Title: Caring for Our People: Special Education
1Caring for Our PeopleSpecial Education
- Training by
- Spirit Lake Consulting, Inc.
2Our training is...
- Being created with input from community members
- Designed to be useful for people with
disabilities, family members and staff - Under constant development to provide the latest
up-to-date information and meet community needs
3Introduction
- Who gets special education?
- More than 10 of children nationwide
- 20-30 on most reservations
- Its the law!
- Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
requires quality services for students with
disabilities, including preschoolers infants
4WHO QUALIFIES?
- There are thirteen categories for special
education - Mental Retardation
- Learning Disabilities
- Serious Emotional Disturbance
- Visual Impairment
- Hearing Impairment
- Deafness
- Deaf-Blindness
5WHO QUALIFIES?(continued)
- Autism
- Speech or Language Impairment
- Traumatic Brain Injury
- Orthopedic Impairment
- Multiple Disabilities
- Other Health Impairments
6DEFINING THESE CATEGORIES Mental Retardation
- .... a condition in which a person has
trouble learning, absorbing, and practicing every
day skills, which slows them from being able to
take care of themselves and interact with others.
This disorder is usually present from birth,
although some cases of retardation can occur
later in life.
7DEFINITIONS (continued) Learning Disabilities
- defined by law as "an imperfect ability to
read, write, speak or perform mathematical
calculations and which is not due to physical,
sensory or emotional impairment, mental
retardation or socio-cultural disadvantage."
8DEFINITIONS (continued) Serious Emotional
Disturbance
-
- Includes depression, Attention
Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, Conduct Disorders - An ADHD child may impulsively push someone
too hard on a swing, knock the child down on the
ground and be sorry she did this afterward. A
child with a conduct disorder might push the kid
out of the swing and say she didn't do it.
9DEFINITIONS (continued) Visual Impairment
-
- The terms partially sighted, low vision,
legally blind, and totally blind are used to
describe students with visual impairments. - "Partially sighted" indicates a visual problem
that has resulted in a need for special
education - "Low vision" generally refers to a severe visual
impairment, not necessarily limited to distance
vision. - "Legally blind" means that a person has less than
20/200 vision in the better eye or a very limited
field of vision. - Totally blind students learn via braille or
other non-visual media.
10DEFINITIONS (continued) Hearing Impairment
- is when there is an impairment in hearing
that affects a child's educational performance
but that is not included under the definition of
deafness (see next slide). - Each state defines the degree of hearing
loss which determines a student's eligibility for
special education services. Hard of hearing is
defined as a hearing loss of 35-60 decibels in
the better ear.
11DEFINITIONS (continued) Deafness
- is a hearing impairment that is so severe
that the child is impaired in understanding
speech. - Deafness is usually defined as a hearing loss
of 70 decibels or greater in the better ear.
12DEFINITIONS (continued) Deaf-Blindness
- refers to a combination of hearing and
visual impairments which cause such severe
communication and other developmental and
educational needs that they cannot be
accommodated in special education programs solely
for children with deafness or children with
blindness.
13DEFINITIONS (continued) Autism
- this category includes individuals with
all levels of pervasive development disorder
the most known of which being autism. People with
PDD have deficits in social interaction and
communication. - Aspergers Syndrome, Retts Syndrome and
Childhood Disintegrative Disorder are also
classified under PDD.
14DEFINITIONS (continued)Speech or Language
Impairment
- includes communication or language
disorders that affect communication and/or oral
functioning that affects speech. - Speech disorders include articulation
disorder and phonological disorder. - Children with language disorders may have
trouble with matching a word with its meaning,
creating sentences, or comprehending what someone
is saying.
15DEFINITIONS (continued) Traumatic Brain Injury
- usually occurs in an accident when the
brain literally bounces back and forth inside the
skull, often hitting in both the front and the
back of the brain. Brain injury can also occur
due to lack of oxygen. - Brain injury is the most common cause of
death and disability in children. Effects can be
as serious as mental retardation, learning
disabilities, loss of vision or speech, inability
to remember new things and number of other
complications.
16DEFINITIONS (continued) Orthopedic Impairment
- according to the ADA (2005), an
individual with a physical disability is a person
who either - has a physical or mental impairment that
substantially limits one or more major life
activities - has a record of such an impairment
- is regarded as having such an impairment.
- These conditions can be related to any
physical disorder or condition or anatomical loss
affecting one or more body systems. The loss can
be muscular-skeletal (e.g., a missing limb) or
neurological (I.e., the body part does not
function, such as in paraplegia).
17DEFINITIONS (continued) Multiple Disabilities
- refers to a combination of disabilities,
such as mental retardation and orthopedic
impairment, that cannot be served in programs for
either individual disability alone.
18DEFINITIONS (continued) Other Health
Impairments
- cover a variety of diseases and
disorders focused on a special education category
that refers to people who have limited strength,
energy or alertness that affects their ability to
learn in a normal classroom. - Less than .5 of students are diagnosed
with other health impairments. - Some of these disorders are present at
birth, such as sickle cell anemia, asthma,
hemophilia or epilepsy. Other impairments are
caused by acquired conditions such as lead
poisoning, rheumatic fever, HIV, or cancer.