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Exceptional Lives: Special Education in Today’s Schools Chapter 9.

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Presentation on theme: "Exceptional Lives: Special Education in Today’s Schools Chapter 9."— Presentation transcript:

1 Exceptional Lives: Special Education in Today’s Schools Chapter 9

2 *Used to be known as Mental Retardation, families and professionals now embrace the term Intellectual Disability *A more positive implication, rather than a stigma attached to the term

3 * The services, resources, and personal assistance that enable a person to develop, learn, and live effectively * These services can be intermittent or pervasive * INTERMITTENT * LIMITED * EXTENSIVE * PERVASIVE

4 Limitations in Intellectual Functioning & Limitations in Adaptive Behavior

5 * Intelligence refers to a student’s general mental capability for solving problems, paying attention to relevant information, thinking abstractly, remembering important information and skill, learning from everyday experiences, and generalizing knowledge from one setting to another

6 * Mild —IQ 50-55 to around 70 * Moderate—IQ 35-40 to 50-55 * Severe—IQ 20-25 to 30- 40 * Profound—IQ below 20- 25 * The AAIDD classification system has moved away from the IQ-levels approach and instead identifies the level of support a student needs

7 * 1. Memory * 2. Generalization * 3. Motivation

8 * This term refers to the collection of conceptual, social and practical skills that have been learned by people in order to function in their everyday lives

9 * By definition, people with Intellectual Disabilities have significant limitations in adaptive behavior * Conceptual skills include language, reading, and writing, money concepts, and self-direction * Social skills include responsibility, self-esteem, gullibility, and rule-following * Practical skills include activities of daily living, occupational skills, and maintenance of safe environments

10 * Timing * Prenatal * Perinatal * Postnatal * Type * Biomedical factors * Social factors * Behavioral factors * Educational factors

11 * AAIDD proposes a comprehensive assessment that involves diagnosing intellectual disability, classifying and describing the student's strengths, weaknesses, and need for support.

12 * It is very important to form partnerships among students, parents, educators, and adult support providers in planning for the transition needs of students with disabilities * Paraprofessionals can be a very valuable resource in helping students make progress in the general curriculum * Assistive technologies such as audio and video resources help improve students’ literacy skills * A functional curriculum is important for teaching skills for independent living

13 * Preschool and early-education students benefit from prelinguistic milieu teaching to prompt communication and language * Elementary and secondary students develop their abilities to function effectively in school and post school environments by using the self- determined learning model * Students in transitional programs benefit from community-based instruction

14 * For the most part, students are not included in general education programs, but when they are, students with an Intellectual Disability make significant progress in both academics and socialization

15 * Data-based decision-making strategies document students’ progress in the general curriculum * The ecological inventory process is useful in both planning community-based instruction and assessing students’ attainment of community-based instructional goals * Students’ IEPs must describe the accommodations to which they are entitled such as dictating responses, having questions read to them, having more time, and having items clarified for them

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