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Three-Tiered Model of Reading Instruction
Writing Individualized Education
Programs (IEP's)
For Success
by Barbara D. Bateman,
Ph.D., J.D.
Secondary Education and Beyond
Learning Disabilities Association 1995
I. Introduction
The
post-school success rates of students, who have learning disabilities, as a
group, have not been what we would all hope even though many individuals have
been highly successful. A recent focus on greater school responsibility for the
post-school life of students who have disabilities has resulted in new
transition requirements. The purpose of this discussion is to present a
different approach to writing IEPs, with special attention to the transition
component This approach results in IEPs which, unlike most IEP’s, are both
educationally useful and legally correct.
The Promise
After nearly seventeen years of life the Individual Education Program (IEP)--
the heart and soul of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) --
is still in it's infancy, it's great potential unrealized and unappreciated. The
IEP process and product frequently have been distorted beyond recognition. The
purpose of this discussion is to show how the IEP process can work to produce
IEPs that are both educationally useful and legally correct. The essence of
legal correctness is that the IEP is tailored precisely to all the unique needs
of the individual student. The core of educational utility is that the IEP
spells out precisely how the school district will address each and every unique
need and how it will determine whether and when a change in strategy or service
is required. The IEP process must determine:
(a) Which needs or characteristics of the
student require special education, i.e., individualization of services;
(b) Precisely how the district will address each need, i.e., "what special
education, related services or modifications it will provide; and
(c) how and when the efficacy of those services will be evaluated.
The
IEP process must include the parent (or parent/student) as a full and equal
partner, and a student whose IEP addresses "transition" must be invited to
participate in the IEP process and must have her or his preferences and
interests considered. These transition concerns and processes are a special
focus of this discussion.
The Practice
Most
IEP’s are useless or slightly worse, and too many teachers experience the IEP
process as always time consuming, sometimes threatening, and, too often, a
pointless bureaucratic requirement. The result is a quasi-legal document to be
filed away with the expectation it won't be seen again except, heaven forbid, by
a monitor or compliance officer. The point of the IEP exercise seems to be to
complete the given form in a way that commit the district to as little as
possible, and which precludes, as much as possible, any meaningful discussion or
evaluation of the student's real progress.
Parents too often experience the IEP process as an overgrown parent-teacher
conference in which the school personnel present some previously prepared papers
and request a signature. They may be told a few things about some "rights."
Parents who attempt to participate, as equals are often intimidated into
acquiescence. They are frequently given false and outrageous distortions such
as, "We (the district) don't provide individual tutoring"; or "Speech therapy is
always done by the regular classroom teacher and the speech therapist provides
consultation services to her"; or "We are a full inclusion school and have no
special classes or resource rooms because we don't believe in pull-out
programs." When such limiting and blatantly illegal practices are presented as
if they are simple fact few parents are adequately prepared to challenge the
district.
A
Better Way
The
IEP process and product can be both educationally useful and legally correct.
The first step toward that end is for the district to provide an appropriate
time and place for the IEP meeting, The place should be physically comfortable
and the meeting time and length appropriate. The law requires the meeting be at
a mutually agreed on time and place. Too often parents are not aware they have
any say in either. Districts must also be careful to avoid unrealistically short
meetings, especially for initial, complex or disputed IEP’s.
The
only legitimate focus of an IEP meeting is on the special needs of the student
and how those are to be addressed. There may be a temptation for district
personnel to sidestep into policy explanations or justifications or into what
the parents have done or not done. If the student is not present at the IEP
meeting a strategically placed photo of the youngster can serve to help all
participants stay focused on the needs of that student. Many IEP meetings lose
this essential focus and wander, becoming inefficient and frustrating for all.
The
single most important principle of the IEP process is that the school must
appropriately address all the student's unique needs without regard to the
availability of needed services. Prior to the passage of IDEA (then P.L. 94-142)
in 1975, schools were legally free to offer only the programs or services, if
any, they had available. Parents were supposed to be grateful for anything at
all that was provided. The primary purpose of the law was to turn that squarely
around and entitle the student who has a disability to a free appropriate
education individually designed to meet her or his unique needs. Educators who
have entered the field in the last twenty years lack this historical perspective
and too easily revert to the pre-IDEA mentality of trying to stretch existing
programs and services to fit the students. Instead they must start with the
student and design services to fit the student's needs, however unique they may
be.
The
Participants
Sometimes parents report that only a teacher was at the IEP meeting; other times
a seeming army of district personnel confront them. The law specifies that in
addition to the parent and student (if the parent so wishes) a teacher of the
student and a district representative must be present. The IDEA regulations
allow the district substantial discretion in determining which teacher will be
at the IEP meeting. Since, in theory, the IEP team is addressing the student's
needs above all, it would seem reasonable to select a teacher who knows the
student well. In addition, at least one team member must be qualified (by state
standards) in the area of the student's disability. If this is not the teacher,
it must be the district representative (Mcintire, 16 EHLR 163, (OSEP, 1990)).
