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Children with Special Needs: Putting Together the Pieces

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Title: Children with Special Needs: Putting Together the Pieces


1
Children with Special Needs Putting Together
the Pieces
  • NYSAEYC Conference
  • Rochester, NY
  • Saturday, April 16, 2005

2
Where to get these slides
  • http//www.udel.edu/cds/conferencematerials.html

3
Lunchtime Topics
  • Individually appropriate
  • Age appropriate
  • Culturally appropriate
  • Exceptionality appropriate
  • Inclusion
  • Standards and indicators of learning
  • Outcomes and measures

4
History of Early Childhood Special Education
  • 1799-Wild boy of Aveyron
  • 1840s-Seguin and Schools for Students with mental
    retardation
  • Early 1900s-Settlement House Movement
  • Skeels and Dye (1939)
  • 1950s-Isolated public school programs
  • 1958-1961-Samuel Kirk and James McVicker Hunt
    publish seminal books on mental retardation and
    intelligence
  • 1965-War on Poverty begins
  • 1965-First Head Start programs

5
Early Intervention Law
  • Public Law 90-538 (1968) Handicapped Childrens
    Early Education Assistance Act
  • Public Law 92-142 (1972) Head Start Disabilities
    Requirement
  • Public Law 94-142 (1975) Education for All
    Handicapped Act
  • Public Law 99-457 (1986) Amendments to EHA and
    Infant/Toddler/Family Program
  • Public Law 101-476 (1990), New EHA Title
    Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
    (I.D.E.A.)

6
Roots of Early Childhood Special Education
  • Special Education (Behavioral analysis)
  • Compensatory Education (e.g., Head Start)
  • Early Childhood Education (DAP)

7
Early Care and Education Goals
  • to promote development in all domains
  • to build and support childrens social competence
  • to promote child engagement, independence, and
    mastery
  • to promote generalized use of skills
  • to support families as they support their
    children
  • to prevent the emergence of future problems or
    disabilities

8
An Early Childhood Special Education Goal
  • To improve childrens acquisition and use of
    important motor, social, affective,
    communication, and intellectual behaviors that,
    in turn, are integrated into response repertoires
    that are generative, functional, and adaptable.

9
Goals of families who have a child with a
disability
  • Normalcy
  • Friends
  • Stability--financial and emotional
  • Long-term planning
  • Equality
  • Happiness
  • (Turnbull Turnbull, 1990)

10
Developmentally Appropriate Practices
  • Individually Appropriate Programming
  • Age Appropriate Programming
  • Culturally Appropriate Programming

11
DAP Goal To help children
  • Develop positive self-concept
  • Develop curiosity about the world, confidence as
    a learner, and creativity
  • Develop positive relationships with adults and
    peers
  • Know about the community and social roles
  • Communicate effectively and facilitate thinking
    and learning
  • Problem solve
  • Construct knowledge of the physical world and
    understand their relationships to one another
  • Acquire knowledge of and appreciation for fine
    arts, humanities, and sciences
  • Become competent in the care of their bodies and
    to acquire basic physical skills
  • Maintain a desirable level of health and fitness

12
Similarities between DAP and EI
  • Both use Piaget and Vygotsky as
    philosophical/theoretical bases
  • Both are child initiated and child directed
  • Both use adults to support and expand childrens
    choices
  • Both emphasize the whole childs development
  • Both use the environment to provide structure to
    the learning environment
  • Both avoid external rewards and use intrinsic and
    naturalistic motivation to shape and monitor
    childrens behavior

13
Old Recommend Practices in Early Childhood
Programs Serving Children with Disabilities
  • Segregation
  • Traditional assessment
  • Academic orientation
  • Exclusive 11 instruction
  • focus on skills and products
  • Mass trial instruction
  • Highly structured
  • Adult initiated
  • Isolate therapy
  • Classroom teacher role

14
New Recommended Practices for Inclusive Programs
  • Inclusion
  • Blending of EI and DAP principles
  • Naturalistic assessment
  • Play-based orientation
  • Individualized, small group instruction
  • Focus on interactions and process
  • Activity-based instruction
  • Child initiated, adult supported
  • Integrated therapy
  • Collaborative/consultative roles

15
Regression to former practices
  • Increase in segregated preschool classes in many
    states
  • Increase in teaching strategies that emphasize
    repetition out of context
  • Increase in rote instruction
  • Increase in teacher-directed and whole group
    instruction

16
Inclusion/Integration Benefits
  • For children with disabilities
  • Increase in language/communication skills
  • Increase in social skills
  • Increase in families satisfaction with
    programming
  • Increase in family contacts in the community

17
Inclusion/Integration Benefits
  • For children without disabilities
  • Increase in language skills and communication
    abilities
  • Increase in social skills
  • Increase in tolerance of differences among
    individuals

