Title: III-1
1Module III_______________________________________
_______________
2Module III Goal __________________________________
____________________
- To provide information that will facilitate the
successful return of students with TBI to their
schools
3Module III Learning Outcomes_____________________
_________________________________
- At the end of this module you will
- Understand the responsibilities of hospital and
school in school re-entry planning - Be familiar with the IEP team process for
students with TBI - Recognize common problems of students with TBI
- Be able to plan an evaluation of a student with
TBI
4Transition to School_____________________________
_________________________
- Preparing for transition to school begins at the
time of injury
5Transition to School_____________________________
_________________________
- What can the educational facility do?
- What can the medical facility do?
6School Re-entry PlanningWhose responsibility is
it?______________________________________________
_________
- Responsibilities of school staff and medical
staff shift over time - Medical staff assumes leadership for patient
care in the hospital - Educational staff takes more responsibility for
school planning as needs are known and discharge
nears - The family is involved throughout
7Three Stages of School Re-entry
Planning_________________________________________
_____________
- At the time of injury
- During the hospital/rehabilitation stay
- Prior to discharge
8Strategies for the Medical Facility______________
________________________________________
- At the time of the injury
- Identify a medical contact person (e.g., care
coordinator or social worker) - During hospitalization
- Provide updates on progress and needs
- Arrange for hospital visits for school staff
- Educate family and school staff
- Refer for special education if need is suspected
9Strategies for the Medical Facility
(cont.)__________________________________________
____________
- Prior to discharge
- Inform family and school of discharge date
- Provide discharge summary
- Participate in IEP team if possible
- Establish and communicate follow-up and
reevaluation schedule
10Re-entry Strategies for Schools__________________
____________________________________
- At the time of the injury
- As soon as you know a student has been injured,
designate a school contact person to receive and
provide information - Identify the medical contact person
11Role of the School Contact Person________________
______________________________________
- Be a support to the family
- Get appropriate releases signed to share
information - Gather information from hospital personnel as it
becomes available - Inform others (such as teachers, peers, and
siblings teachers) as needed
12Re-entry Strategies for Schools
(cont.)__________________________________________
____________
- During hospitalization
- Obtain parents permission to release/receive
information - Request updates from medical contact
- Visit student in the hospital
- Share information with school staff
13Re-entry Strategies for Schools
(cont.)__________________________________________
_____________
- During hospitalization (cont.)
- Refer for special education if appropriate
- Educate parents about special education process
- Arrange for staff training
14Re-entry Strategies for Schools
(cont.)__________________________________________
____________
- Prior to discharge
- Obtain current hospital records
- Complete IEP team process before discharge, if
possible, but within statutory timeframes. - Collaborate with medical facility to obtain
consultation and in-service training
15Strategies For Successful School Re-entry of
Students With TBI________________________________
_______________________
- Summary of strategies used by medical and school
facilities appears on pages 15a-15b. - Which strategies have participants used?
- Are there other strategies participants have
found helpful in the transition from hospital to
school?
16Transition to School Checklist___________________
____________________________________
- The Transition to School Checklist is designed to
help school personnel monitor completion of
transition activities - Please refer to the Checklist on page 16a.
17Transitions also include________________________
______________________________
- Transitions between classes
- Transition to new schools
- Transition to post school settings
- Other students
- See Transition Checklist on p. 17a
18The IEP Team Process_____________________________
__________________________
- 1. Refer the student to the LEA
- 2. Identify IEP Team members
- 3. Evaluate the students eligibility and
determine needs - 4. Develop the IEP
- 5. Offer placement
191. Refer the student to the LEA__________________
____________________________________
- In moderate and severe brain injuries referrals
usually occur while the student is hospitalized - As soon as you suspect a student is a child with
a disability, inform the parent of your intent to
refer, and refer in writing to the LEA
202. Identify IEP team members_____________________
__________________________________
- The IEP Team must include members designated in
Chapter 115.78 - These requirements are reproduced on the next
page of your manual - Others with special expertise or knowledge may be
included at the discretion of parent or school
212. Identify IEP Team Members (cont.)_____________
_________________________________________
- Who would you want on Serenas IEP team?