Students at middle school or high school most often have several teachers. The
law does not require that they all attend, but good special education practice
suggests their input should be sought and they most certainly should be informed
of the IEP's provisions.
The
district representative must provide or be qualified to supervise special
education, have the authority to allocate district resources, and be able to
guarantee no administrative veto of the IEP team's decisions (34 CFR Part 300
Appendix C, 13). These qualifications are the law's way of insuring that the IEP
team, and it alone, has the power to determine what services the student needs
and, therefore, will receive. The evaluation team, often called the
multi-disciplinary team, determines eligibility, but only recommends services.
All
members of the IEP team should remember the enormous power and responsibility
that is theirs. When the IEP specifies a service is needed, the district must
provide it. Too often parents are given a very different impression, i.e., that
only what is already available can be provided and often in smaller than needed
amounts. This critical difference between the law and practice is typified by
the common situation, e.g., where the parent believes the student who has a
learning disability needs intensive, individual, daily language therapy and is
told by the speech therapist that since the therapist is only in that building
on Mondays and Wednesdays the student will be included in an ongoing 20 minute
speech therapy group on those two days.
In
addition to the parent (and perhaps student), teacher, and the district
representative, the first IEP meeting for a given student must be attended by a
member of the evaluation team or someone familiar with the evaluation. In
addition, either the district or the parent may invite anyone else. The district
must, however, inform the parent ahead of time of all district invited persons
who will be at the IEP meeting. There is no similar requirement for parents to
inform the district of anyone they may invite.
The
fact the law does not require related services personnel to be present may be
highly significant. The IDEA regulations (34 CFR Part 300 Appendix A) advise
that related service personnel provide written recommendations to the IEP team
about the nature, frequency and amount of service to be provided. Arguably,
there is no requirement that goals and objectives are necessary for related
services. If related service goals and objectives are required they may be of
the sort a teacher and parent could write. Since related services include only
those necessary to enable the student to benefit from special education it
stands to reason that the goals and objectives to be accomplished by the related
services would appear as goals for the special education services. The focus on
the related services components of the IEP is on specifying the amount of
service and the outcome is reflected in the goals and objectives for special
education. The related services are not ends in themselves, but rather enablers.
Contents of the IEP
The
federal requirements for the contents of the IEP are straightforward. The
individualized education program for each child must include:
(a) A statement of the student's present
levels of education performance;
(b) A statement of annual goals, including short term instructional objectives;
(c) A statement of the specific special education and related services to be
provided to the student, and the extent to which the student will be able to
participate in regular educational programs;
(d) A statement of the needed transition services for students beginning no
later than age 16 and annually thereafter (and if determined appropriate for an
individual student, beginning at age 14, or younger), including, if appropriate,
a statement of each public agency's and each participating agency's
responsibilities or linkages, or both, before the student leaves the school
setting;
(e) The projected dates for initiation of services and the anticipated duration
of the services; and (f) Appropriate objective criteria and evaluation
procedures and schedules for determining, on at least an annual basis, whether
the short term instructional objectives are being achieved. (34-CFR 300.346).
Legal Rulings on IEP’s
These five general principles, among others, emerge clearly from a review of the
hundreds of past IEP rulings from agencies and courts:
(1) All of a student's unique needs must
be addressed, not just her or his academic needs, e.g., Russell v.
Jefferson Sch. Dist.,
609 F. Supp. 605, (N.D. CA 1985); Abrahamson v. Hershman, 701 F.2nd 223,
(1st Cir. 1983). Arguably, no "non-unique" needs have to be addressed.
(2) The availability of services may not be considered in writing the IEP. If a
service is needed it must be written on the IEP and if the district does not
have it available, it must be provided by another agency. One of the earliest of
all the agency rulings mandated that availability of services be disregarded in
writing the IEP (Leconte, EHLR 211:146, OSEP, 1979). This principle has
been reiterated repeatedly by the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative
Services (OSERS) and the Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP) and
virtually ignored by the field.
(3) The IEP is a firm, legally binding "commitment of resources." The district
must provide the services listed or the IEP must be amended (Beck, EHLR
211:145 (OSEP 1979)).
(4) IEPs must be individualized. The same goals, same content areas, same
discipline or the same amounts of therapy on many IEPs (e.g., every student who
receives speech therapy in a particular building receives 30 minutes daily)
reveals a violation of this individualization requirement (Tucson, AZ Unified
Sch. Dist. #1, EHLR 352.547 (OCR 1987)).
(5) All of the components of the IEP required by law (e.g., goals and
objectives, specific special education and related services) must be present.
