Education

Education
Creating The Future!

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

IEP vs. 504

IEP vs. 504





IEP and 504 developments have strived for a better education for students with disabilities. Both of these plans can be developed and implemented by local school agencies in regards to students that have identified disabilities (Understood.org, 2014). Both of these plans are federally mandated but are categorized under two separate laws. IEP and 504 are designed to provide students with a free and appropriate education in a least restrictive environment (Davidson Institute, 2009). According to the needs of the student, these two plans serve different purposes.
            An Individualized Education Program is a program or curriculum that is different from what the peers use. This program is a specialized instruction with modifications. Students are protected under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act to utilize the IEP who have autism, emotional, specific learning disability, sensory, and other disabilities (Understood.org, 2014). Students that are covered under IDEA on an IEP are automatically covered under American with Disabilities Act Section 504 (Hubspot, 2007). Individualized Education Programs are federally funded. IEP includes disability listing, vision statement, progress impact, short-term goals, accommodations/modifications, summer services, transport needs, placement recommendation, and behavior and/or social skills plan (Hubspot, 2007). Progress reporting monitors an IEP. Whether a student qualifies for an IEP is determined at a IEP meeting by using results from standardized assessments and other informal and formal data collection. Having a unanimous agreement from a team that consists the following makes a decision on acceptance: special educator, psychologist, parent, related service provider, and a general education teacher. The committee must agree that the student’s disability falls under one of the 13 mandated categories and it interferes with the student’s education and performance (Understood.org, 2014). The Individualized Education Program is designed to create structure and monitoring of progression of a student’s education experience.
            Under Section 504 there is an equal opportunity for students with disabilities. It includes accommodations to access standard program or curriculum materials. Under Section 504, it is less discriminatory since it protects students with physical or mental impairments, which limit at least one major life activity. Section 504 falls under the Americans with Disabilities Act of the Civil Rights Law. Section 504 includes plan objectives, definitions, care and self-care details, health/medical monitoring, testing and classroom dynamics, additional contact details, communication and notification instructions, resource access, and emergency planning. It is not federally funded (Hubspot, 2007). If the student is covered under American with Disabilities Act Section 504 then they are not necessarily covered under IDEA. There is no progress reporting included. Section 504 is designed to prohibit disability discrimination (Understood.org, 2014). Section 504 is an accommodation to continuously help people with a disability through out their life experiences.
            The IEP and Section 504 are both federally mandated and require the school system to implement and adhere based on their provisions. Each state and local school agency has their own interpretations regarding how the federal laws are implemented (Understood.org, 2014). It is important to understand the similarities and differences in order to understand the best approach for the students in the classroom. It also allows teachers to provide recommendations. I believe both of these programs are designed to encourage equal education with restrictions to discrimination and other forms of bias. These programs have good intensions, but could always be modified to encourage the most out of learning for students with disabilities.


References for Essay

A Support Plan Comparison: IEP vs. 504. (2007). Retrieved July 15, 2015, from http://cdn2.hubspot.net/hub/41331/file-14184103-pdf/docs/plan_comparison_iep_vs_504.pdf

Special Education Process: IEP vs. 504 Plan. (2009, January 5). Retrieved July 15, 2015, from http://www.davidsongifted.org/db/Articles_id_10671.aspx

The Difference Between IEPs and 504 Plans. (2014, June 27). Retrieved July 15, 2015, from https://www.understood.org/en/school-learning/special-services/504-plan/the-difference-between-ieps-and-504-plans



References for Venn Diagram

A Support Plan Comparison: IEP vs. 504. (2007). Retrieved July 15, 2015, from http://cdn2.hubspot.net/hub/41331/file-14184103-pdf/docs/plan_comparison_iep_vs_504.pdf

Special Education Process: IEP vs. 504 Plan. (2009, January 5). Retrieved July 15, 2015, from http://www.davidsongifted.org/db/Articles_id_10671.aspx

The Difference Between IEPs and 504 Plans. (2014, June 27). Retrieved July 15, 2015, from https://www.understood.org/en/school-learning/special-services/504-plan/the-difference-between-ieps-and-504-plans

United States Department of Education. (2010, June 5). Retrieved July 15, 2015, from http://idea.ed.gov/explore/view/p/,root,dynamic,TopicalBrief,10,.

