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Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Edilberto I. Dizon

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Page 1: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices

Dr. Edilberto I. DizonDr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Page 2: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Current Perspectives

1.Curricular Programs

2.Instructional Schemes

3.Psychosocial Training

4.Pupil Evaluation and Promotion

Page 3: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Curricular ProgramsCurricular Programs

• As much as possible, the CSEN must be given the same lessons if he can perform comparably well.

Page 4: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• If the child, however, encounters some difficulties, lessons need to be modified/simplified using appropriate and helpful instructional materials to facilitate comprehension.

Page 5: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• If the child can neither perform at par nor respond positively to modifications, change the lessons into simpler ones. Provide parallel lessons in the same subject.

Page 6: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• The curricular priorities for CSEN must be based on the psychoeducational and/or therapists’ assessment results/reports. This set of priorities consists of fallback/substitute curricular contents.

Page 7: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• Curricular priorities must be in multi-developmental areas considering that many CSEN have global or pervasive developmental delays.

Motor(Gross& Fine)

Psychosocial-Behavioral

Perceptuo-Cognitive

Language-Communica-

tion

Self-Help/Vocational

Page 8: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• Curricular priorities must be developmentally - sequenced, relevant, performance-based and provide opportunities for practical-skills application.

Page 9: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• Curricular contents must consider the child’s personal including his socio-cultural, economic and family backgrounds.

Page 10: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• Curricular contents must utilize indigenous materials and actual day-to-day life situations to closely approximate realistic expectations.

Page 11: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

- END -- END -

Page 12: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Instructional Schemes

• Instructional schemes are special learning plans/arrangements which permit structural flexibility, collaborative teaching, and resource sharing aimed at individualizing and maximizing intervention for a CSEN.

•  

Page 13: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Inclusive education is not partial to pullout of the child in other venues during the class. The CSEN must, as much as possible, be in the regular room at all times.

Page 14: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Pullout within the room

• A child with special needs enrolled in a regular classroom may be individualized without removing him from his homeroom.

• One option is to deliver instruction by seating him in an area within the classroom where he can be monitored directly by the teacher while performing his assigned tasks.

Page 15: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

He may be moved to this area because he may need closer supervision from

the teacher.

Page 16: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• This type of instructional scheme allows the child to be in his own classroom for the entire day even though he may be given differentiated activities to suit his particular needs. It reduces any stigma that may come with being pulled out from the class during class hours.

Page 17: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Assistantship plan

• This is a co-teaching option where one teacher has the primary teaching responsibility. Such lead teacher is assisted by another teacher without assuming direct teaching responsibility.

Page 18: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

This assistant teacher assists learners with their work, monitors behavior, simplifies instructions, correct assignments, observes and records critical incidents, among others.

Page 19: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Team-teaching plan

• This instructional scheme employs the presence of two teachers in the class. They both present the lesson to the students and may devise a system on how they share responsibility in handling the class.

Page 20: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

They may share lecturing on the same topic or divide which subjects will be taught by whom.

Page 21: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Shadow teaching plan• The shadow teaching scheme may be

considered to ensure the child’s success in the regular class.

• This scheme is an adaptation as many CSEN need a support person inside the classroom due to cognitive, psychosocial, language-communication, self-care and motoral deficits – causing verbal-behavioral difficulties.

Page 22: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

The shadow teacher is task to manage behaviors, modify/ simplify/change lessons, facilitate social-skills training, individualize instruction (only when needed), and teamwork with regular teachers.

Page 23: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

- END -

Page 24: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Psychosocial Training

• This pertains to the social and behavioral targets planned by the

teacher in the regular class.

Page 25: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• Teachers must not only teach cognitive skills but also manage behaviors and increase social skills.

Page 26: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• Many concerns in inclusive programs pertain to the difficulty in managing

behaviors. Teachers, therefore, must equally focus on behavior management

became all other learnings in the different areas are contingent on the

child’s behavioral readiness.

Page 27: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• Some proponents emphasize the importance of social rather than learning outcomes in the inclusionary program.

Page 28: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• Teachers in inclusionary programs must be trained in behavior modification and behavior coaching as behavior issues in the classroom pose more as a concern than other deficits.

Page 29: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• The buddy system yields encouraging findings in terms of addressing atypical behaviors. Here, a mature, sociable, and tactful peer serves as the CSEN’s “big brother,” and helps in behavior, language and cognitive concerns.