II. Developing the IEP
The proper team has assembled, the student's photo is prominently placed, the
calming herbal tea has been served, the tape recorder is on and the newsprint is
on the easel. It is time to begin developing the IEP. A three-step IEP
development process is strongly recommended:
(a) List the student's unique characteristics or needs that require
individualization (and which entitle the student to individualized services);
(b) Determine and specify the district-provided services and modifications that
will appropriately address each need; and
(c) Write the goals and objectives that will be accomplished by the student if
the services and modifications are appropriate and effective.
An
IEP "Non-Form" consisting solely of a blank piece of paper oriented horizontally
can accommodate this process far better than existing forms. Divide the paper
into thirds and label the three columns something like:
(1) Student's Needs;
(2) Services; and
(3) Evaluation of Services.
Other headings that work well are (a) Individualize because... (b) What the
district will do; (c) How we'll know it is working.
The
Student's Unique Characteristics or Needs
First, the IEP team must determine the
student's unique characteristics or needs to which the special services will be
directed. One helpful way to learn to think in terms of these essential
characteristics is to imagine that you are describing the student to a volunteer
who has never met the student and is going to take him or her camping for a
week. The IEP is required to address only the portions or aspects of the
student's education that need to be individualized. The student should be
visible in the IEP. Too many IEPs reveal only the academic program available in
the resource room and show nothing whatsoever about the student. The primary
focus of the IEP is going to be the specification of services. This initial step
is to determine what is necessitating the services.
If
we complete the statement, "We are individualizing Johnny's program because
"_______" those "because" are his unique needs. The "because" may be such things
as: (a) he is reading several years behind where he should be; (b) he is unable
to organize his assignments, homework; or (c) his attention is too easily
distracted away from work, etc. These are the exact needs to be addressed in the
next column.
When
a legal dispute arises about a student's program, a common concern is whether
the services provided addressed all the student's special needs. Those special
needs are what must be specified in this first stage of IEP development. It is
difficult to imagine how one could either attack or defend the services offered
to meet unique needs unless those needs had been specified. In addition to the
real world knowledge the IEP team members have about the student's
characteristics/ needs, it may be helpful to consult any current evaluations.
This is particularly important for the first IEP, which immediately follows the
evaluation, which found the student to be IDEA eligible. Some evaluations fail
to address a student's special needs; others can be very helpful.
Characteristics or needs will often "cluster." The team may well decide in the
next stage that one service will address more than one characteristic or need.
However, at this point it is important to just "brainstorm" and list all the
unique characteristics that require individualized attention. Sometimes the
natural flow seems to be to work "across" the IEP Non-Form, i.e., when a
characteristic has been identified, to then decide what service or accommodation
will address it and finally determine the goals and objectives for that service
that will indicate its appropriateness. Other times it may be better to list all
the characteristics first, then move to services and then to goals. Either way,
or a combination, is perfectly OK.
Examples of characteristics (not all from the same student) in both academic and
social-emotional-behavioral areas follow. Remember that for each, the next
inquiry will be, "What will the district do about this?" Some examples of unique
characteristics or needs in academic areas are:
(a) Handwriting that is slow, labored,
"drawn," nearly illegible due to improper size and spacing of letters and words;
(b) Lacks understanding of place value and
regrouping in both addition and subtraction;
(c) Attributes literal, concrete meaning
to everything he hears and reads; doesn't get jokes or slang;
(d) Understands spoken language, decodes
words accurately, but does not comprehend material read independently; oral
reading reveals severe lack of expression and no attention to punctuation;
(e) Works very slowly, becomes upset if he
makes a mistake, quits and refuses to continue if paper is "messy",
(f) Answers before thinking, both in oral
and written work; work is impulsive; many "careless" errors; and
(g) Gets arithmetic problems `"messed up"
and copies them incorrectly off board and out of book. Lines up problems
incorrectly and also lines up answers wrong in multiplication and division.
The
law requires that the Present Level of Performance (PLOP) in these areas of need
be indicated in a way that is readily understandable and is precise enough to
allow us to measure progress. The PLOP can appear either as an elaboration of
the characteristic or need or as the chronological beginning point in a
succession of PLOP, behavioral objectives, and annual goal. The PLOP is now, the
objectives are short-term goals, and the goal is where the student is headed by
the end of a year.
If
the PLOP is treated as a quantification of the characteristic or need, then a
PLOP for the slow, barely legible handwriting in example (a) above might be
"copies 5 words per minute with 1 or 2 of the words illegible."
Some
characteristics or needs are sufficiently descriptive as they are and need no
quantification, e.g., lacks understanding of place value and regrouping. To say
that the student performs zero regrouping problems correctly adds little to the
description.
Sometimes a present level of performance can be best described by a work sample.
