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Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting November 18, 2013

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Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting. November 18, 2013. Agenda. Thank you Updates Onsite Audit Transfer Reminders Data, Data, Data, and… more Data Progress Reports Present Levels/Findings Accommodations and Services LRE Calendar. ありがとう. Thank You. Thanks to all. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Monthly Special Education Coordinator MeetingNovember 18, 2013

Page 2: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Agenda• Thank you• Updates

– Onsite Audit

• Transfer Reminders • Data, Data, Data, and… more Data

– Progress Reports– Present Levels/Findings– Accommodations and

Services

• LRE• Calendar

Page 3: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

THANK YOU

ありがとう

Page 4: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Thanks to all

• IEPs are looking significantly better– Data– Content

• Schools are serving students with a wide variety of needs across disability categories.

• When problems are identified, schools are handling them quickly and efficiently.

Page 5: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

UPDATES

Page 6: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

General Updates

• SC Department of Education Onsite Monitoring– Thanks to all for your hard work in

correcting issues.– We’re going through the IEPs and

documentation submitted and will be providing feedback.

Page 7: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

TRANSFERS

Page 8: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Transfer remindersHave a process in place to check the status of every

transfer into the school.• After verifying the child is transferring in with a

current IEP (no more than 4 months expired), contact the parent about holding the comparable services IEP meeting.

• Option A: typical face-to-face IEP meeting to discuss “comparable services”

– Requires letter of invite– Comparable services consultation meeting form – Minutes– PWN

• Option B: if LEA and parents agree, meet without “meeting”

– Requires comparable services consultation without a meeting form

Page 9: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Transfers

• After holding this meeting, go into Excent, and officially “add” as a transfer.

• Within 30 calendar days from the 1st day of enrollment, an IEP team will need to meet again to either: – accept the IEP,– amend the transfer IEP (BASED ON DATA COLLECTED),

or – conduct an annual review.

• Upload all info into Excent

Page 10: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Transfers - ISPs

• Students who are homeschooled or parentally-placed in a private school and who have been determined eligible for special education services by their resident district will have an Individual Services Plan (ISP).

• Within 5 days of enrollment, for a student who

transfers in with a current or no more than 4 months expired ISP, hold a comparable services meeting (just like you would for a current transfer IEP) and implement services comparable to those in the ISP.

Page 11: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Transfers - ISPs

• Because the previous LEA is responsible for providing equitable services and not a FAPE, you will conduct a reevaluation planning meeting at the same time as the comparable services meeting to review existing information, including but not limited to, the most recent evaluation/reevaluation from the previous district, any draft IEP developed by the previous district, and the ISP, and to determine what additional information, if any, is needed in order to develop and implement a new IEP.

Page 12: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Transfers - ISPs

• Within 15 calendar days from the conclusion of the gathering of the additional data, you will conclude the reevaluation process and develop a new IEP for the child.

• When a child transfers with an ISP, eligibility has already been established in the previous district.

Page 13: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Transfers - ISPs

• Request most recent evaluation/reevaluation from district of residence

• Within 5 days of enrollment, hold comparable services meeting and Reevaluation planning meeting

• Within 15 days of reevaluation planning meeting, hold reevaluation determination and develop IEP

Page 14: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

DATA, DATA, DATA

Page 15: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Present Levels

• Current baseline data that describe the student’s strengths and needs within the disability category and that are directly tied to the annual goals.

• Here is where we are now and here is where we want to be by the end of the IEP.

Page 16: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Progress Reports“May meet annual goal by the end of the year”

But how do you know this?

Ideally you’ll repeat your baseline measurement at least each 9 weeks to monitor progress.

Page 17: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Example– Baseline data for reading fluency is currently

reading 62 wpm on a 3rd grade reading passage.– Annual goal is to read 114 wpm by the end of the

year.– Administer a 3rd grade reading CBM every 4 weeks

and chart progress.

Page 18: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Progress monitoring

Must have data to back up your statements

Page 19: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Accommodations and Services Documentation

• Documentation of indirect services– Log

• Documentation of direct services• Documentation of accommodations provided

– Sign-in sheet– Initialed tests

Page 20: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

LRE ON THE IEP SECTION IX

Page 21: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

LRE – Section IX• For any child who is receiving a special education

service, there is an assumption to be made. It’s assumed that the child is missing something to receive special education (or related services).

• This is even true for a HS child who are taking academic support (for an elective credit) in place of an elective.

Page 22: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

LRE and Section IX• Samples:

– Elementary Child Receiving Speech or “ typical resource:”

• Other is checked– The student is receiving insert the service here and this will be

delivered during X regular education class.

– Elementary/Middle Child Receiving a subject related resource during that particular regular education class (i.e. Math resource during math class).

• Math is checked (but if the child was math and speech (or any related service), you would need to check “other” as well and see statement above.

– HS child taking academic support for an elective credit:• Electives is checked:

– The student is enrolled in a period of Study Skills, Learning Strategies (whatever you call the SPED class) in lieu of general ed elective.

Page 23: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

LRE – Section IX (Virtual Schools)• Final Sample:

– The child (virtual setting) isn’t “missing anything” or having anything “replaced,” but is taking a support class in addition to his typical schedule.

• We think checking “nothing” is appropriate, but we are seeking an interpretation of this from the SCDE.

Page 24: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Child Count Assurance• On Wednesday, we will give to the school leaders

the list of students showing as active on the 10/22/13 Child Count (formally Dec 1 count) along with an assurance that needs to be signed by the school leader. These assurances are due back to Zenobia no later than noon on Monday, November 25, 2013.

• They can be returned via email (scanned) or fax.

• Questions, ask Zenobia.

Page 25: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Upcoming Dates• Monday, November 25: child count

assurances due• Monday, December 9, 2013 is next

Coordinators’ Meeting

• Thursday, January 16, 2014 is the face-to-face Coordinators’ Meeting

Page 26: Monthly Special Education Coordinator Meeting

Looking Forward to January

• What does it really mean when a child enrolls?

• What kind of responsibility does that mean?

• Lessons learned from OCR, and the SCDE.