- Who would you want on Montys IEP team?
223. Evaluate the students needs__________________
_____________________________________
- As part of the evaluation the IEP team
- Reviews existing evaluation data
- evaluations and information provided by parents
- previous interventions and their effects
- current classroom-based assessments and
observations - observations by teachers and related services
providers
233. Evaluate the students needs
(cont.)__________________________________________
____________
- After review of data the IEP team determines
- if additional data are needed, and if so, who
should gather it - if child has an impairment
- present levels of performance
- if child needs SE and related services
244. Develop the IEP______________________________
________________________
- If the IEP team determines that the student has
an impairment (TBI) and needs special education
and related services, the team prepares the
Individualized Education Program
255. Offer placement_______________________________
________________________
- An educational placement is developed to
implement the childs IEP - To the maximum extent appropriate, a child with a
disability is educated with nondisabled children
(Chapter 115.79)
26Designate a case manager_________________________
______________________________
- It is best practice to appoint a case manager who
coordinates communication among IEP team members
27What types of problems can the school
anticipate?______________________________________
_________________
28Common Problems of Students with
TBI______________________________________________
________
- Certain types of difficulties are common in
students with TBI - Anticipating these difficulties can facilitate
successful re-entry to school - Problems can be physical/medical, cognitive,
sensory, motor, social, emotional, and behavioral
29Physical/Medical Problems________________________
_______________________________
- Problems
- Seizures
- Fatigue
- Headaches
- Swallowing/Eating
- Self-care activities
- Medication issues (see p. 29a)
- Is an Individualized Health Care Plan (IHCP)
needed? (see p. 29c-d)
30Common Motor Problems____________________________
__________________________
- Apraxia
- Ataxia
- Coordination problems
- Paresis or paralysis
- Orthopedic problems
- Spasticity
- Balance problems
- Impaired speed of movement
- Fatigue
- See p. 30a
31Sensory/Perceptual Problems______________________
________________________________
- Visual deficits
- field cuts
- tracking (moving and stationary objects)
- spatial relationships
- double vision (diplopia)
- Neglect
- Auditory deficits
- Tactile deficits
32Cognitive/Communication Problems_________________
______________________________________
- Executive functions
- Memory
- Attention
- Concentration
- Information processing
- Sequencing
- Problem solving
- Comprehension of abstract language
- Word retrieval
- Expressive language organization
- Pragmatics
33Executive Functions______________________________
________________________
- Planning, prioritizing, sequencing,
self-monitoring, self-correcting, inhibiting,
initiating, controlling or altering behavior - (Savage Wolcott, 1995, p. 150)
-
34Cognitive/Communication Deficits_________________
______________________________________
- See p. 34a for additional information regarding
cognitive/communication problems - See p. 34b for an example of Montys difficulties
at school
35Social-emotional Problems________________________
_______________________________
- Irritability
- Impulsivity
- Disinhibition
- Perseveration
- Emotional Lability
- Insensitivity to social cues
- Low frustration tolerance
- Anxiety
- Withdrawal
- Egocentricity
- Denial of deficit/lack of insight
- Depression
- Peer conflict
- Sexuality concerns
- High risk behavior
36Social-emotional Problems________________________
______________________________________
- See p. 36a for descriptions of social-emotional
deficits - See p. 36b for an example of Serenas
difficulties at school
37Behavioral Problems _____________________________
_________________________
- Deficits (all types) may lead to challenging
behaviors - non-compliance
- aggression
- confrontational behavior
- lack of initiative
- withdrawal
38Traumatic Brain Injury Checklist_________________
______________________________________
- Orientation and Attention to Activity
- Starting, Changing, and Maintaining Activities
- Taking in and Retaining Information
- Language Comprehension and Expression
- Visual-Perceptual Processing
- Visual-Motor Skills
- Sequential Processing
- Problem-Solving, Reasoning, and Generalization
- Organization and Planning Skills
- Impulse or Self-Control
- Social Adjustment and Awareness
- Emotional Adjustment
- Sensorimotor Skills
39Manifestations of TBI by Age_____________________
_____________________________________
- Preschool
- Irritability and crying
- Temper tantrums
- Frustration
- Fearfulness
- Disabilities become evident over time as higher
level skills are expected to develop
40Manifestations of TBI by Age_____________________
____________________________________
- Elementary school
- Difficulty with new learning
- Short attention span and impulsivity
- Frustration
- Inappropriate social interactions
- Disabilities become evident over time as higher
level skills are expected to develop
41Manifestations of TBI by Age_____________________
___________________________________
- Middle school and high school
- Difficulty with new learning
- Short attention span and impulsivity
- Frustration over skill losses
- Decreased social judgment
- Risk-taking
- Depression and anxiety
- Sexuality concerns
- Effects of earlier injury become evident
42What happens as a result of these deficits and
behaviors?_______________________________________
________________
- Friends leave
- Families mourn
- Teachers are frustrated
- The student is at increased risk for isolation
from peers, academic failure, depression,
substance abuse, sexual behavior, delinquency,
further TBI
43Evaluation of students with TBI__________________
_____________________________________
- Two purposes
- Identification of a student as a student with a
disability - Program planning
44Evaluation Planning____________________________
__________________________
- Where do you begin after a referral is made?