A picture can speak very loudly, as in a timed handwriting sample, which could
be attached to the IEP as a PLOP. Such a sample can reveal both quality
(content) of written expression as well as mechanics of handwriting.
Some
examples of unique characteristics or needs in social-emotional- behavioral
areas would be:
(a) Shy; no friends; never volunteers in
class; never initiates social contact with other children;
(b) Bully; doesn't know how to play with
other children; physically aggressive with smaller children;
(c) Over-reacts and has temper outbursts; is noncompliant; pouts and whines; is
sullen and negative when suggestions are made; and
(d) Short attention span; easily
distracted by sounds.
These characteristics would be treated just the same as academic needs. A PLOP
would be added if necessary and then the team would ask what the district will
do about the bullying or the shyness or short attention span.
The
Special Education, Related Services and Modifications - the District's "Will
Do's"
The second inquiry the team should make
is, "How will the district respond to each of the student's needs? What will we
do about Joe's need for help in making friends? What will we do about Toni's
tendency to work rapidly and carelessly? What will we do about Manuel's anger
problem?" The special education, related services or modifications the district
will provide can be conveniently thought of as the "district do's." The "do's"
are listed in the middle column of the Non-Form. They may be as creative,
flexible, innovative, and often inexpensive as the team's brainstorming and
combined wisdom allow. This listing of services becomes the "Special Education
and Related Services" which the law requires be on the IEP and which is too
often omitted or simply perverted into a mere check mark or a percentage of time
in special education. The amount of related services such as speech therapy or
physical therapy that is needed must be shown, along with the date the service
is to begin and the anticipated duration of the service.
One
of the interesting issues about services is the question of whether methodology
need be specified. If, for example, the service is remedial reading, must the
method be spelled out? In general the answer is "no". In 1977, when the IDEA
rules were first proposed, they would have mandated that methodology and
instructional materials were to be included in IEP’s. However, when the rules
became final that requirement had been dropped. In the meantime, some states and
districts had moved quickly and already had forms that included methods and
materials. It is not unusual to find those forms still in use. One disadvantage
of including method is that so doing means an IEP meeting would have to be
called to change the method. If method isn't on the IEP it can be changed
unilaterally as the teacher sees fit.
Methodology becomes a source of conflict when parents are convinced their child
will receive benefit from a particular method and will not benefit from the
method the district wants to use. The most frequently sought methods are a
particular method of communication for students who are deaf and direct
instruction and/or phonics based reading programs for students who are learning
disabled. Almost all courts agree that schools may usually select the method.
However, in rare cases parents have been able to show that a particular method
is necessary to allow the IEP to be "reasonably calculated" to allow benefit,
e.g., Hawaii Dept. of Education v. Tara H., Civ. No. 86-1161, (D.HI
1987). It is extremely important to note, as no court has yet done, that when
the U.S. Supreme Court said methodology should be left to the state (school) it
said so in the context of presuming the school had expertise in all relevant,
effective methods (Board
of Ed. v. Rowley, 102 S.Ct. 3034,
(1982)). This is not usually the case.
A
common and interesting question related to these "District To Do" services
relates to in-service training for teachers. Rob, e.g., has Tourette syndrome
and needs a teacher who is knowledgeable about how his involuntary vocalizations
are affected by stress. The agreed upon service to be provided by the district
is in-service training by the local physician for all the school staff. Does
that "district do" belong on Rob's IEP? Yes, it does. It is a service to meet
his unique need. One concern is that such a service doesn't lend itself directly
to a goal formulated in terms of Rob's behavior. This concern is easily
addressed by looking to what we hope to see in Rob's behavior as a result of
having an informed, sympathetic teacher who assists him in avoiding unnecessary
stress. One obvious answer is improved academic performance. Other outcomes
could be a direct decrease in frequency and severity of his symptoms and an
increase in socialization.
Another issue is that the service is not being provided directly to Rob.
Legally, an important question is whether Rob is receiving some special
education, i.e., some specially designed instruction to meet his unique needs,
which is delivered by qualified special education personnel. If he is not
receiving any special education, as defined in the law, he is either not
eligible under IDEA or he is not receiving the free appropriate education to
which he is entitled. If he is receiving special education then it does not
matter how the in-service training for his teachers is conceptualized.
Logically, in-service staff training is perfectly analogous to parent training
and is, therefore, a related service. If so, it is important to specify, as for
all related services, how much in-service is to be provided and when.
For
many years some districts resisted including on IEP’s the modifications needed
in the regular classroom. However, it is well settled law that they must be
included. A checklist of types of modifications (e.g., in grading, discipline,
assignments, texts, tests, etc.) can be helpful to insure all necessary
modifications are addressed.
