Parental Involvement in Special Education
Parental Involvement in Special Education
Parental Rights
Parent’s Rights Meaning
Parents’ have the right to obtain independent educational you have the right to have your child evaluated by
evaluations. professionals from outside the school district if you disagree
with an evaluation that has been conducted by the school
district.
Parents have the right to receive prior written notice anytime The school is required to notify you before if they wish to:
the school district plans to evaluate the student, schedules a Evaluate your child
meeting where decisions will be made about the student’s Determine whether your child is eligible for special education
eligibility or educational placement or refuses to evaluate or services
change student’s plan or placement. Change your child’s evaluation or educational placement or
plan.
Parents’ have right to consent to evaluations and to the school The school must obtain your written, informed consent before
providing special education services they can evaluate your child or begin to provide special
education services to your child (following initial evaluation and
eligibility).
Parents’ have the right to have access to their child’s You have the right to see your child’s educational records, to
educational records have copies and to have the records explained to you by
school officials.
Parents’ have the right to present and resolve a complaint. Procedures for resolving parents’ complaint against the school
district include:
Mediation Resolution Meetings
Due process hearings Appeals to courts
Parents’ have the rights in due process hearings Both you and the school districts have the right to request a
due process hearing to resolve a dispute. A due process hearing
is a formal legal procedure before and impartial hearing officer
or administrative law judge.
Practices in Supporting Parental Involvement
Adequate Advance Notification- when parents are invited to a planning meeting, it is helpful if this invitation is extended at
least one week in advance of the proposal date. Advance planning can be particularly important where parents are working
or where they need to make child care arrangements.
Encourage Practical Involvement of Parents- Parents often ask, “ What can I do to help my child?” and teachers and
professionals should give this question some prior consideration. Parents may volunteer to undertake a task, such as
listening to their child read every evening. Parents may also be involved in monitoring behavior, including supporting
interventions by giving rewards.
Information in Writing- it may be helpful if parents are given written information about the process so that they can
understand their role, rights and responsibilities and know what to expect from the process.
Parent- Teacher Communication- the use of different form of communication (in-service program, home-school notebook,
parent-teacher conferences). Continued communication with the family is critical to the success of the program.
Instructional Program for Special Education (Educational Services for Children with Special Needs)
Resource Room Plan
The child is enrolled in the regular school program but goes to a resource room to use the specialized equipment either in a
tutorial situation or in a small group.
Teacher in the resource room functions both as an instructor and as a consultant.
Pull-out
A student is enrolled in a regular classrooms, reports to the resource room for a period of time for special instructions by
the SPED teacher.
Itinerant Teacher Plan
An itinerant or travelling teacher serves one or more regular schools depending on how many pupils need special help.
They give direct and consultative services to children.
They also observe, diagnose, make referrals, requisition textbooks and equipment, prepare instructional materials and
evaluate performance.
Special Class Plan (Self-Contained/ Segregated Plan)
In this plan, pupils with only one type of exceptionality label are enrolled in the special class.
This plan is needed for those with more severe problems which makes it impossible for them to learn in a regular classroom
setting.
Special Day School
This types serves specific type of children with moderate to severe disabilities.
Offers a range of trained special educators and a comprehensive array of medical, psychological and social services.
Integration/Mainstreaming
Refers to the enrollment of a child with special needs in regular class with support services.
*Partial Integration- a child with special need is enrolled in a special class is integrated with regular children in non-academic
activities like work education, physical education, arts, school programs, etc. then gradually integrated in the academic subjects
when qualified.
*Full integration- a child with special needs sits in the regular class in all academic and non-academic subjects.
Inclusion
All children with disabilities, regardless of the nature and severity of their disability and need for related services, receive
their total education within the regular education classroom.
Residential School
Reason for placing a child in residential school is based on the premise that he can make greater progress in such setting
than in any other.
Provides special education services that are qualitatively and quantitatively superior to those available in local communities.
Also offers comprehensive diagnostic and counseling services and vocational and recreational services.
Hospital Instruction
Provision of children confined to hospitals, sanatoria, and convalescent homes is a service of special education.
The types of children in need of hospital instruction are the severely emotionally disturbed, the profoundly retarded who
are bedbound, the crippled, those with chronic and/or serious health disabilities, and recovering patients.
Both bedside tutoring and group instruction are made available to the above.
Homebound Instruction
This plan is provided by the local school system to serve the chronically ill, usually the bedridden, the convalescents from
operation, accident or temporary illness, the disturbed, and the retarded pupils.
Services are provided by either a full-time itinerant teacher who instructs each pupil in his own home about 3x a week, or
the regular class teacher who instructs her temporarily homebound pupils.
Accommodations
Are supports and services provided to help a student access the general education curriculum and validly demonstrate
learning (Ferry, 2011).
Refers to changes that remove barriers and provide your child with equal access to learning
Allows students to complete the same task as their regular peers but with some variation in time, format setting, and
presentation. (Kessler & Shneider, 2020).
Types of Accommodation
1. Presentation
-allows student to access information in ways that do not require them to visually read standard print.
-these alternate modes of access are auditory, multi-sensory, tactile and visual.