18
Barriers to Inclusion/Integration
  • Fear of losing services for children with
    disabilities
  • Fear of inadequate services for children without
    disabilities
  • Fear of physical harm
  • Fear of psychological/emotional harm
  • Lack of planning and teaching time
  • Lack of resources and equipment
  • Lack of training and knowledge
  • Lack of administrative support

19
Pressure from Three Points
Developmentally Appropriate Practice
Special Education Strategies
CHILD Program
Standards And Indicators
20
The Study
  • A four year longitudinal study of kindergarteners
    who entered school in the 1997-98 school year
  • Purpose To determine the impact of
    pre-kindergarten services for students with
    disabilities and students living in poverty

21
The Sample
  • 717 students who entered kindergarten during
    1997-98
  • 217 students with active IEPs
  • 250 students living in poverty
  • 250 students from the general population

22
Sample Categories
23
Students Having Received Pre-K Services
  • Pre-k service records were reviewed to determine
    if students had received pre-k intervention in
  • Head Start
  • Early Childhood Assistance Programs
  • Birth to Three services (Part C of IDEA)
  • Preschool special education

24
Sample Students Receiving Pre-K Services
The 49 students receiving ECAP/HS services all
were in the Poverty group of the sample the 89
students receiving PSE Services were all in the
IEP group of the sample
25
Variables Tracked
  • Students family backgrounds, including
  • family form (number of siblings, parents,
    extended family members in the household)
  • parents/guardians education
  • Parents/guardians employment
  • Services students received including
  • Special education services
  • Extended school day
  • Extended school year
  • K-3(4) early intervention
  • Students behavior
  • Students grades
  • Students 3rd grade DSTP results

26
Comparison Groups
  • In order to determine the impact of
    pre-kindergarten services, comparison groups
    needed to be created from the sample
  • Two groups were created
  • Students who were living in poverty who did not
    receive ECAP or Head Start services
  • Students who did not have their disabilities
    identified until kindergarten, 1st, or 2nd grade

27
Comparison Groups
28
Analysis
  • The variables of the groups receiving
    pre-kindergarten services and the comparison
    groups were analyzed using comparison of means
    procedures such as t-tests and analysis of
    variance

29
Students with Disabilities
  • Students receiving preschool special education
    services had significantly higher 3rd grade DSTP
    scores than those students not identified with
    disabilities until K, 1, or 2
  • 65.2 met or exceeded the reading standard (vs.
    33.3)
  • 55.6 met or exceeded the math standard (vs.
    33.4)

30
Comparative 3rd Grade DSTP Results for Students
with Disabilities
31
Students with Disabilities (cont.)
  • Significantly more students receiving preschool
    special education services had satisfactory or
    higher 3rd grade academic grades in language
    arts, math, and listening skills than students
    not identified with disabilities until K, 1, or 2
    (73 vs. 59)
  • Students receiving preschool special education
    services had a grade retention rate of 5.56 per
    100 students compared to 26.1 per 100 students
    for students not identified with disabilities
    until K, 1, or2

32
Pressure from Three Points
Developmentally Appropriate Practice
Special Education Strategies
CHILD Program
Standards And Indicators
33
How do we make it happen?
What are the setting demands?
What are the goals for the child?
What are the childs strengths?
How is the child doing?
What are the instructional strategies needed?
34
We need to do three things
  • Assess, assess, assess
  • Assess childrens strengths
  • Assess environmental demands
  • assess families preferences for skills and
    behaviors
  • Instruct
  • With reinforcers
  • With specific instructional strategies
  • Document

35
Curriculum Adaptation Process
  • Same Task, Same Materials--adaptations are how
    the materials are arranged, displayed, the type
    of directions provided, and how the directions or
    teacher interactions are presented to the
    children
  • Same Task, Easier Steps--students participate in
    general curriculum activities with the adaptation
    that the steps to the activities are simplified
    or shortened. Often response modes are adapted
    (e.g., listen rather than speak, point rather
    than verbally label)

Adapted from Christine Salisbury, Ph.D.
36
Curriculum Adaptation Process
  • Same Task, Different Materials--the materials or
    equipment of the activity may be changed to
    enable the student to participate in the activity
    (e.g., use a glue stick instead of a brush for a
    collage activity)
  • Same Theme, Different Task--the activities that
    the child with a disability participates in are
    different but linked to the other activities by
    the theme or topic being addressed (e.g.,
    students in a kindergarten are working with
    attribute blocks and grouping according to
    characteristics while a child with a lower
    cognitive ability is making block patterns with
    the same materials)

