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Inclusion in Afterschool: Serving Students with Specific Needs THE WHY’S AND THE HOW’S TO MAKE IT HAPPEN!

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Presentation on theme: "Inclusion in Afterschool: Serving Students with Specific Needs THE WHY’S AND THE HOW’S TO MAKE IT HAPPEN!"— Presentation transcript:

1 Inclusion in Afterschool: Serving Students with Specific Needs THE WHY’S AND THE HOW’S TO MAKE IT HAPPEN!

2 Inclusion vs Accommodations Let’s make sure we understand the difference…. and why it’s so important to our students.

3 Two Very Different Terms Inclusion: (n) 1. The act of making someone or something a part of a group or total. 2. The act of making someone or something a part of something. Accommodation: (n) 1. something supplied for convenience or to satisfy a need.

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5 Why Inclusion? 1. Legal: Use of Federal Funds 2. Research: Student Performance in Inclusive Environments 3. Creates Alignment with School Day 4. Supports Parents; Facilitates Staff/Family Relationships 5. It’s the Right Thing to do for the STUDENTS!

6 U.S. Department of Education: 21 st CCLC Inclusion Initiative 6 California Utah Massachusetts Lessons from the Field: Site Observation Visits Site Training and Technical Assistance Visits Webinars and Webinar Feedback Technical Working Group Member Feedback Literature Review

7 Possible Barriers to Inclusion? 7 Access, Outreach and Recruitment Bridging Connections With Schools, Families and Communities Behavior and Development Differentiated Supports and Differentiated Environments Leveraging Resources and Expertise to Support All Students

8 Access, Outreach and Recruitment: Action Areas  Write a policy on inclusion.  Invite parents to tour the program.  Reserve slots for students with disabilities.  Target outreach to students with disabilities.  Work with your school or district special education offices to identify potential student participants.  Use enrolled students to recruit new students. 8

9  Offer training on inclusion to all program staff, partnering organization staff, and volunteers.  Ask Special Education Team at school to facilitate staff trainings and attend OST meetings to discuss student progress and needs.  Develop a plan for family engagement.  Join existing community efforts to support children and families.  Leverage opportunities for staff to be part of the IEP process.  Encourage communication between OST and school-day staff. 9 Bridging Connections With Schools, Families and Communities: Action Are as

10 Behavior and Development: Action Areas  Facilitate development rather than managing behavior.  Conduct informal check-ins.  Look at physical surroundings of the program from students’ perspectives  View behavior as communication and respond with compassion and understanding.  Facilitate activities that teach the skills students are lacking.  Include student voice as a developmental strategy. 10

11 Differentiated Supports and Differentiated Environments: Action Areas  Design opportunities for staff to plan accommodations for activities.  Discuss differentiated support during the IEP meeting.  Emphasize diverse learners and plan for differences.  Include student choice as a support strategy.  Leverage the flexibility of OST space for individualized instruction. 11

12 Leveraging Resources and Expertise to Support All Students: Action Areas  Create a group to share resources.  Create deliberate links with and among community agencies.  Partner with local colleges and universities to support students.  Use internal resources and expertise.  Include students in meetings as experts on their own strengths and challenges. 12

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15 Questions/More Information Lisa Wisham Utah State Office of Education 801-538-7825 lisa.wisham@schools.utah.gov


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