The
Present Levels of Performance, Goals and Objectives - Evaluating the District
"Do's"
The third step, after the needs have been
delineated and the services specified, is to write the required annual goal and
behavioral objectives for each special education service or cluster of services.
The clustering of services can be very efficient as well as conceptually
illuminating. For example, think of a secondary student who has a severe
learning disability affecting his written expression. He might need several
services including keyboarding instruction, tutoring in writing, modifications
in test taking and length of written assignments, substitution of oral
presentations for some term papers, and modified grading. The entire service
cluster could be reasonably evaluated in terms of his improved rates of
successful course completion and attendance. Other goals could also be very
appropriate. The point is that just as characteristics or needs can be clustered
to provide one service, so services can be clustered to be assessed by a common,
single goal.
Writing goals and objectives begins with asking, "If the service we are
providing is effective, what will we see in Todd's behavior that tells us so?"
The purpose of the mandated goals and objectives is to evaluate the service. We
need to know when or if to change what we're doing, to change the service we are
providing. As long as we're on track and the child is making reasonable progress
we just keep going. That's why objectives are to be statements of how far the
student will progress toward the annual goal (12 month objective) by when.
One
of the common and major problems with goals and objectives is that they are not
taken seriously by their writers who have no intention of actually checking
whether the student has reached them or not. It is as if we never understood the
most basic tenet of the IEP, i.e., that we are going to try the listed services
and see if they work for that student. The goals and objectives are to be real.
They are to be used to evaluate program effectiveness. They are not just legal
requirements to be completed and filed. The contrast can be seen easily.
|
Examples of Annual Goals
|
|
Real
Goal |
Not
Real Goal |
|
Joe will have no more
than 5 unexcused absences/tardies this year. |
Joe will have a better
attitude toward school 80% of the time. |
|
Sara will participate
regularly in a supervised extra-curricular activity that meets weekly. |
Sara will make wise
choices in her use of leisure time. |
|
Max will maintain a C+
average in his regular classes. |
Max will be 75%
successful in the mainstream. |
|
Beth will pass upper
body strength items on the fitness test. |
Beth will show an
appropriate level of upper body strength. |
One
easy and effective way to include the mandated present levels of performance
(PLOP) in the areas of concern is to use them as the beginning point in a
sequence going from the PLOP to the objectives to the annual goal. This kind of
sequence is illustrated in Joe's Non-Form IEP. Joe is an identified student with
learning disabilities who was in the 9th grade in a very small, rural district.
Additional examples of sequences that are intended to be used to evaluate the
services are shown below:
|
Examples of Sequences |
|
A: PLOP |
Anita averages 10
unexcused absences/tardies per month. |
|
Objective 1 |
By Feb. 1 she will
have fewer than 5 unexcused absences/tardies per month. |
|
Objective 2 |
By April 2 she will
have fewer than 2 unexcused absences/tardies per month. |
|
Goal |
From April through
June 1 she will average less than 1 unexcused absence/tardy per month. |
|
|
|
|
B: PLOP |
Jeremy submits fewer
than half his homework assignments. |
|
Objective 1 |
By Nov.15 he will have
submitted 75% of all homework assignments. |
|
Objective 2 |
By Jan. 15 he will
have submitted 85% of all homework assignments. |
|
Goal |
By the end of the year
he will regularly submit all assigned homework on time. |
|
C: PLOP |
Jill silently reads 6
th grade material at a rate of 50-75 words per minute and correctly
answers 30-40% of factual comprehension questions asked orally. |
|
Objective 1 |
By Dec. 1 Jill will
read 6th grade material orally at 75-100 words per minute with 0-2 errors. |
|
Objective 2 |
By Mar. 1 Jill will
read 6th grade material orally at 100-125 words per minute with 0-2 errors
and correctly answer more than 70% of factual questions asked over the
material. |
|
Goal |
By June 15 Jill will
orally read 7th grade material at 75-100 words per minute with 0-2 errors
and correctly answer 90% to 100% of factual questions asked over the
material. |
|
JOE'S IEP NON-FORM A |
| Unique
Characteristics/ Needs |
Special Education, Related Services, Modifications |
Begin;
duration |
Present levels, Objectives, Annual Goals (Objectives to include procedure,
criteria, schedule) |
|
1. More time to
complete written assignments. |
1. Adjust amount of
work required (e.g., selected questions, page limits) and/or extend time
for completion (e.g., for essays and content area assignments) |
immediately, year |
1-3. Present Level: Out
of school for three years, completed virtually no assignments during the
9th grade Objectives:
1. Within one month, |
|
2. Because of his
attention deficits and disorders, he needs frequent access to a
low-distraction environment |
2.1 Provide in-classroom
seating away from high distractions
2.2 Provide an
alternative work place for independent work (e.g., study hall, library,
resource room) available to Joe on request
2.3 Provide in-service
to all teachers on Attention Deficit Disorders |
immediately, year
|
will complete 50% or more of
his assignments with grade of "C" or better.
