1. Special education and instructional strategies are like a puzzle. You have many pieces in
different shapes needed to fit to form the puzzle. The pieces represent students,
teachers, specialists, legislative and federal regulations and many other key elements of
special education. All of the pieces fit together, but it takes time, patience, problem
solving and team work at times to put the pieces together to form the finished product.
Often times you need to try multiple pieces
until you find the right fit.
The main idea is that all of the pieces do fit.
Created by Anne Deilke
2. Legislative and Federal Regulations
American with Disabilities Act (ADA)
Establishes guidelines for employment, public accommodations, transportation, state
and local government operations and telecommunications system for those individuals
who are disabled.
Broad civil rights coverage for those that are disabled
Protects individuals with disabilities from discrimination
No Child Left Behind (NCLB)
Increased accountability
Parent and Student choice
Greater flexibility to states, school districts and schools
Reading first
Highly qualified teachers
Student accountability through standardized testing
Section 504 of Rehabilitation Act
Includes any student who has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits
one or more major life activities
Students that need accommodations but not categorized in IDEA
3. Legislative and Federal Regulations
(Continued)
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act of 2004 (IDEA)
Revised in 1983, 1990, 1997 and 2004
PL 94-142 - original law authorized funding to states to assist in
development, expansion and improvement of special education programs
Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) - school districts must provide
special education and related services necessary to meet needs of
students with special learning requirements
Appropriate Evaluation - must be a full and individual initial evaluation
conducted before first time services
4. Legislative and Federal Regulations
(Continued)
(IDEA)
Individualized Education Plan (IEP) – required written document
summarizing a student’s learning program and transition planning
for school to post school
Least Restrictive Environment (LRE) – educate children with
disabilities in general education settings with peers to greatest
extent possible
Parent and student participation in decision making - parental
consent must accompany every decision that affects a child with a
disability and encouraged to participate as often as possible
Procedural safeguards - protects rights of parents and children
(obtain records, right to IEE, the right to request due process, etc)
5. Key Elements of Special Education
Standard Base Education
what is taught is to be correlated with state-derived content and
performance standards that now exist in almost all states in the core
subject areas (language arts/English, mathematics, social studies and
science).
Differentiated Instruction
The concept and process to approach teaching and learning for student
of differing abilities in the same class while maximizing growth and
success for the individual student
Empowerment
The concept that embraces many essential aspects of what it truly
means to be respected and given dignity. The idea that quality of life is
important through the use of self-determination
Diversity Considerations
School student population is diverse (race, setting, sexual orientation,
cognitive, sensory, behavioral, cultural) therefore the need for the
multitiered systems and approaches are important and necessary
6. Key Elements of Special Education
Universal Design for Learning (UDL)
Approach to teaching for diversity in the classroom
Learning as unique as fingerprints
Approach to minimize barriers and maximize learning
For all students
Inclusion “supported education”
the opportunity to have a place in society and a sense of belonging and
acceptance
Multitiered
provides layers of intervention to meet student needs including 3 tiers of High
Quality Core Instruction
Access to General Education Curriculum
content, performance standards, standards set by district or state, acquire
knowledge to gain access and accessibility to curriculum for the majority of
students in school
7. Key Elements of Special Education
Evidence based practice
Requirement of teachers to use specific teaching tools and strategies for a
particular population that has research or evidence that it is successful
Student Accountability
Student evaluations acquired through standards-based tests
Response to Intervention (RTI)
3 Tier approach to teaching and learning
Tier 1 – differentiated instruction with evidence-based curriculum
80-85% of student population
Tier 2 –strategic evidence-based interventions in small groups
15% of student population supplementing core curriculum teaching
Tier 3 – Intensive evidence-based interventions to individual or small groups to
5% of student population
8. Special Education
Special education has been redefined in recent years as inclusion
has become the most important emphasis. With the amount of
standards based education that is at the forefront, special
education has become a system where students receive as much
of their education in the general education classroom and have
access to general education curriculum.
Together the puzzle will get put together.