Title: Chapter 14 Early Childhood Special Education
1Chapter 14Early Childhood Special Education
2Early Intervention
- Compensatory or preventative services for
children who are assumed to be at risk - Remedial services for problems already
encountered - Research has documented that early intervention
can provide both intermediate and long-term
benefits for young children with disabilities and
those at risk for developmental delay
3The Importance of Early Intervention
- Skeels and Dye
- Purpose Does early intervention work?
- Results intensive stimulation, one-to-one
attention with 1-2 year old children considered
MR, resulted in IQ gains. - Milwaukee Project
- Purpose Reduce the incidence of MR through a
program of parent education (children at risk
because of mothers IQ) - Results Increased IQ early infant stimulation
can reduce incidence of MR caused by Psychosocial
disadvantage - The Abecedarian Project
- Purpose Test whether environmental MR could be
prevented by intensive early education preschool
programs (5 days/week) - Results Increased IQ scores as compared to
control group
4The Importance of Early Intervention
- Project CARE
- Purpose Compare the effectiveness of home-based
early intervention with center-based - Results Improvement was observed in center-based
only - The Infant Health and Development Program
- Purpose EI for children born prematurely and at
low birth weight - Results Positive correlation between how much
children and their families participated in early
intervention and childrens gains. - Intensity and level of participation are crucial
variables
5The Importance of Early Intervention
- IDEA and Early Childhood Special Education
- Mandatory preschool for children with
disabilities ages 3-5 and voluntary early
intervention services for infants and toddlers - States that receive IDEA funds for early
intervention must serve all infants and toddlers
with developmental delays or established risk
conditions - States may also serve infants and toddlers who
are identified as at-risk
6Factors that place children at risk
- Risk factors are not causes but can contribute to
the probability of developmental delays if no
intervention is provided - Established risk risk for developmental delay
based on a diagnosed physical or mental condition
(e.g., chromosomal abnormality, sensory
impairments) - Biological/Medical Risk low birth weigh,
failure to thrive, etc - Environmental Risk caregiving circumstances
place them at risk
7Environmental Risk
- Parental Substance Abuse
- Family instability
- Poverty
- Homelessness
- Violence in the home
- Teen pregnancy
- Child abuse/neglect
- School factors
- ESL
8Identification
- Failures to intervene due to
- Developmental optimism
- Stigma
- Predict is to make it happen
- Early screening and intervention are expensive
9Early Start
- Infants and toddlers from birth to 36 months of
age may be eligible for early intervention
services if, through documented evaluation and
assessment, they meet one of the criteria listed
below - Have a developmental delay in either cognitive,
communication, social or emotional, adaptive, or
physical and motor development including vision
and hearing or - Have established risk conditions of known
etiology with a high probability of resulting in
delayed development or - Are at high risk of having a substantial
developmental disability due to a combination of
risk factors. - http//www.dds.ca.gov/earlystart/
10Screening, Identification, and Assessment
- Assessment in early childhood special education
is conducted for at least four different
purposes - Screening
- APGAR scale (heart rate, respiratory effort,
response to stimulation, muscle tone and skin
color see p. 570) - Newborn blood test for congenital conditions or
diseases - Developmental screening tests(gross motor, fine
motor, language and social) - Diagnosis
- Tests may vary depending on the suspected
disability but usually include measurement of 5
areas) - Program planning
- Evaluation
11Diagnosis
- Tests measure performance in 5 major areas
- Motor development
- Cognitive development
- Communication and language development
- Social and emotional development
- Adaptive development
12Individualized Family Services Plan
- An IFSP is a plan that addresses the needs of the
child and family and is developed by a
multidisciplinary team - An IFSP defines the family as being the recipient
of early intervention services - The IFSP must be evaluated once a year and
reviewed at six-month intervals
13Curriculum and Instruction in Early Childhood
Special Education
- Curriculum and program goals
- Support families in achieving their own goals
- Promote child engagement, independence, and
mastery - Promote development in all important domains
- Build and support social competence
- Facilitate the generalization use of skills
- Prepare and assist children for normalized life
experiences with their families - Help children and their families make smooth
transitions - Prevent or minimize the development of future
problems or disabilities
14Curriculum and Instruction in Early Childhood
Special Education
- Selecting IFSP/IEP Goals and Objectives
- Goals and objectives should be evaluated
according to the following five quality
indicators - Functionality
- Generality
- Instructional context
- Measurability
- Relation between long-range goals and short-term
objectives
15Service Delivery Alternatives for Early
Intervention
- IDEA requires that early intervention services be
provided in natural environments to the greatest
extent possible - Service delivery options for early childhood
special education include - Hospital-based programs
- Home-based programs (pros/cons) 583
- Center-based programs (pros/cons)
- Combined home-center programs
16Current Issues and Future Trends
- Early childhood special education will benefit
from - Research investigating which programs are most
effective for exceptional and at-risk young
children - Studies analyzing the cost-benefit of early
intervention - Parents are the most important people in an early
intervention program - They can act as advocates
- Participate in educational planning
- Observe their childrens behavior
- Help set realistic goals
- Work in the classroom
- Teach their children at home