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Title: Masters Comprehensive Exam for Early Childhood Education Notes
Description: These are notes I took for my Masters Comprehensive Exam. It is on different things that I learned throughout my Masters program in elementary education
Description: These are notes I took for my Masters Comprehensive Exam. It is on different things that I learned throughout my Masters program in elementary education
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CUIN 6321 Principles of Curriculum Development Diane Prince
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I will be asking you a question on bringing about change in a learning environment (schools, etc
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If you do not have
the book , you might look for articles by Michael Fullan on Educational change or Neal Gross on
overcoming resistance to change
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Hope this helps
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It depends on whether or not:
• The change gets embedded/built into the structure
• The change has generated a critical mass of administrators or teachers who are
skilled and committed
• The change has established procedures for continuing assistance
o Outcome
§ To be positive and successful
• Active initiation & participation
• Pressure, support and negotiation
• Changes in skills, thinking, and committed actions
• Overriding problem of ownership
o What can we learn from change process?
§ Can’t mandate what matters
§ Change is a journey not a blueprint
§ Problems are our friends
§ Vision and strategic planning come later
§ Individualism and collectivism must have equal power
§ Neither centralization nor decentralization works
§ Connection with the wider environment is critical for success
§ Every person is a change agent
Change requires restructuring and replacement, adjusting personal habits
Getting educators to shift from current program to the new program
Teachers need time to try the new program to be implemented
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Innovations designed to improve student achievement must be technically sound
2
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Innovation must be manageable and feasible for the average teacher
4
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Avoid the “do something, do anything” syndrome
to get a program implemented, we need people willing to engage in something new, to push boundaries
and then attract other colleagues
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School administrators should accept that teachers will initially be negatively predisposed toward
the change and will resist it
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)
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CUIN 6341 Teaching Problem Solving
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Barbara Patton
Discuss in detail the steps you would ask students to learn to follow to do all problem solving
activities
Four Step Problem Solving Plan
1
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The student is a reader, a thinker, and an analyzer
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If unusual names of people or places
cause confusion, the student may substitute a familiar name and see if the
question now makes sense
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When the student
identifies the main idea, he or she should write it down, using words or phrases
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Details
a
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The student identifies and records any details,
using numbers, words, and phrases
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Look for hidden
numbers
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Strategy
a
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o Find a Pattern
§ Can I see something happening over and over again? Will this
help me solve the problem?
o Make a Table
o Work Backwards
§ Can I start at the end of the question to help work it out? Will
my answer work?
o Guess and Check
o Draw a Picture
§ Can I draw something about the problem? Will this help me to
find the answer?
o Make a List
o Write a Number Sentence
o Use Logical Reasoning
4
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To make sure they understand what is being said the student uses words or
phrases to describe how they solved the problem
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It requires the students to
record their thinking
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Part B specifically speaks to the educational requirements for
students aged 3-‐21, therefore this is the section that is most important for special education
personnel to understand
...
These principals are: zero reject, identification and evaluation; free appropriate
public education (FAPE); leas restrictive environment (LRE); procedural safeguards; technology-‐
related assistance; personnel development and parent participation
6 guiding principles of IDEA
1
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It is the
sates responsibility to identify, locate, and evaluate these students
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This
principal is not dependent on whether or not the parents have notified the school of
the disability, it is the schools districts responsibility to identify these students
...
This principle applies
regardless of the nature or severity of the disability; no child with disabilities
may be excluded from a public education
...
If a state provides educational services to children without
disabilities between the ages of 3 to 5 and 18 to 21, it must also educate all
children with disabilities in those age groups
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This requirement is called the child find system
...
2 One
of the most important aspects of FAPE is that the services provided must conform
with the students Individualized Education Plan (IEP)
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• All children with disabilities, regardless of the type or severity of their
disability, shall receive a free, appropriate public education
...
An individualized education program (IEP) must be developed and
implemented to meet the unique needs of each student with a disability
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§ Child Find: This system was put together so that all students from birth to twenty
one who are in need of special education or other services are identified, located
and evaluated
...
Child find programs can be done in many ways, for example, through public
awareness, mailings to parents, television and radio advertisements, and
coordinated activities with local service agencies, such as hospitals and clinics, to
identify children and youth with disabilities
...
If a school fails
to perform these tasks they will be in direct violate of FAPE, which is a series
violation of IDEA
...
2
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Testing and evaluation procedures must not discriminate on the basis of race,
culture, or native language
...
These provisions of IDEA are known as protection in evaluation
procedures
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LRE
§
§
§
IDEA mandates that students with disabilities be educated with children without
disabilities to the maximum extent appropriate and that students with disabilities
be removed to separate classes or schools only when the nature or severity of their
disabilities is such that they cannot receive an appropriate education in a general
education classroom with supplementary aids and services
...
g
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To ensure that each student with disabilities is
educated in the least restrictive environment appropriate for her needs, school
districts must provide a continuum of placement and service alternatives
...
