Foundations of Special Education: Learning Knows No Boundaries
Foundations of Special Education: Learning Knows No Boundaries
Foundations of Special Education: Learning Knows No Boundaries
FOUNDATIONS OF
SPECIAL EDUCATION
BY ANN VITUG
OUTLINE
• OBJECTIVES OF
SPECIAL EDUCATION
• CATEGORIES OF
EXCEPTIONALITIES
• INDIVIDUAL
PROGRAMS AND
PLANS (IEP)
INDIVIDUAL WITH DISABILITIES EDUCATION IMPROVEMENT ACT
SPECIAL EDUCATION
• An educational
program/service designed to
meet the needs of children
with special needs who
cannot profit from general or
regular education because of
disabilities or exceptional
abilities.
PHILOSOPHICAL
FOUNDATION
- must NOT be
isolated nor be
looked down
- must be treated as
persons of dignity
- needs should be
provided
BASIC PHILOSOPHY OF
SPECIAL EDUCATION
“Every child with special needs has a
right to an educational program that
is suitable to his needs.”
•learning disabilities
•developmental delays
•emotional and behavioral disorders
•communication disorders
•hearing disabilities
•visual impairments
•physical disabilities
13 LEGAL CATEGORIES FOR
EXCEPTIONALITIES
1. Autism 8. Orthopedic Impairment
2. Deaf-blindness 9. Other Health impairment
3. Deafness 10.Specific Learning Disability
4. Emotional Disturbance 11.Speech or Language
5. Intellectual Disability Impairment
6. Hearing Impairment 12. Traumatic Brain Injury
7. Multiple Disabilities 13. Visual Impairment
1. AUTISM
A developmental disability significantly affecting
verbal and nonverbal communication and social
interaction.
3 Primary Features
- Restricted range of
social interaction
- Impaired
communication skills
- Persistent pattern of
stereotypical behaviors,
interests, and activities
2. DEAF-BLINDNESS
A concomitant hearing and
visual impairments, the
combination of which causes
such as severe communication
and other developmental and
educational needs that they
cannot be accommodated in
special education programs
solely for children with
deafness or children with
blindness.
3. DEAFNESS
A hearing impairment that is
so severe that the child is
impaired in processing
linguistic information
through hearing; with or
without amplification that
adversely affects a child’s
educational performance
4. EMOTIONAL DISTURBANCE
A condition exhibiting one or more of the
following characteristics over a long period of
time and to a marked degree that adversely
affects a child’s educational performance.
- Inability to learn that cannot be explained
- Inability to build or maintain satisfactory
interpersonal relationships with peers
- Inappropriate types of behaviors
- A general pervasive mood of unhappiness
- A tendency to develop physical symptoms
or fears with personal or school problems
*schizophrenia
5. HEARING IMPAIRMENT
An impairment in hearing,
whether permanent or
fluctuating, that adversely
affects a child’s educational
performance but that is not
included under the
definition of deafness.
6. INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY
A significantly sub-average general
intellectual functioning, existing
concurrently with deficits in adaptive
behavior and manifested during the
developmental period, that adversely
affects a child’s educational
performance.
7. MULTIPLE DISABILITIES
Concomitant impairments,
the combination of which
causes such severe
educational needs that
they cannot be
accommodated in special
education solely for one
of the impairments.
8. ORTHOPEDIC IMPAIRMENTS
A severe orthopedic impairment that
adversely affects a child’s educational
performance.
Includes:
- Congenital anomalies
Ex. clubfoot
- Caused by disease
Ex. poliomyelitis
- Other causes
Ex. Cerebral palsy
9. OTHER HEALTH IMPAIRMENTS
Having limited strength, vitality or alertness,
including a heightened alertness to
environmental stimuli, that results in
limited alertness with respect to the
educational environment.
- Due to chronic or acute asthma, ADD, ADHD,
diabetes, epilepsy, a heart condition, hemophilia, lead
poisoning, leukemia, nephritis, rheumatic fever, and
sickle cell anemia.
- Adversely affects a child’s educational performance.
10. SPECIFIC LEARNING DISABILITY
A disorder in one or more of the basic
psychological processes involved in
understanding or in using language,
spoken or written, that may manifest itself
In an imperfect ability to
listen, think, speak,
read, write, spell,
or to do mathematical
discussions
Also brain injury,
minimal brain
dysfunction,
development
aphasia.
11. SPEECH OR LANGUAGE IMPAIRMENT
A communication
disorder, such as
stuttering, impaired
articulation, language
impairment, or a voice
impairment, that
adversely affects a
child’s educational
performance.
12. TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
An acquired injury to the
brain caused by an
external force, resulting
in total or partial
functional disability or
psychosocial
impairment, or both,
that adversely affects a
child’s educational
performance.
13. VISUAL IMPAIRMENT
An impairment in vision
that, even with correction,
adversely affects a child’s
educational performance.
The term includes both
partial sight and
blindness.
INDIVIDUAL PROGRAMS
AND PLANS
INDIVIDUALIZED EDUCATIONAL
PROGRAM (IEP)
The IEP is a document
developed by a team of
persons from the child’s
attending school system
who have a direct
relationship to helping the
student with special needs
to be able to reach his full
potential.
IEP AMENDED 2004 (IDEA)
Must include information
about students functional
ability to perform & academic
levels
Must include measurable
yearly goals that are academic
and functional
Parents to be provided
progress reports
MEMBERS OF IEP TEAM
A local representative from
the school agency
The child's teacher.
One or both of the child's
parents or responsible party
The child, where appropriate
Other individuals at the
discretion of the parent or
agency.
TYPES OF RELATED SERVICES
- Transportation WHAT KIND OF
SERVICES
- Speech-language pathology WILL HELP ME?
- Audiologist services
- Interpreting services
- Psychological services
- Physical therapy
- Occupational therapy
- Recreation, including therapeutic recreation
- Social work services
- School nurse services
- Counseling services, including rehabilitation
counseling
CONSIDERATIONS IN DEVELOPING
THE IEP Assessment of Students
needs (identify strengths
and weaknesses)
Details of disability that
are being addressed
Individualization of IEP
◦ Classification
◦ Parental involvement
◦ Teacher involvement
◦ Collaboration of what best suites
student’s needs
IEP IN THE CLASSROOM
-To include ACCOMMODATIONS
-To include MODIFICATIONS on class work
- To use a different assessment
tool if needed to measure child’s
academic abilities