Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Citation for Assessment in Special Education: A Practical Approach

Pierangelo, Roger, and George A. Giuliana.  Assessment in Special Education: A Practical Approach. 4th Ed.  New Jersey: Pearson, 2012. Print.

Collaboration with Families and Other Educators.



Collaboration is tied closely to communication.  In order for families and educators to have a good relationship with you as a teacher, one must first open the line of communication.  Once the open line of communication is established, then the teacher can build their relationships with the other educators and families.  My Mentor teacher has strong family ties with the student’s parents.  If she is running low on school supplies and needs items soon, then she sends out an email to the designated parents who volunteer to contribute when necessary.  These “life lines” that consist of the parents are what makes the details in the classroom go smoothly and leave the teacher with focusing on the lesson objectives.  This strong connection can come in handy when teachers in the younger grades for "early childhood interventions that are important for a student who needs intervention."  The teacher can also talk to other educators to collaborate on rotations for the day/week.  Review over lesson plans and collaborate with one another to see if they can relate their own lesson plans together to build on the students overall learning outcome.  When it comes to communicating with the parents, my mentor teacher prefers to communicate through email and if personal, both email and phone call will be given.  When dealing with other educators, face to face meeting are preferred to collaborate in fine detail what their expectations and lesson plans are. 

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Inclusion in the Classroom


The class I am currently working in, there is mild inclusion taking place with two students.  My mentor teacher does a wonderful job including the student in the classroom, but places him in the back of the classroom with only one other student, while the other students are arranged with five or six student clusters.  There is a teacher aid that comes into the classroom to work with the students and verbally read out questions and help clarify any misunderstandings.  I asked the teacher if she had ever been in a "eligibility committee for the responsibly for a student before and after they were classified in special education."  This particular student does not like to stray from the school schedule and tends to act out when the day does not occur in the same manner.  The other students are not distracted by the one student and are actually encouraging of the one student.  I personally believe that the student with mild autism benefits from being in an inclusion room because of the interaction with other students.  The classroom as a whole also benefits from having the student with mild autism, because they are learning life skills of how to work together and become aware of being considerate of those around you.  The teachers in the fourth grade also benefit from having the student included in the classroom because they are forced to think of their traditional teaching in a different way and how to approach teaching with different learning strategies. 

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Writing Assessment and Instruction


In my field placement, I am in a 4th grade geometry class; therefore I have not had the privilege of working with a literacy coach or language arts teacher to properly answer this week’s questions on writing assessment and instruction.  However, I did talk to the 4th grade language arts teacher about how she assesses students and documents their progress and how she would create a "comprehensive report in special education."  She explained how everything the students are working on is geared towards their STAR test at the end of the year and the components required by the state of Texas to meet the writing requirements. She mentioned that she has never written a "comprehensive report that was based on finding of the students academic work."  All teachers in the fourth grade keep running assessments on their students that are administrated depending on where the student is intellectually.  Based off the students progress the teacher then determines the lesson plan for the next following days and if there is a significant review day that is need for the students to truly comprehend the objective. In the classroom while actively working with their students, the teacher does not focus too much time on spelling for the students, because that is expected of them to know and review at home so they can perform in the classroom.  Peer evaluation is also a prominent way a teacher can assess a students’ progress and this give each student the opportunity to peer teach, giving the teacher more time to work one-on-one with students who are struggling more.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Mathematics Assessment & Instruction


I witness mathematics assessment and instruction every day in the current field placement in a fourth grade classroom.  On a typical day, the students rotate from three different classes and only get 90 minutes in a classroom.  During this time, the students start out with a catch-up question… “What do I need to do or finish getting myself caught up?”  Then the teacher will start her lesson and implement it with enough time at the end to review and assess the students on the information covered.  There is really no "formal referral" for a suspected disability for any of the students, so my Mentor Teacher is able to go about her lesson plan.  If students need to review over a specific mathematics skill or strategy, then the teacher either addressed the concern or made a note to combine the next day’s schedule to incorporate the skill/strategy.  Worksheets that build off of the lesson of the day also give the teacher a better understanding of what the students need to review and refresh.  I was informed that when grading the teacher will then decide whether or not the worksheet will be taken for a grade or will be a good review strategy for the students in the classroom.  This is an interesting way to keep the students interested in their results of their academic performance and acts as a motivator so they can not only get good grades, but move onto the next mathematics lesson. 

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Reading Assessments

With my field placement being in a fourth grade mathematics classroom, the students do not read as much as the literature or science classes do.  However, in the class, my mentor teacher does have students read aloud the questions to the class.  This is the only form of reading that the class does and therefore I was unable to observe a reading assessment or instruction in action.  I was able to talk to my mentor teacher about ways the reading literacy coach performs reading assessments.  In our conversation I found that strategies such as reading fluency of full paragraphs followed by reading comprehension questions.  Students seem to struggle with reading comprehension including reading in the mathematics class.  Some students have trouble with multi-step problems because of the phrasing of the words.  In the fourth grade, students start off the day in the core classrooms that they need the most intervention.  There is a hand full of student in the literature classroom, especially with the STAR testing that is about to take place.  Another strategy my Mentor Teacher uses is "preferential intervention strategies where a team meeting with the teachers will take place to discuss the students progress in the classroom.:  Also at the beginning of the school day and if any free time presents itself, then the students are supposed to read their books.  Most students are excited about reading their books so allowing them to read at the end of class in an extra incentive.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Response to Intervension

When it comes to the students with learning disabilities, the school must "allow students to use 'response to scientific, research-based intervention' as par of an evaluation"  These evaluations of the students are able vital for their future and need to be identified in "early interventions" for the student to benefit from the RIT.  Student who are not identified early struggle and usually fall behind in academics and social aspects of school.  Talking to my Mentor Teacher she said that at the school there are a few RIT written every so often for students and are updated periodically or as needed.