Title: Idahos Early Childhood Outcomes System Idaho ECOS
1Idahos Early Childhood Outcomes System (Idaho
ECOS)
- Measuring Early Childhood Outcomes
- Idaho Infant Toddler Program
- Idaho Early Childhood Special Education Program
2Agenda
- Measuring Child Outcomes
- Why, What, When, Where,
- Who How
- Review Child Outcome Summary Form, Tools
Resources - Practice Exercises
-
3Federal Accountability and Early Childhood
Outcomes
4Training Objectives
- Participants will be able to
- Demonstrate the ability to accurately identify,
record, and report a childs outcome data using
the Idaho Child Outcome Summary Form (Idaho COSF)
5Idahos goal
- Document our programs
- impact for children
- with IFSPs or IEPs
6Measuring outcomes make sense for Idaho
- Support DEC/NAEYC best practice guidelines
- Examine and refine current assessment practices
- Demonstrate value of
- Early Intervention (Part C),
- Early Childhood Special Ed (Part B) programs
- Meet Federal Reporting Requirements
7What are the OSEPs Early Childhood Outcomes?
8OSEPs outcomes focus on measuring the results of
our service system
9OSEPs 3 Child Outcomes
- Children have positive social-emotional skills
(including positive social relationships) - Children acquire and use knowledge and skills
(including early language /communication) - Children use appropriate behaviors to meet their
needs
10OSEPs 3 Child Outcomes
- Children have positive social-emotional skills
(including positive social relationships) - Such as responding to others, expressing
emotions, turn-taking, using appropriate social
greetings, - play skills or having friendships with
same-age peers, etc.
11OSEPs 3 Child Outcomes
- 2. Children acquire and use knowledge and skills
- (including early language /communication)
- Such as expressing thoughts and ideas, listening
to and enjoying stories and books, or learning
new ways to do things, etc.
12OSEPs 3 Child Outcomes
- 3. Children use appropriate behaviors to meet
their needs - Such as getting from place to place, using tools
like forks or crayon, and feeding or dressing,
etc.
13The Child Outcome Areas
- Represent critical functional outcomes
necessary in every day activities and routines - Not domains based not trying to separate child
development into discrete areas (communication,
gross motor, etc.) - Emphasize how the child is able to integrate
across domains to carry out complex meaningful
behaviors
14Outcomes are Functional
- Meaningful to the child in the context of
everyday living - Integrated series of behaviors or skills that
allow the child to achieve the outcomes. - Not
- a single behavior
- the sum of a series of discrete behaviors
15Functional Outcomes
- What does a child typically do?
- Actual performance across settings and situations
-
- How child uses his/her skills to accomplish tasks
-
- Not the childs capacity to function under ideal
circumstances
16Sohow do we demonstrate that our programs
produce good outcomes for children?
17Demonstrate that
- Children have positive outcomes given who they
are, their delays, disabilities, functioning when
they entered, etc. - Outcomes are better than they would have been
without the program
18Complicating Issues
- Many children progress with no intervention
(maturing with age) - Children with disabilities show diverse
progress and under the best of programs, will
experience different outcomes
19Solution
- Document the number of children for whom the
program has changed their developmental
trajectories
20Thinking about how children are doing with regard
to each outcome.
Movement away from age-expected
Age-expected skills behavior
Movement toward age-expected
21OSEP Indicators categories of progress
- a. of children who maintain functioning at a
level comparable to same-age peers - b. of children who reach functioning at a level
comparable to same-age peers - c. of children who improved functioning but did
not achieve functioning comparable to same-age
peers - d. of children who did not improve functioning.
22OSEP Indicators Measurement Categories
Group a maintained or reached typical
5 year old level
2 year old level
Entry
Exit
23Indicators Measurement Categories
5 year old level
Group b made progress but
2 year old level
Entry
Exit
24Indicators Measurement Categories
Exit
Entry
25Indicators Measurement Categories
Group a maintained or reached typical
5 year old level
Group b made progress but..
Group c did not make progress
2 year old level
Enry
Exit
26How do we document change in developmental
trajectories while in services ?
- Obtain and compare a childs assessment data
- at program
- entry and exit.
27 - Quality Assessment
- ?
- Quality Service
- ?
- Better Outcomes
28- Much of developmental psychology (early
childhood testing) as it now exists is the
science of the strange behavior of children with
strange adults in strange settings for the
briefest possible periods of time. - (Bronfenbrenner, 1979)
29What is assessment?