Page 30: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• The teacher needs to provide plenty of constructive activities to increase the child’s psychosocial skills. Thus, much more opportunities for social training in varied situations/places are provided.

Page 31: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• The child, therefore, participates in social events, programs, sports, recreation/leisure,

outings as much

as regular peers.

Page 32: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Opportunities for monitoring tasks like doing favors for teachers/peers, distributing/collecting papers, and doing simple chores are provided to ventilate excess energy, improve focus, and increase verbal and social reciprocity and propriety.

Page 33: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

- END -

Page 34: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Pupil Evaluation and Promotion

• The primary purpose of psychoeducational assessment is to determine/identify the child’s development condition including his/her achievement level and also possible exceptionality/disability. This purpose is pursued by trained clinicians and diagnosticians within an educational context.

Page 35: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• After the clinician/diagnostician has identified the child’s possible exceptionality/disability, the trained teacher can assume the responsibility of determining what the child can and cannot do cognitively, affectively and psychomotorally for specific purposes.

Page 36: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Principles and guidelines in

psychoeducational

assessment are:

Page 37: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

PA …

• is confidential.

• is comprehensive as it is holistic covering fine- and gross-motor, cognitive/academic, psychosocial, language-communication and self-help-vocational areas.

• a developmental process enabling the teacher to determine and record gains and progress within a given time duration.

Page 38: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• believes in early assessment for early intervention/remediation.

• utilizes varied educational tools and strategies.

• adheres to transdisciplinary and interdisciplinary models of collaboration.

Page 39: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• considers processes as important as results.

• considers the provision of recommendations (based on the results) vital to teaching.

• is a process of making scientific approximations; limitations, therefore are expected.

Page 40: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

• can only sample the child’s abilities, skills knowledge, qualities/attributes. Teachers, therefore, are excepted to use good assessment tools and strategies to ensure comprehensiveness of data. Good decision-making relies on the adequacy and thoroughness of data.

Page 41: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

PA yields data needed in making decisions about/along:

a) grade placement of each child;

b) curricular differences to partially individualize/customize lessons/activities/ contents for specific cases such as disabilities, overage and giftedness/mental superiority;

Page 42: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

c) promotion of children;

d) interest and ability groupings as part of co-curricular activities;

Page 43: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

e) needed collaboration with parents and other service providers;

f) gauging of developmental/academic achievement of the child; and

g) provision of needed appropriate materials, equipment and facilities.

Page 44: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

The following slide presents alternative approaches to evaluation of CSEN (Salend,

1990).

Take note that some of these are not recommended for evaluating gains/progress of a CSEN for

promotion/pass-up purposes. Examples are given to illustrate each of the

evaluation approach presented by the author.

Page 45: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Approach Example

1.Traditional Grading: letter grades or percentages assigned.

2.Pass/Fail System: broad-based criteria are established for passing or failing

3.IEP Grading: competency levels on student’s IEP are translated into school performance standards

4.Mastery- or criterion-level grading: content is divided into subcomponents. Students earn credit when their mastery of a certain skill reaches an acceptable level (success criterion)

5.Multiple Grading: the student is assessed and graded in several areas such as ability, effort, achievement

Letters like A,B,C,D,F; percentage grades/scores

Students who complete assignments and pass tests or quizzes will receive a passing gradeAchievement of criteria levels specified in the IEP will be given an equivalent grade

Naming 10 out of 12 colors; Surpassing previous performance level (the child competes with the previous performance not with that of his peers)

Points for assignments, quizzes, for projects and actual-skills performance are accumulated.

Page 46: Current Perspectives, Support Services and Best Practices Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon Dr. Edilberto I. Dizon

Approach Example

6. Shared Grading: two or more teachers determine a student’s grade

7.Point system: points are assigned to activities or assignments that add up to the term grade

8.Student self-comparison: students evaluate themselves on an individual basis

9.Contracting: the student and the teacher agree on specific activities required for a certain grade.

10. Portfolio evaluation: a cumulative portfolio is maintained of each student’s work

Regular teacher grading 50% and a SPED teacher grading the other 50%

Points are given for every project, quiz, attendance, homework, etc., the total of which will be the student’s gradeCompleting assignments, working independently – student rates his work

Giving the student extra work to make up for quizzes or tests

Cumulative samples of artworks, compositions, projects, worksheets, etc.