However, it is
understood that some students do much better in more restrictive settings, and
when this problem occurs adjustments need to be made
...
• A school is required to provide a continuum of alternative placements when
necessary in order to allow the LRE to meet the individual needs of the
students
...
The IEP team is responsible for determining the best
placement for the student to receive their education
...
Students with
disabilities who are disruptive to other students in the general education
classroom should be considered for a placement change
...
The goal is for the students
with disabilities to make progress in the general education curriculum
...
IDEA creates a presumption in favor of inclusion in the
regular classroom by requiring that a student’s IEP contain a justification and
explanation of the extent, if any, to which a child will not participate with
nondisabled peers in the general academic curriculum, extracurricular
activities, and other nonacademic activities (e
...
, lunch, recess,
transportation, dances)
...
Standards for Determining the LRE: The school district must make decisions
based on data that is compose throughout the LRE process
...
When a
student with disabilities is placed in a general education classroom and disrupts the
§
4
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The primary concern is that schools are
providing FAPE for all students with disabilities
...
However, it is the schools first concern to provide the students
with FAPE, LRE is secondary, which is why a continuum is required
...
For
example, in the case Roncker v
...
Neil is a 9-‐year-‐old boy who
has moderate mental retardation
...
They
believed that he would benefit from the contact and socialization with his peers
...
The U
...
District Court for the Southern District of
Ohio ruled in favor of the school district
...
The court decided that Neil
had not made significant progress while integrated, or being a part of, the general
education classroom
...
If it
they are attainable then it is mandated that the school must provide these
services
...
An individualized education program (IEP) creates free and appropriate education
(FAPE) for students with disabilities
...
There are several procedural requirements that schools must
follow in order for a student to receive an appropriate IEP
...
If a violation
occurs a due process hearing officer will determine if the IEP is invalid or not
...
Once a student has been determined as eligible it is the
schools responsibility to have the IEP team mean within 30 days to develop the IEP
...
During the meeting to develop the IEP the
students evaluations, current records and relevant information, have to be
reviewed
...
The IEP Team: There are specific people that IDEA requires to attend IEP
meetings
...
A special education teacher attends the IEP meeting
because they are the person who implements the meeting
...
A representative of the local
educational agency must attend because they knowledge of the general education
curriculum and the districts resources
...
The person who interprets the evaluation results is usually a
psychologist or educational diagnostician who is responsible for ensuring that all
the members of the IEP team understand the results of the evaluation and the
individuals needs
...
§ The parents: The parents are important part of the IEP process and it is important
that they are involved from the very beginning to the very end
...
If there is to be an
IEP meeting a notice must be sent at least 10 days in advance in order to allow
adequate time for planning
...
If parents are divorced the school is
only required to invite the parent that has custody of the child
...
If
a child is in foster car, the foster parents can attend the meeting if allowed by the
state
...
Procedural Safeguards
§ This principle protects the interests of students with disabilities and ensures that
parents are equal participants in the special education process
...
The parent or student has the right to sue
if they do not feel they are receiving and appropriate education in the least
restrictive environment
...
If parents are dissatisfied they can request a due process
hearing or a “mini trial” with an impartial person presiding over the hearing
...
§ Schools must provide due process safeguards to protect the rights of children with
disabilities and their parents
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Schools must maintain the confidentiality of all records pertaining to a child with
disabilities and make those records available to the parents
...
When the school and
parents disagree on the identification, evaluation, placement, or provision of a free,
appropriate public education and related services for the child, the parents may
request a due process hearing
...
Parents have the right to attorney’s fees if they prevail in due
process or judicial proceedings under IDEA
...
Although “due process hearings are a last resort to resolve conflicts or
problems between school districts and parents” (Getty & Summey, 2004, p
...
The majority of due process hearings are over
placement or program issues (Newcomer & Zirkel, 1999)
...
6
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Earning a parents trust and support can make the world of difference when it comes
to the students
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Parent-‐professional collaboration is
important because it promotes (a) real change in children, (b) child development
and learning across multiple environments, and (c) coordination and linkages
between home and school
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There are four recommendations that are given to help increase family involvement
in the transition planning
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There are many parents and
families that do not play an active role in IEP planning for their children and is a
continuous concern that schools have when it comes to transition planning
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§ IDEA requires that parents must be involved in every aspect of the students’
education
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The main goal of the principal is for
parents to play a meaningful role in the education of their children and their
participation is crucial in their students success
...
The parents’ (and, whenever
appropriate, the student’s) input and wishes must be considered in IEP goals and
objectives, related-‐service needs, and placement decisions
Title: Masters Comprehensive Exam for Early Childhood Education Notes
Description: These are notes I took for my Masters Comprehensive Exam. It is on different things that I learned throughout my Masters program in elementary education
Description: These are notes I took for my Masters Comprehensive Exam. It is on different things that I learned throughout my Masters program in elementary education