37
Curriculum Adaptation Process
  • Different Theme, Different Task--in very limited
    circumstances where a child has a very severe
    disability, a different task and theme might be
    planned for him or her this should only occur in
    very rare instances and never related to any
    social activity in the program (e.g., snack,
    circle time, outside time)
  • The goal of this approach is to make adaptations
    as simple as possible and to address each childs
    needs within the routines and activities of the
    program day

38
Peer Adaptations
  • Make sure that you are using MANY materials that
    promote social interactions
  • Create activities where children need to work
    cooperatively and group children who have
    disabilities and those who do not have
    disabilities (e.g, mural painting)
  • Use routine times to group children with
    complementary skills together (e.g., at snack
    time have a child with good language modeling
    skills sit with a child with lower level language
    skills)

39
Characteristics of Materials that Encourage
Social Interactions
  • Accessible--children with all different levels of
    abilities can use the materials (e.g., the glue
    stick vs. a brush that needs to be dipped in a
    bowl of glue)
  • Adaptable--children of different skill levels can
    play with the materials at different conceptual
    levels (e.g., block play materials often have
    this quality--cars can be used for rolling or for
    complex role playing)
  • Cooperative--materials that either require or are
    more efficiently used when two children use them
    (e.g., many outside materials are like
    this---wagons, swings)

40
Teaching Specific Objectives
  • Teaching is the process of manipulating the
    environment so that learning will occur.
  • Characteristics that can be manipulated
  • materials
  • equipment
  • routines
  • peer behavior
  • teacher and other staff behavior

41
Phases of Learning
  • Acquisition--learning the new skill or behavior
  • Fluency--using the new skill at a normal rate
  • Maintenance--using the skill without support or
    external rewards
  • Generalization--using the skill in situations
    outside of the circumstances in which it was
    learned

42
Reinforcement for Learning
  • Start with natural reinforcers (play, social
    interactions, objects, actions)
  • Identify specific reinforcers from caregivers
    (parents, child care providers, relatives)
  • Observe child to determine why he or she does a
    behavior repeatedly
  • Test for reinforcer preferences

43
Using Reinforcers Effectively
  • CLEARLY identify the behavior you want to
    reinforce
  • Ensure that the reinforcer occurs IMMEDIATELY
    after the behavior or an approximation of the
    behavior
  • Pair non-naturally occurring reinforcers with
    social reinforcers
  • Once acquisition has occurred, mix reinforcers
  • Once acquisition and fluency has been achieved,
    fade non-natural reinforcers and replace with
    natural reinforcers
  • In generalization phase, move to intermittent
    reinforcement

44
Teaching Strategies
  • Arranging the environment
  • Providing models
  • Using childrens material and activity
    preferences
  • Violation of expectancy
  • Time delay
  • Transition teaching
  • Structured play activities
  • Shaping behaviors with reinforcers
  • System of least prompts
  • Stimulus modifications

Least intrusive to most intrusive.
45
Teaching Strategies (Continued)
  • Violation of expectancy--the teacher or other
    staff member incorrectly does a step in a
    familiar routine
  • Time delay--With holding a material or action
    from an expected routine sequence
  • Transition teaching--presenting a learning
    opportunity during transition times
  • Structured play activities--scripting childrens
    interactions and play scheme
  • Shaping--reinforcing approximations of a skill or
    behavior and withholding future reinforcements
    until the behavior is more closely approximates
    the desired behavior
  • System of least prompts--providing the child with
    the level of support needed to accomplish a
    specific skill

46
System of Least Prompts
  • Hierarchy of prompts from least to most intrusive
  • 1) Present the stimulus (e.g. What do you want
    to eat?
  • 2) Wait for a response.
  • 3) Use least prompt (usually a verbal or partial
    verbal prompt).
  • 4) Move to more intrusive prompts (toward
    physical assistance).
  • 5) Once desired behavior is acquired, move
    backward in the sequence of prompts until only
    the presented stimulus triggers the behavior.

47
Example of System of Least Prompts
  • Presentation of stimulus
  • Model
  • Visual cue
  • Visual cue, model, and minimal or partial verbal
    prompt
  • Visual cue, model and full verbal prompt
  • Visual cue, model, verbal and partial physical
    prompt
  • Model, verbal and full physical prompt

48
And, finally
  • We need to document.
  • We need to collect data.
  • We need to compile data.
  • We need to report data.
  • And we need to share it with funders, sponsors,
    boards, and directors, superintendents and head
    masterseveryone!

49
Where to get these slides
  • http//www.udel.edu/cds/conferencematerials.html

50
Contemporary Early Intervention Approaches
  • Incidental Teaching
  • child selected
  • child initiated
  • adult responded
  • use of graded prompts
  • Milieu Teaching
  • Arrangement of the environment
  • Assess the childs functioning
  • Find methods for the child to interact with the
    environment
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