(e.g: Large Prints, Braille, Audiotape, Tactile Graphics, Magnifier)
2. Response
-allow student to complete activities, assignments and assessment in different ways or to solve or organize problems using some
type of assistive device organizer.
(e.g: Scribe, Calculators, Word Processor, Spelling Devices)
3. Setting
-a change in the environment where a child learns.
(e.g: Reduce distractions to students, change setting to permit physical access, change setting to allow use of special equipment)
4. Timing and Scheduling Accommodations
- Increase allowable length of time to complete an assessment or assignment and perhaps change the way the time is organized.
(e.g: extended time, frequent breaks, change of activities)
Modifications
Individualized changes made to the content and performance expectations for students. (Ferry, 2011).
Refers to changes in what students are expected to learn, based on their individual abilities. (Kessler & Shneider, 2020).
Modified Curriculum
For visually impaired: shall include sensory training, special instruction in braille reading and writing, mathematics,
orientation and mobility, braille music and typing.
For hearing impaired: shall emphasize communication and language development based on the philosophy of total
communication which is tailored to meet the individual child’s communication and educational needs. The curriculum shall
include special instruction in speech and speech reading, auditory training and rhythm. Multi-sensory approach shall be
maximized and speech/speech reading and sign language shall be encouraged starting in Grade 1.
For children with behavior problems: shall include special activities and instructional techniques for normalization of
behavior with emphasis on moral, civic and spiritual values as well as training in livelihood and technical, and academic skills
to prepare them for the world of work.
Special Curriculum
For physically handicapped: shall include functional exercises.
For mentally retarded: shall emphasize training in self-care, socialization, motor and prevocational and vocational skills.
For more severely retarded child: emphasis shall be more on development of self-care skills.
Special Schools shall strengthen their vocational and technical training programs. Arrangements shall be made to enable the
child with special need to attend special courses offered in the regular vocational schools whenever practical.
A Community-based, home-based or any useful alternatives special education delivery system shall be established to reach
those who cannot avail regular institution-based programs.
Educational Setting
Some common placements in which a student might get specific services.
Teams of trained teachers and aids are in all types of placements.
1. Mainstream
Also referred as General Education and Inclusion
Student receives special education and related services in a general education classroom where peers without disabilities
also spend their days.
Some services that a student might receive in mainstream setting are the following:
Direct instructions
Helping teacher
Team teaching and co-teaching
Interpreter
Education aids
Modification
Accommodations in lesson or instruction
More teacher per student
2. Resource
A class for student who receive special education services and need intensive help to keep up with grade-level work.
This class may have 1-2 or more students
Students receive instruction or support based on their unique needs. The number of minutes your child spends in a
resource class must be written into the IEP.
3. Self-Contained Programs
General term for placements for which the students needs to receive services outside of the general education classroom
for half of the school day or more.
Placement in a self contained classroom has to be based on a student’s unique needs, not on the disability alone.
Components in Assessment:
Collection
Process of tracing and gathering information from the many sources of background information on a child such as school
records, observation, parent intakes and teacher’s report.
Analysis
Processing and understanding of patterns in a child’s educational, social, developmental, environmental, medical and
emotional history.
Evaluation
The child’s academic, intellectual, psychological, emotional, perceptual, language, cognitive and medical development to
determine areas of strength and weakness.
Determination
Determination of the presence of a suspected disability and knowledge of the criteria that constitute each category.
Recommendation
Concern for the educational placement and program that need to be made to the school, teachers, and parents.
Purpose of Assessment
Screening and Identification
Eligibility and Diagnosis
IEP(Individualized Education Program) Development and Placement
Instructional Planning
Evaluation
1. Autism
Developmental disability significantly affecting verbal and nonverbal communication and social interaction, generally
evident before 3 years of age.
2. Deafness
A hearing impairment that is so severe that the child is impaired in processing linguistic information with or without
amplification.
3. Deaf-Blindness
Simultaneous hearing and visual impairments.
4. Hearing Impairment
An impairment in hearing, whether permanent or fluctuating.
5. Mental Retardation
Significantly sub-average general intellectual functioning existing concurrently with deficits in adaptive behavior.
6. Multiple Disabilities
The manifestation of two or more disabilities (such as mental retardation-blindness), the combination of which requires
special accommodation of maximal learning.
7. Orthopedic Impairment
Physical disabilities, including congenital impairments, impairments caused by disease, and impairments from other causes.
8. Other Health Impairment
Having limited strength, vitality, or alertness due to chronic or acute health problems.
9. Serious Emotional Disturbance
A disability where a child of typical intelligence has difficulty, over time and to a marked degree, building satisfactory
interpersonal relationships
Responds inappropriately behaviorally or emotionally under normal circumstances
Demonstrates a pervasive mood of unhappiness
Tendency to develop physical symptoms of fear.
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, which may manifest itself in an imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do mathematical
calculations.
11. Speech or Language Impairment
A communication disorder such as stuttering, impaired articulation, a language impairment, or a voice impairment.
12. Traumatic Brain Injury
An acquired injury to the brain caused by an external physical force, resulting in total or partial functional disability or
psychosocial impairment, or both.
13. Visual Impairment
A visual difficulty (including blindness) that, even with correction, adversely affects a child educational performance.