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Action Research Project

Hey Everyone!

Below is a link to my Action Research Project created in my Assessments class. I performed my presentation based on the question of "What impact would learning videos have on student learning?" I find this to be an important question to ask. Especially considering I am looking to become a STEM Biology teacher so I want to understand what methods and strategies are best to introducing videos into my instruction. If you take a look at the presentation I created, it will inform you of the steps I would take to performing my research, experiment, and ways I would present my results with my recommended solutions. It is not just the students who need to become problem solvers and present solutions, but we do too! Please take a look and enjoy! Thank you!


Prezi Link: http://prezi.com/2ikcs4noalmu/?utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=copy

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Personal Assessment Philosophy

Assessment.png

Personal Assessment Philosophy

For several years, I have set out to find my destiny. I have found an  adventure leading me to my purpose in life. I have always had an interest in knowledge and learning. It became clear recently that I could continue this interest by teaching. Teaching is not just a job that involves giving students homework and grades. It involves having a well-designed assessment that can encourage motivation and achievement with students. Assessments are an essential part to effective teaching and the learning process for students. These can be aligned with learning objectives that are identified on specific lesson/unit plans.

Authentic assessments should be linked with Cognitively Based Assessment FOR/AS/OF Learning (Navas, 2014). CBAL helps combine summative (of learning) and formative (for learning) components of assessment by working with innovative tasks that are viewed by teachers and students for learning experiences in and of themselves (as learning) by being delivered primarily by technology (Navas, 2014). These assessments provide students with opportunities to learn in real contexts (Mueller, 2014). Students will learn how to handle real-life situations as each student experiences a form of scaffolding through feedback. A variety of assessments will be used for diverse learning opportunities for students with different learning styles. “Each assessment should link to instructional objectives (Risko & Walker-Dalhouse, 2010).” My goal is develop a plan that focuses on the elements of formative assessment, learning targets, rubrics, student self-assessment, emphasis on descriptive feedback, and grading with the use of clarity and accuracy (Mueller, 2014).

Authentic assessments are especially important in STEM and the Common Core. I have the opportunity to support students in meeting the Common Core needs by creating more authentic reading and writing tasks (Miller, 2013). I will consider having students create assessments and products that involve work from the real work like letters, blogs, infographics, press releases, guides, and podcasts (Miller, 2013). Students will be provided with more primary sources to read to help create reading engagement within my classroom. As a STEM educator, students will be provided an opportunity to have a space to practice various roles in real life situations with science. The Common Core emphasizes a speaking and listening standard. Assessments and the Common Core are aligned to encourage growth and a deeper understanding of the material as shown on the example below.. Students will tackle real-world challenges and problems in teams with building collaborative skills (Miller, 2013). Authentic assessment meets the needs of Common Core by creating collaboration for real-world scenarios, challenges, and problems.  


There are three major categories of assessment: Formative, summative and norm-referenced. Formative assessment is the “heart” of assessment since it is used to monitor student progress during lessons and units. It helps drive instruction, identify strengths or weaknesses, and creates an environment of differentiated instruction for each student by providing feedback to the student and instructor. Summative assessment is used to analyze whether or not learning goals were met by comparing student performance with the goals or standards designed for the unit. A norm-referenced assessment is used to compare student results with the set of “norm.” Depending on the goal of assessment will help determine what form of assessment to use.