- What do you need to know about the student to
determine eligibility for special education and
related services and to develop an IEP?
45Information to Determine Needs___________________
____________________________________
- TBI information
- Information about areas of functioning
- Cognition and memory
- Speech and language communication
- Sensory and perceptual abilities
- Motor abilities
- Psychosocial impairments
- Physical functions/safety
- Academic skills
46Challenges to Evaluation for Programming_________
_____________________________________________
- What factors make evaluation of the programming
needs of students with TBI challenging?
47Challenges to Evaluation for Programming Student
Factors__________________________________________
____________
- Rapidly changing skills (especially during first
6-12 months) - Communication, physical, sensory, motor,
emotional, and behavioral difficulties may
interfere with assessment - Uneven skill profile (some higher skills
preserved with lower skills lost) - Performance influenced by state and situation
- Problems may emerge later
48Challenges to Evaluation for Programming Other
Factors__________________________________________
____________
- The family is probably in distress
- Initial assessment is probably conducted outside
school in a setting unlike the classroom - Much assessment information is needed from other
professionals (who are busy) - Medical reports may be difficult to interpret
- Assessment requires IEP team coordination and
planning
49What can be done to address these
challenges?______________________________________
_________________
- Use classroom data to inform instruction
- Use observation, curriculum-based measures, work
samples, trial teaching - Assess across content, time, settings
- Invite parents to provide information
- Ask medical personnel for assistance
- Plan team evaluations
- Share information
50Teamwork The Family and the School
Staff____________________________________________
_________
- Parent(s) and educators work together
- Educators recognize and respect the expertise,
values, and concerns of the family - The family recognizes and respects the skills of
educators - Communication is frequent and honest
51TBI Evaluation PlanningGroup Activity__________
____________________________________________
- Refer to the TBI Evaluation Planning worksheet on
pages 51a and b - Monty and Serena have been referred for
evaluation for special education. What do you
know? What do you need to find out?
52How Can I Gather Additional Information?_________
______________________________________________
- Record review (school and medical)
- Direct observation (school or hospital)
- Student interview (if possible)
- Teachers/service provider interviews
- Criterion-referenced assessment
- Curriculum-based assessment
- Rating scales and checklists
- Neuropsychological assessment (if available)
53Test Interpretation Cautions____________________
___________________________________
- Standardized, norm-referenced measures
- may not assess the full range of skills
- testing situation may mask deficits
- limited predictive validity
- Timed tasks
- may reflect motor slowing, not ability
- Measures of prior knowledge
- may not reveal difficulty with new learning
54What does Wisconsin law require in evaluations
for special education?___________________________
___________________________
- See Chapter 115.782 on pages 54a and 54b
55Monty and Serena Do they meet Wisconsin criteria
for TBI?_________________________________________
______________
- Acquired injury to the brain
- External physical force
- NOT congenital or birth trauma
- Partial functional disability or psychosocial
impairment or both - Impairments in one or more areas (listed in
definition) - Need special education/related services
56End of Module III