CHAPTER 4 Components of Special and Inclusive Education
CHAPTER 4 Components of Special and Inclusive Education
CHAPTER 4 Components of Special and Inclusive Education
COMPONENTS OF SPECIAL
AND INCLUSIVE
EDUCATION
INTRODUCTION
In this chapter, the aims to describe the
components and processes involved in
identifying children through assessment
and providing varied means of support .
OBJECTIVES
Enumerate the processes
involved in Child Find through
the pre-referral process. Compare accommodations
and curriculum modification.
Identify the assessment tools,
methods, and principles in Identify ways how to involve
working with children with parents as part of home-
additional needs. school collaboration.
Identify the different
placement within a
continuum
I. CHILD FINF THROUGH A PRE-
REFERRAL PROCESS
Referral for evaluation and
special education services begins
by identifying students who have
additional needs and who may
be at risk for development
disabilities.
A. PRE-REFERRAL PROCESS
A child noted to have significant difficulties in relation to expected
competencies and development milestone may be reffered by
parents and teachers for observation assessment.
Using such strategies lessens the number of cases referred for special
education and makes efficient use of time and financial resources
that could have beern spent for special education assessment.
B. PRE-REFERRAL STRATEGIES
Examples of pre-referral strategies are :
Assessment
b.) The test results accurately reflect the child's aptitude or achievement level rather than reflecting the
child's impaired sensory, manual, or speaking skills;
c.) No single procedure is used as the sole criterion for determining an appropriate educational program
for a child; and
d.) The evaluation is made by a multidisciplinary team or group of persons, including at least i.e. teacher
or other specialist with knowledge in the area of suspected disability.
PLACEMENT EVALUATION PROCEDURE
IV. ACCOMODATION AND
CURRICULAR MODIFICATION
With disabilities and additional
needs who are studying in an
inclusive general education
classroom may need
accommodations in the
formStudentsof instructional support
and other supplementary services.
Others who need more intensive
support are provided with curricular
modifications.
A. ACCOMODATION
Supports provided to students to help Examples of accommodations are altering instruments, toys
or materials, changing the room during specific activities,
gain full access to class content and
providing time extensions or allowances for tests and tasks,
instruction, without altering the
and changing response formats in worksheets.
curriculum standards and competencies
expected and to demonstrate accurately
what they know. When Accommodations may be provided both during
accommodations are provided in a assessment and instruction, depending on the
general education classroom for learning profile and needs of a child and may vary
children with disabilities, barriers are in terms of presentation, response, setting, and
removed from accessing education. As a scheduling (Beech 2010).
result, children can work around the
effect of their disabilities.
TYPES OF ACCOMODATIONS
PRESENTATION
ACCOMODATIONS
Allow a student with a disability to
access information in ways other
than standard visual or auditory
means (e.g., by reading or
listening). these accomodations
change the way that instruction,
directions, and information are
presented.
TYPES OF ACCOMODATIONS
RESPONSE
ACCOMODATION
Allow students to complete
activities, assignments, and
assessments in different ways or to
solve or organize problems using
some type of assistive device or
organizer.
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
SETTING SCHEDULING
ACCOMODATION ACCOMODATION
Change the location in which Change the location in which a
test or assignment is given or
a test or assignment is given the conditions of the
or the conditions of the assessment setting.
assessment setting.
B. MODIFICATIONS CURRICULAR
Is a change to a classroom activity or to the MODIFICATIONS
classroom materials in order to maximize a INCLUDE CHANGES IN
child’s participation. It is provided for students
with significant or severe disabilities where
content expectations are altered, and the
·Instructional level
·Content and performance
performance outcomes are changed in relation
·Breath and depth of
to what are expected of typically developing content
students of the same age (DEC 2007).
V. PARENT INVOLVEMENT
BONFENBRENNER’S ECOLOGICAL
THEORY
Parent education
Parent support group
Thank You