The basis of my assessment plan is formative assessment, which is a form of assessment for learning. As I teach in the classroom, I will use the formative assessment to check for student understanding, adjust my instruction accordingly, and provide feedback to students (Stiggins, 2006). “Formative assessment can lead to significant learning gains (Price, 2012).” Formative assessments are often informal and continuous. student thinking and feedback are key aspects of formative assessments (Price, 2012). The instructor has the opportunity to draw on his or her pedagogical content knowledge to recognize and respond to students’ thinking (Price, 2012). “The assessments can reinforce instruction that is increasingly rich, complex, and full of meaning and enhance lessons that offer authentic tasks with a variety of routes to success (Oakes & Lipton, 2007).”A number of strategies is used like a reflection journal, graphic organizers, class discussions, exit tickets, one sentence summaries, and probing questions. Formative assessments are used to inform teaching, promote learning, and encourage success for students.

Another piece to my assessment plan is learning targets. Learning targets have clear statements that are simple for the intent of learning that can be posted in the classroom every day. These learning targets identify specific skills that I intend to teach by beginning with “I can.” Learning targets are used to help me think about my instruction and classroom activities to provide an idea of what my students are expected to learn.

Rubrics provide me with information to the students on how he or she is being assessed. It is my responsibility to create rubrics that are fair and clear to understand (Mueller, 2014). I will utilize internal and external resources to create a rubric that everyone can use. Achievement levels are defined on the rubric, explain the differences on the quality of work, and provide samples that illustrate the different levels and traits. Students will be provided with the assessment rubrics at the beginning of an instructional unit so he or she can utilize this throughout the unit to evaluate their quality of work.

Student self-assessments provide students with the ability to identify their own strengths and weaknesses. It also allows the students to set their goals for learning. This helps students take more initiative in their own educational experiences. Students will be taught to communicate about their learning through conferences and self-reflecting writing activities.

Descriptive feedback is the opportunity for me to provide the strengths and weaknesses of the students’ work (Miller, 2013). I will provide the students with information regarding the areas of learning they are doing well in and where improvement is needed. The work will be evaluated before a final grade is assigned. I plan to model the thinking that I would like my students to use when they perform their own self-assessment.

I understand the importance of summative assessments that evaluate students to determine if learning has occurred. The scores of summative assessments help inform policy makers, but have limited value in practical instructional settings since it lacks informing classroom instruction and learning (Navas, 2014). It is extremely important to parents, school personnel, and college admission officers (School Improvement Network, 2011). In order to create a summative assessment that provides information on assigned grades and student achievement, I need to begin developing a plan at the beginning of the semester. I also need to be careful to record information from the assessments as they are given. Homework grades are part of the students’ learning so I will be scoring this as 10 percent of their final grade in order to encourage the students to continue doing it. A majority of their final grade will be based off the assignments provided at the end of the semester. Grades will present information on academic achievement of the student. Attendance, homework, turning in assignments on time, group participation, labs, and behavior will be discussed separately.

Educational assessments include important instructional elements. “Fundamental to all of these assessment practices is that teachers see all students as extraordinary capable learners (Oakes & Lipton, 2007). ” Assessments will be used to help each student develop creative, critical thinking and decision-making skills that are valuable for their future (Mueller, 2014). Each assessment will be carefully created to guide and support my students as they acquire knowledge and learn skills that are important for their holistic formation. I feel it is important for parents to be educated on how to interpret data and understand the types of assessments being used. Students will be able to apply and practice skills through authentic tasks. My students will be given learning opportunities to excel in class and engage in critical reflection to become more active in understanding, reflecting and monitoring their own learning. My assessments will be designed based on learning goals and intended outcome (School Improvement Network, 2011). Using Evidence-Centered Design (ECD) process helps develop and interpret assessments. It is viewed as a way of formalizing the test design process, which is related to the validity of the test scores (Navas, 2014). A Cognitive Diagnostic Model helps guide test design and analysis with providing diagnostic information about students’ strengths and weaknesses to encourage tailored instruction or for remediation purposes (Navas, 2014). I feel that I need to emphasize educational equity in my classroom to promote the importance of career and life for the student after he or she completes his or her education (School Improvement Network, 2011).  

