Collaborating with students: Invite them to the IEP process
Written by: Dr. Pamela Hill (http://exclusive.multibriefs.com/content/collaborating-with-students-invite-them-to-the-iep-process/education)
In the typical special education scenario, the special
education team sets the goals for the student receiving an Individual Education
Plan. However, at the age of 14 the student reaches the age of transition and
begins to collaborate with the special education team to plan goals for his
future.
The law intends that students can be involved with any
transition decisions before age 14, which may include discussion of student
goals and accommodations needed to be successful in school. But it is rare that
a student attend his own IEP meeting before age 14, and there is little
research to show that students are participating in developing their own IEP
goals before age 14.
Does it really matter if the student participates in his IEP
meeting before the law recommends he does? A poignant article written in 2006
called "Why is this cake on fire?" compared attending an IEP meeting
to attending a child's own birthday party. The child was not invited year after
year, and then when he finally was invited as a teenager he saw no reason to
attend.
The meaning of the metaphor was clear. The child needs to
attend — and be involved in a greater way — well before he is a teenager if we
expect him to understand that the IEP is written as a plan for his success.
The crux of the IEP are the goals set to guide the student's
educational process for one school year. There is plenty of support for
students writing educational goals as a means for improving their own learning.
Student-written goals can be a motivating factor for achievement in school and
for attainment after school.
Wood, Karvonen, Test, Browder and Algozzine have delineated
that students can begin to write simple goals with adult assistance at age 6.
Beyond age eight they can set goals independently, determine actions and make
changes to actions to meet the goals. Teaching students to write goals in the
classroom can lead to a natural transition for teacher-student collaborative
IEP goal development.
Discussion with students regarding their school goals will
begin the process of looking to the future and then planning the steps to get
there. Students can be taught that all types of goal development follow a
simple pattern of questioning to guide decision-making.
·
What do you want to happen and why is it
important?
·
By when do you want it to transpire?
·
What steps will be needed to make it measurable
and successful?
·
How will you know when it is met?
Students need to develop goals that are realistic and
achievable, and ones that are mastery-type goals. According to Alexandra Usher
and Nancy Kober, mastery goals "involve demonstrating increased
understanding, skills and content knowledge" which leads the student to "deeper
cognitive processes, strategize more effectively, and more adaptable to
changes."
Many students — especially those with learning disabilities
— do not understand that a desired effect occurs by planning and negotiating
the actions that lead to an outcome. Many think they have no control of their
school accomplishments. However, students who develop and follow their own
goals have an increased opportunity of developing positive motivation,
self-efficacy and self-determination when meeting goals and experiencing
success.
Once an educator makes the choice to include the student in
the IEP process and not just "do it for them," she is making a choice
that will influence the student for the future. The goals belong to the
students, not the educators. It makes sense that the students take hold of the
process early, and when they reach the age of transition they will already have
a plan that has deep roots in success.
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