey of 550
preschool teachers (including itinerant teachers) - 215 teachers provided pairs of IEP goals and
objectives - Teachers represent 20 states from 5 regions of
the US - Majority from the Southern and Midwestern regions
- South (n86)
Midwest (n78) - Northwest/West (n25) Southeast
(n20) - Northeast (n6)
9Participant Characteristics (N215)
- Highest degree obtained
- High school diploma 1 (0.5)
- Associates degree 2 (0.9)
- Bachelors degree 111 (51.6)
- Masters degree 99 (46)
- Doctoral degree 2 (0.9)
- State licensures/certifications/endorsements to
work with preschool children with disabilities - No 26 (12.3)
- Yes 186 (87.7)
- Number of years teaching preschool age children
- Range from zero years to 30 years (M8.8, SD6.9)
- Number of years teaching preschoolers w/special
needs - Range from zero years to 30 years (M7.9, SD6.6)
10Findings Written Goals
- Only 26.5 or 57 of the 215 goals were considered
codable using the GORI - The targeted skill can be seen and/or heard
- Multiple people can agree that the same skill has
occurred - A specific definition of the skill is provided
- Examples include
- Child will initiate and maintain a verbal
interaction with peer and sustain the interaction
for 5 minutes - Sam will carry out two-step direction without
contextual cues.
11Goals Continued
- That means, 73.5 or 158 of the 215 goals written
by preschool teachers in this study were not
codable using the GORI - Examples include
- Will improve "readiness" skills
- J. will develop age-appropriate math skills.
- In other words what are readiness skills or
what are age-appropriate math skills?
12Findings Written Objectives
- In contrast to written goals, 80 or 172 of the
215 objectives were considered codable using the
GORI - The targeted skill can be seen and/or heard
- Multiple people can agree that the same skill has
occurred - A specific definition of the skill is provided
- Examples include
- Andy will hold his writing utensil in a
three-fingered grasp - Child will hang up own belongings ( coat, book
bag) upon arrival at school
13Objectives Continued
- Thus, 20 or 43 of the 215 objectives written by
preschool teachers in this study were not codable
using the GORI - Examples include
- Will perform a familiar daily job in the
classroom - To show an increase in attention span
- In other words what are familiar daily jobs or
what does an increased attention span look like?
14Findings and Implications
- Goals and objectives from this sample do not meet
a basic definition of codable - Legal mandates specify that long range goals and
short term objectives/benchmarks MUST be
measurable - When targeted non-measurable skills, how do
teachers and other team members - Embed skills that are not measurable?
- Know when a child is making progress?
- Collect data?
- Select appropriate interventions?
- Report on a childs performance over time?
15Looking Beyond the Basics
- Many would argue that in addition to being
measurable, IEP goals and objectives should be
meaningful. - Are the goals and objectives written by teachers
in this study of high quality? - Do teachers write better goals or better
objectives? - What factors are related to higher quality
written goals and objectives?
16Selecting Meaningful Skills
- At least four main criteria should be used for
selecting meaningful skills - Functional
- Usable
- Observable and measurable
- Addressable
- Developmentally appropriate
17Quality Indicators Goals
- Overall (N215)
- GORI scores ranged from 0 to 9
- M 1.48, SD 2.6
- In terms of just codable goals (n57, 26.5)
- GORI scores ranged from 3 to 9
- M 5.58, SD 1.65
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19Quality Indicators Objectives
- Overall (N215)
- GORI scores ranged from 0 to 8
- M 4.03, SD 2.43
- In terms of just codable objectives (n172, 80)
- GORI scores ranged from 2 to 8
- M 5.04, SD 1.51
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21Antecedents
- The condition or context under which the behavior
will occur and can be observed OR the occurrence
or event that happens before the behavior - Antecedents used on goals and objectives/benchmark
s should represent generalization or independence - Examples of antecedents used on IEPs
- During a variety of daily activities During
group activities - At school and at home When given a variety of
foods - Independently Following a directive
- OR state actual behavior (e.g., initiate, seek,
answer questions) - Examples of antecedents used on intervention
plans - When given a model/prompt During play time
- When presented with pictures With a walker
- At circle With physical assistance
- When presented a toy Given another
persons assistance - When a game is played When given a choice
22Antecedent Continued
- Two optional components of the Antecedent or
Condition - Accommodation (including special materials)
- Evaluation Setting where you want to see the
skill performed (has it generalized)
Taken from Lignugaris-Kraft, B.,
Marchand-Martella, N., Martella, R. (2001).
Writing better goals and short-term objectives or
benchmarks. Teaching Exceptional Children, 34(1),
52-58.
23Behaviors (Knowledge and Skills)
- Observable and measurable skills demonstrated by
the child. Targeted skills describe something
which can be seen or heard by an observer. - Behaviors have a beginning and an end
- Examples
- Looks Names Gives Cuts
- Puts on Takes off Zips Jumps
- Pours Copies Selects Places
- Uses Walks Remains Answers
- Initiates Seeks Maintains Reach
- Non Examples
- Increases Understands Believes Comprehends
- Realizes Demonstrates Knows Tries
- Grey Area Examples
- Manipulates (describe how they manipulate)
- Participates (describe how they participate)
- Uses (describe how they use)
24Criteria
- Statements that describe a standard level of
performance required to learn and apply the skill - Ask the following questions
- What will convince me the child has acquired the
skill? - What is reasonable in terms of data collection?
- Across all activities, settings, people?
- For how many days are they consistent?
- What is the classroom schedule like (i.e., of
opportunities)? - Examples
- At least once a day At least twice during
group activities - On each occasion Each day for two weeks
- Performance criteria helps make skills measurable
the degree of difficulty or duration (e.g., for
15 feet, across hard and soft surfaces, with
familiar adults, without a context, intelligibly)
25Criteria Continued
- Three Major Components
- Criterion Level (e.g., percentage correct or rate
of correct responding) - Number of time demonstrated at specified level
(addresses the issue of consistency what is
considered mastery) - Evaluation schedule (the frequency the team plans
to collect data)
Taken from Lignugaris-Kraft, B.,
Marchand-Martella, N., Martella, R. (2001).
Writing better goals and short-term objectives or
benchmarks. Teaching Exceptional Children, 34(1),
52-58.