2. Within three months, Joe will complete 80% or more of his assignments
with grades of "C" or better.
Goal: Joe will complete
classroom assignments satisfactorily. |
|
3. Needs assistance
with oral and written directions |
3.1 Provide Joe with tape,
tape recorder, and headphones and instruct Joe in using this equipment
unobtrusively in any classroom settings
3.2 Classroom teachers
will condense lengthy directions into steps and will write directions and
assignments on chalkboard, wall chart, overhead transparency, hand-out,
etc. |
by Oct. 3 |
|
|
4. Joe doesn't know
how to approach teachers to seek needed instruction |
4.1 Provide direct
instruction in teacher appropriate behaviors |
20 min. daily Sept.5-
Nov. 15 |
4. Present Level: Never
approaches teachers Objectives:
1. Within one month, Joe and two
of his teachers will agree, Joe is interacting more and more appropriately
2. Within three months, Joe and four of his teachers will agree, Joe is
"appropriate" in his interactions with teachers
Goal:
Joe will complete classroom assignments satisfactorily |
|
5. Joe is very
disorganized, does not keep track of due dates, assignments, etc. |
5.1 Provide
appropriate materials and specific instructions in establishment and
maintenance of an organizational system that includes a notebook and a
calendar/checklist system |
10 min. daily
Sept.5-10 |
5. Present Level: See
characteristics Objectives:
1. Within one week Joe will physically
organize a notebook with dividers for each class and use a calendar to
note assignments, due dates, etc. (checked daily by contact agent)
2. Within one month, Joe will independently use organized notebook and
calendar/checklist
Goal:
Joe will successfully use organizing aids such as a notebook and calendar
|
|
6. Joe needs to learn
how to deal with peers who tease him. |
6.1 Provide
instructions to using appropriate assertive behaviors when teased by
others |
1 hr. weekly
Sept.5-Nov.15 |
6. Present Level: Once or
twice daily Joe reacts inappropriately to peer teasing
Objectives:
1. Within two weeks, in role playing situations, Joe will respond
appropriately to staged teasing
2. Within six weeks, Joe will respond successfully in confrontations with
peers 50% of the time (self-monitoring)
3. Within six months, Joe will respond successfully in confrontations with
peers 100% of the time (self-monitoring) and the confrontations will be
much less frequent
Goal:
Joe will react appropriately to peers |
III.
Legal Requirements for
Transition Components of the IEP
Transition services must be included in all IEP’s when the student
reaches age 16 and may be included for younger students if deemed appropriate by
the IEP team (OSEP Letter to Anonymous, 17 EFLR 842). Preventing school
dropout is to be a major factor in determining when transition services are
needed (OSEP Letter to Bereuter 20 IDELR 536). See also
Appendix A to IDEA 97
Transition services are a coordinated set of activities that promote movement
from school to such post-school activities as post-secondary education,
vocational training, employment, adult services, independent living and
community participation. They must be based on the individual student's needs,
taking into account his or her preferences and interests. Transition services
must include instruction, community experiences, and development of employment
and other post school adult living objectives. If appropriate, daily living
skills and functional vocational evaluation may also be included.
If the IEP team determines an individual student does not need services in one
or more of these areas the IEP must contain a statement to that effect and the
basis upon which the determination is made (OSEP Letter to Cernosia 19
IDELR 933).
See Jim's Non-Form IEP transition component for an example of such a statement
regarding employment. Before the student leaves school the IEP must also
contain, if appropriate, a statement of each public agency's and each
participating agency's responsibilities or linkages (including financial) for
the transition activities (34 CFR 300.346(d) and comment).
The IEP meeting must include a representative of the public agency providing and
supervising the transition activities and, if appropriate, representatives of
other participating agencies. In almost all situations the familiar district
representative required for all IEP meetings would qualify as this
representative. If appropriate, the student should also be there to ensure her
or his needs, preferences, and interests are addressed. It is difficult to
imagine circumstances where it would not be appropriate for a student who has a
learning disability to be at the meeting. If the student cannot attend, other
methods of participating must be used (34 CFR 300.344(c)(3)).
The ultimate responsibility for providing transition services rests with the
school district (or state education agency if district fails) and there is no
provision for a waiver of this requirement. Thus it applies to all public
agencies to whom IDEA applies and, if a participating agency defaults on service
provision, it is the school that must find an alternative way to provide the
service. However, nothing in IDEA relieves a participating agency of any of its
responsibility for serving or paying for services for that student.