- Early childhood assessment is flexible,
collaborative decision-making process in which
teams of parents and professionals repeatedly
revise their judgments and reach consensus about
the changing developmental, educational, medical,
and mental health services needs of young
children and their families. - Bagnato and Neisworth, 1991
- Quoted in DEC Recommended Practices, 2005
30DEC Recommended Practices for Assessment
- Involves multiple sources (e.g., families,
professional team members, service providers,
caregivers) - Involves multiple measures (e.g., observations,
criterion-curriculum-based instruments,
interviews, curriculum-compatible norm-referenced
scales, informed clinical opinion, work samples)
31What information is gathered?
Norm-referenced, criterion-referenced or
curriculum-based assessments
Multiple sources of data are used to rate a
childs functioning
Informed Professional Judgment Observation
Parent Input
32Which anchor assessment tools will we use in
Idaho?
- The following tools have been adopted for
completing the outcome rating scale. - BDI II (Battelle)
- HELP (Hawaii)
- Creative Curriculum
- AEPS
- Carolina
- OUNCE
- Work Sampling
- High Scope (COR)
- Brigance
- Bayley III (ITP program only)
33Information to gather
- Informed professional judgment
- Teachers, paraprofessionals, related service
providers - Anecdotal records, documented observations and
data, progress reports, work samples, portfolios - Parental input
- Best practice
- Information from caregivers provide critical
information to determine how child is doing
across a variety of settings
34Soour challenge
- How do we take what we know about assessment and
apply it to measuring the 3 outcomes
- when there is no one assessment tool that
assesses all 3 outcomes directly.
35And through our assessment lens
- Each child is a collection of numerous behaviors,
skills, traits, capabilities, interests,
strengths, and needs - What an individual tunes into depends on
his/her orientation - Individual professional training has provided an
organizing framework for how one sees the child
36How do assessment tools fit with the three Child
Outcome Areas?
- CROSSWALKS CAN HELP!
- A national center, the ECO Center is crosswalking
the most common assessments to the 3 child
outcomes - Crosswalks give a visual indication of how items
on an assessment tool covers the 3 outcomes - Crosswalks show which areas/subareas map to which
outcome
37Sample Crosswalk
38What will the process look like in Idaho?....
- Parents will be well informed and contribute
information to the process - An anchor assessment will be completed to assess
the child in the three outcome areas - Information will be collected, compiled and
documented using anchor assessments, parent
information, and informed professional
observation and judgment. - A rating decision regarding a childs level of
functioning will be made by the team utilizing
all the information gathered
39The Specifics Who, What, and When
40Target Population for Entry (Part C)
- Entry baseline data is required for
- all children entering services on or after
July 1, 2006 will have COSF completed within 45
days of IFSP development. - except premature infants less than 6 months
adjusted age - Includes children receiving only a single
related-service (i.e. Speech only or OT only)
41Target Population for Exit (Part C)
- Exit data is required for all children in
services for at least 6-months as of January 1,
2007. - Unanticipated exits use best information
available to complete form following exit. - Assessment (with anchor tool) recommended for all
exiting children - If necessary, those receiving only one
related-service can use ASQ and ASQ-SE in lieu of
full developmental evaluation as one data source
in determining exit outcome rating
42Time Lines at Exit (Part C)
- COSF completed near exit or transition meeting
with Part B - Anchor assessment completed between 2.6 IFSP
meeting and childs 3rd birthday - Outcome data is due to Data-Tot system (and if
appropriate, Part B system) - no later than 30 days after childs exit from
Part C, or - no later than 30 days after childs 3rd birthday
(whichever comes first).
43Additional information about child indicators
(Part C)
- Child must be in program at least 6 months for
EXIT data to be counted - Data must be collected near entry and near exit
- Collection of Entry data begins
- for ITP July 1, 2006
- for SDE September 1, 2006
44Roles and Responsibilities (Part C)
- Child information compiled from multiple sources
Service Coordinator - Scoring/completion of COS Form Primary
Therapist or Multi-disciplinary Team - Outcome Ratings transferred to Data-Tot Entry
form Service Coordinator - Data entered into Data-Tot Data Entry operator
45Difference of Opinion? (Part C)
- If therapists or other team members can not agree
on a rating - Review data at MDT, seek consensus
- If no resolution, provide Child Team supervisor
with all data - Child Team Supervisor will assign final rating
- Note different perspectives on form
46Summary Steps in COS Process (Part C)
- Gather information from multiple sources
(complete anchor assessment if necessary) - Synthesize data and complete COS Form
- Update Data-Tot enrollment form and submit for
entry - Share data with Part B if appropriate
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48Data Collection Process for Part B
- Target populations and Entry data
- All children enrolled in early childhood special
education on September 1, 2006 or later must have
entry data (baseline) collected within 45
calendar days of initial consent for placement. - Children transitioning from Part C -Exit from
Part C may be used for Part B entry if an
approved anchor tool was administered
49Exit data will be collected Part B
- EC Outcome Exit data will be collected within 30
days of the end of the school year (including
ESY) for all children who are 5 years old on or
before Sept 1st of the current school year
(cut-off date for kindergarten entry) no matter
if they are staying in a preschool setting or
going into kindergarten. - If moves to another preschool, transfer outcome
entry data and information with eligibility
report and student file.