A table that provides examples of different activities that can be used to assess different types of learning objectives to help analyze or measure performance for useful feedback for teaching and learning (Carnegie Mellon, 2015):

Type of Learning Objective
Examples of Types of Assessment
How to Measure
Remember
Students will be able to:
  • recall
  • recognize
  • Objective Test items that require students to recall or recognize information:
    • Fill-in the Blank
    • Multiple Choice items with question stems such as, “what is a…”, or “which of the following is the definition of)
    • Labeling diagrams
  • Reciting (orally, musically, or in writing)
  • Accuracy – correct vs number of errors
  • Item Analysis (at the class level, are there items that had higher error rates? Did some items result in the same errors?)
Understand
Students will be able to:
  • interpret
  • exemplify
  • classify
  • summarize
  • infer
  • compare
  • explain
Papers, oral/written exam questions, problems, class discussions, concept maps, homework assignments that require (oral or written):
  • Summarizing readings, films, speeches, etc.
  • Comparing and/or contrasting two or more theories, events, processes, etc.
  • Classifying or categorizing cases, elements, events, etc., using established criteria
  • Paraphrasing documents or speeches
  • Finding or identifying examples or illustrations of a concept, principle
Scoring or performance rubrics that identify critical components of the work and discriminates between differing levels of proficiency in addressing the components
Apply
Students will be able to:
  • execute
  • implement
Activities that require students to use procedures to solve or complete familiar or unfamiliar tasks; may also require students to determine which procedure(s) are most appropriate for a given task.  Activities include:
Problem sets, performances, labs, Prototyping, Simulations
Accuracy scores, Check lists, Rubrics, Primary Trait Analysis
Analyze
Students will be able to:
  • differentiate
  • organize
  • attribute
Activities that require students to discriminate or select relevant from irrelevant parts, determine how elements function together, or determine bias, values or underlying intent in presented materials. These might include:
Case studies, Critiques, Labs, Papers, Projects, Debates, Concept Maps,  
  • Rubrics, scored by instructor, juries, external clients, employers, internship supervisor, etc.
  • Primary Trait Analysis
Evaluate
Students will be able to:
  • check
  • critique
A range of activities that require students to test, monitor, judge or critique readings, performances, or products against established criteria or standards.  These activities might include:
Journals, Diaries, Critiques, Problem Sets, Product Reviews, Case Studies.
  • Rubrics, scored by instructor, juries, external clients, employers, internship supervisor, etc.
  • Primary Trait Analysis
Create
Students will be able to:
  • generate
  • plan
  • produce
Research projects, musical compositions, performances, essays, business plans, website designs, prototyping, set designs
  • Rubrics, scored by instructor, juries, external clients, employers, internship supervisor, etc.
  • Primary Trait Analysis









Work Cited


Align Assessments with Objectives. (2015, June 1). Retrieved July 1, 2015, from http://www.cmu.edu/teaching/assessment/howto/basics/objectives.html

Miller, A (2013, November 13). Authenticity to Support Common Core Instruction and

Mueller, J. (2014). What is Authentic Assessment? (Authentic Assessment Toolbox). Retrieved

Navas, M. J. (2014). Bringing added value to educational assessment: A shift from an audit
mode of assessment to an assistence mode. Psicologia Educativa, 20(2), 61-63. doi:10.1016/j.pse.2014.11.005

Oakes, J., & Lipton, M. (2007). Teaching to Change the World. New York: McGraw Hill.

Price, E. (2012). Complex interactions between formative assessment, technology, and
classroom practices. AIP Conference Proceedings, 1413(1), 59-62. doi:10.1063/1.3679993

Risko, V. J., & Walker-Dalhouse, D. (2010). Making the Most of Assessment to Inform
Instruction. The Reading Teacher , 420-422.

Skills vs. Assessments: The Heart of Common Core. (2011, October 21). Retrieved May 31,

Stiggins, R., Arter, J., Chappuis, J., & Chappuis, S. (2006). Classroom Assessment for
Student Learning.Princeton: Educational Testing Service.

Strauss, V. (2015, January 22). What the new Common Core tests are — and aren’t.