Two 1994 due process hearings against an Iowa district resulted in rulings that
the district's failure to provide appropriate transition planning and services
precluded the district from graduating the student and obligated it to provide
further vocational programs (Mason City Comm. Sch. Dist. 21 IDELR 241 and
21 IDELR 248).
Developing the Transition Component of
the IEP
The transition component
of the IEP is just that, a part of the student's regular IEP. It is not a
parallel document, a separate thing, or a "transition IEP." All the IEP
development requirements and procedures discussed earlier also apply to the
transition component. The legal significance of transition, being but one aspect
of the IEP process, is substantial. A student is entitled to those transition
services, which for that student are either special education or related
services necessary to enable the student to benefit from special education. The
period of "benefit" to be considered has arguably been lengthened beyond school
and into adult life, but the substantive entitlement is still to special
education and related services, not to those plus transition services.
One logical beginning point for the transition component is with the team
reaching agreement about the individual student's needs with regard to the three
mandated areas of:
(a) instruction;
(b) community experiences; and
(c) employment and other post-school living objectives.
If the team deems it inappropriate to address an area, presumably because the
student presents no unique needs, the IEP must include the basis for that
determination. The student's needs, taking into account interests and
preferences, can be explored prior to the meeting and substantial input should
also be sought from the parents. Questionnaires are appropriate.
Zigmond (1990) has studied extensively secondary programs for students with
learning disabilities and suggested four major areas of program need. First,
many of these students need, and too few receive, intensive basic skills
instruction. Too many programs slight basic skills altogether, believing it
is too late while others require students to "do" basic skills activities, but
provide next to no real instruction. What Zigmond calls "Survival Skills"
includes explicit instruction needed by most LD students in behavior control,
teacher-pleasing and study skills including test taking.
The third need is for successful completion of courses required for
graduation. As schools suffer funding cut backs, so-called basic level
courses in math and English often disappear, leaving IEP teams to struggle with
issues of granting graduation credit for resource room courses or for
extensively modified regular courses. One legally correct solution is for the
district to establish what the essential, minimum requirements are for credit
toward graduation. Those may be rigorously adhered to, as long as reasonable
modifications are allowed in how the requirement is met. The IEP should lay out
these understandings clearly and explicitly.
Transition needs are the last area Zigmond addresses. She points out that
about 12 to 30% of graduating LD students go on to college and they, of course,
have transition needs related to selecting and applying to a school. She also
notes that vocational education programs in high school are not necessarily a
better ticket to job success than are more academic programs. We are left
realizing, again, that many secondary programs still need improvement and that
we must truly look, in the IEP process, at the individual needs and situation of
each student.
One of the most important additional skills needed by many students who have
learning disabilities is self-advocacy. The student's presentation of his
or her needs at the IEP meeting may itself provide one opportunity to assess and
discuss self-advocacy skills. Another concern for some students with learning
disabilities is passing the examinations required to obtain a driver's license.
Using the same basic three-step inquiry process used in the rest of the IEP and
with self-advocacy and obtaining a driver's license as the student's needs we
can illustrate the inclusion of transition services on the IEP. This Non-Form is
nearly identical to that used earlier to show Joe's IEP. The only difference is
that the present level of performance is included in the first rather than last
column. That is just another way of doing it and is unrelated to the fact we are
illustrating transition.
It is important to note that the Secretary of Education has acknowledged that
not all the IEP content requirements, especially goals and objectives, are
appropriate for all transition services (FR 44847, discussion of 34 CFR
300.346). No IEP team should use time or energy trying to fit transition needs
and services into a format including annual goals and objectives unless it truly
makes sense to do so.
Confidentiality of IEP’s
Many secondary teachers
report they have no idea which of their students, if any, are on IEP’s and that
they never see the IEP even when they are informed a student has one. This is
sad, perhaps sometimes even tragic. By its very nature a good IEP is always
helpful and sometimes essential in providing an appropriate program for the
student. Rarely is a student's disability so mild or limited that she or he
requires no modifications or accommodations in regular middle school or high
school classes.
When this process of hiding IEP’s from teachers is questioned the common answer
suggests a belief that confidentiality would be violated if IEP’s were shared.
While it is true IEP’s are education records and must be treated as such, the
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA)
has an exception,
which is pertinent. Under Reg. 99.31(a) of the FERPA regulations, an educational
agency may disclose personally identifiable information from the education
records of a student without the written consent of the parent "if the
disclosure is to other school officials, including teachers, within the
educational institution or local education agency who have been determined by
the agency or institution to have legitimate educational interests" in that
information.
Furthermore, even if there were a confidentiality problem under state law or
district policy it could be readily solved by parental permission to share the
IEP with all teachers. Parents should insist teachers have copies of the IEP,
even if it means they themselves must provide them to the teachers. Of course,
it should go without saying that the IEP should not contain any information
beyond what is required. It would not be appropriate, e.g., to include the
category of disability or an intelligence score, etc.