50Exit data will be collected Part B (contd)
- If determined no longer eligible before 5, exit
outcome data is collected on all three outcomes
within 30 days of no longer meeting eligibility
criteria. - Prior to a move out of state, collect data 30
days prior to leaving the program - If child leaves before 5 without notice and prior
to administering the anchor assessment, complete
the COSF with the information you have.
51Roles (Part B)
- Preschool teachers have the lead role to gather
the necessary information for the COSF,
preferably during team meetings. - Related service providers also provide assessment
data, observation, etc.
52Determining the score 1-7 (Part B)
- This should be a team decision by consensus to
insure validity and reliability. - Scores may be averaged
- If there is disagreement, an administrator should
make the final determination after reviewing the
COSF.
53Process (Part B)
- Gather all assessment information
- Complete the COSF may be incorporated at time
of IEP meeting. - Consent is not required for this process.
- Enter score 1-7 (Y or N for exit) in web-based
data system
54Exit Data Collection (Part B)
-
- All children that have been in the program for 6
months or more must have exit data collected.
55Data reporting to the state (Part B)
- A real-time data collection system is being
constructed so data can be entered at the
convenience of the preschool teacher to avoid
lost data. - Data should be entered as soon as possible.
56- The Child Outcome Summary Form (COSF)
57Child Outcome Summary Form Key Features
- Is NOT an Assessment
- Is NOT about eligibility determination
- Does NOT rate or summarize
- Info about services provided to child
- Familys satisfaction with services
- Information for planning services for child
- Blends diverse data from multiple sources into a
consistent, reliable unit of measurement that can
be aggregated and tracked over time
58Child Outcome Summary Form Key Features
- Uses diverse information for global view of a
child - Compares a childs functioning to same-aged peers
- Documents progress and movement toward typical
development - Considers functional abilities across diverse
settings (not under ideal circumstances) - Provides information about childs overall sense
of functioning in the three outcome areas
59The Child Outcome Summary Form (COSF)
- Cover sheet
- Summary of evidence used to complete ratings
- People involved in assigning rating
- 7-point rating , with an overall rating for each
required outcome area - Highest score (7) outcome achieved at
age-expected level - Lowest score (1) farthest distance from
age-expectations - Progress Question (to be completed only at exit)
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61Thinking about how children are doing with regard
to each outcome.
7
Movement away from age-expected
Age-expected skills behavior
Movement toward age-expected
62Outcome Ratings A 7-Point Scale
- 1 - Not Yet
- 2 - Between emerging and not yet
- 3 - Emerging
- 4 - Between somewhat and emerging
- 5 - Somewhat
- 6 - Between completely and somewhat
- 7 -Completely
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64Considerations when completing Child Outcome
Summary Form
- Teams input is required
- Consider role of assistive technology/accommodatio
ns (i.e. sign language, wheel chair) - Consider childs culture and language
- Document special considerations that impacted
childs development - Reflect the childs actual functioning not
what the child is capable of under the ideal or
highly unusual circumstances
65Considerations when completing Child Outcome
Summary Form
- OSEP reporting requires two data points for each
outcome - Near entry (sets baseline)
- Near exit (shows progress)
- At Exit only, answer question Has child shown
new skills or made progress in outcome area? - Child CAN make progress without changing
numbers on the scale
66Identifying who made progress
- Progress moving up a point on the scale in a
subsequent rating, e.g., 3 to 4 - Progress staying at the same rating but having a
yes for the progress question
67Parental Involvement
- Parental consent for evaluations is required, as
always. - Parents give input to the COSF through assessment
process and IFSP/IEP development. - Parents need not be present when COSF is
completed. - Completion of the COSF is NOT an assessment and
does not require parental consent. - Discuss/share Parents Handout to inform parents
about process and purpose.
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69Team Planning
70What Did We Cover?
- Background and History
- OSEPs Three Functional Outcomes
- Assessment Practices
- Specific Requirements for Part C Part B
- Tools (Anchor Assessment List, Crosswalks, COSF,
Instructions, Decision Tree, Parent Talking
points) - Practice
- Local Planning
71Issues?
- What issues do you foresee?
- What guidance do you need?
- What else?
72- Good outcome data is a tool to produce good
outcomes for children and families.