Discussion
We are all new at
incorporating transition services into the IEP and into the broader world. Few
rulings are yet available to assist us in understanding new requirements.
Already a few areas of confusion are emerging. Several are in the direction of
an unduly expansive reading of the new regulations.
First, the transition activities that must be addressed, unless the IEP team
finds it unnecessary, are: (a) instruction; (b) community experiences; and (c)
the development of objectives related to employment and other post-school areas.
There is a tendency to confuse these three requirements with the post-school
activities to which the three are to be directed, i.e., post-secondary
education, vocational training, employment, adult services, independent living,
etc. Many "lists" are available which can be seen as suggesting the IEP must
address the latter directly rather than the former.
A second source of confusion is that by erroneously viewing the transition
component of the IEP as a thing unto itself it is easy to forget that IDEA
entitles the student who has a disability only to special education and related
services. The transition services to which a student is entitled must fit the
definition of one or the other. Therefore, each required transition service must
be either specially designed instruction to meet the students' unique needs
(taking into account his preferences and interests) or it must be required to
enable the student to benefit from that instruction. The fact that transition
services must qualify as either special education or related services may not
pose a significant limitation since one could argue that almost any transition
service is necessary to enable the student to reap the benefits of all the
special education she or he has had to date.
A third overly broad reading is the failure to recognize that "student's
preferences and interests" refers to determining the student's needs, not to
delineating the services to be provided (34 CFR 300.18(b)(1)(2)). One way to
approach the question of student needs is to envision a typical weekday and a
typical weekend after secondary school. Is the student still living in his or
her parents' home? Has she gotten an apartment? Does he know how to find
apartment ads in the classifieds? How to respond to an ad? How to locate the
address?
The exact process the IEP team goes through in looking into a student's
post-school future and planning for it will differ from student to student, as
it should. The essential elements which will not vary include student and
family participation
and the willingness of the IEP team to address all the areas of need-intensive
and effective basic skills instruction (not just exposure and not just
repetitious practice), explicit survival skills, graduation requirements, and
transition.
Properly used, the IEP can be an extraordinarily useful tool in building the
future we desire for our students who have learning disabilities.
|
JOE'S IEP NON-FORM
(TRANSITION) |
|
Student's Needs
(taking into account preferences & interests) |
Special Education &
Related Services
to be Provided and Agency Linkages
& Responsibilities (L & R) |
Goals & Objectives
(if appropriate) |
| INSTRUCTION
1. Self-Advocacy (PLOP): presently Jim is
unaware of his legal rights under Section 504 and ADA, and unable to
express the accommodations he would need in given situations in such a
large class |
1. Small group instruction from
Special Ed teacher in relevant rights & procedures under Section 504, ADA,
IDEA Role-playing as describing
needed accommodations to "employers" and "professors"
(Services to begin Tuesday, Sept. 15,
two 30-minute sessions weekly until goals are met.)
(L & R) Protection & Advocacy
will assist teacher and provide materials at no cost. Verified by phone -
M. Adams. |
1. Goal: Appropriately
explain to a potential employer, professor, or other representative of the
post-school world what accommodations are needed and, if necessary, the
basis for the request.
Objectives:
1. By Dec. 15, Jim will pass (75%) of a 25-item objective test over basic
rights and procedures under Sec.504 and ADA.
2. By March 1, given 5 hypothetical situations of common denial of rights
under Sec.504 or ADA, correctly explain possible actions and defend choice
of actions to be taken. |
| COMMUNITY
2. Driver's License (PLOP): Jim has been
driving for a year on a learner's permit and is concerned he cannot pass
the test required for his license, although he is confident of all his
driving and related skills except map reading. |
2. Within two weeks the driver
training instructor will inform Jim about accommodations in the state, if
any, for licensing people with learning disabilities. Then she and Jim
will develop a plan to follow through and that plan will be added to this
IEP no later than Oct. 10.
Instruction in appropriately obtaining assistance in (a) route
highlighting and (b) map drawing will be incorporated in self-advocacy
practice above.
(L & R) DMV
will assist instructor and will provide information on test
accommodations. Verified by phone - J. Hill. |
2. Goal: Jim will be a
competent, licensed driver in Jefferson state prior to June 15 and will be
able to obtain and follow highlighted maps and line maps.
Objectives:
1. By Dec. 1, Jim will be able to describe correctly 8 of 10 times how he
would get from A to B following a highlighted map and will 8 of 20 times
succeed in getting clerks, gas station attendants or others to assist him
in drawing a line map with approximate distances and major landmarks.
2. By Dec. 15, Jim will score at least 70% on practice exams, administered
under actual conditions. |
Reference
Zigmond. N., (1990). Rethinking secondary school programs for students with
learning disabilities. Focus on Exceptional Children, 23,1,1-22.
|