The Education Team: Positive, Effective Interdisciplinary Collaboration
By Paula Jacobsen
Chapter 12
The Challenge of Programming for Students with ASDs
Students with ASDs have different ways of communicating, processing information, and understanding language than neurotypical students
Therefore, recognizing their challenges and strengths and determining appropriate expectations is not always easy
Successful Programming for Students with ASDs
The likelihood of developing appropriate expectations increases when interdisciplinary team members work together to understand the studentEach person brings to the table his
or her expertise and his or her set of experiences with the student
The Interdisciplinary Education Team Parents Student Special education
teacher General education
teacher School
psychologist
School administrator
Speech-language therapist
Occupational therapist
Behavior specialist Outside
professionals
Engaging the Student in the Collaboration Process
The student is more likely to be engaged in the collaboration process if other team members maintain positive, accepting, respectful, problem-solving relationships with him
The student is less likely to engage if he believes that the adults are primarily interested in gain his compliance
Formal Opportunities for Collaboration
Student Study Team (SST)Convened when parents or teachers
have concerns about a student who has not yet been evaluated or identified as having special education needs
Formal Opportunities for Collaboration
504 Plan TeamA 504 plan is for students who can
function adequately in general education with accommodations
Team is responsible for planning and monitoring progress
Formal Opportunities for Collaboration
Individualized Education Program (IEP) Team For students who have been identified
as eligible for services (special education placements, OT, etc.)
Team is responsible for developing and monitoring goals, plus accommodations and/or modifications
Informal Collaboration
With or without a formal team, informal collaboration between teacher, parents, and any others who work with the student can facilitate understanding and enhance communication
Areas for Collaboration
Language and Communication For lower-functioning students with ASDs, their
efforts at communication can sometimes be difficult to understand, even by those who know them well
For higher-functioning students, pragmatic challenges that affect learning, communication, and relationships are not always obvious
Team members should work together to ensure that unreasonable expectations are not being set
Areas for Collaboration
Social-Emotional IssuesWhen students with ASDs are taught
new social skills, they often have difficulty generalizing these lessons from one setting to another
Team members can support the student’s needs, self-awareness, and generalization of skills
Areas for Collaboration
BehaviorSome students with ASDs have little
awareness of their emotional and behavioral escalation
Team can:• Help each other (and, ultimately, the
student) to recognize warning signs• Work with the student throughout day,
using clear expectations and pre-arranged cues
Areas for Collaboration
Academics and LearningCollaboration can help everyone
understand and accept what a student knows and how he learns
Sharing “what works” helps teachers to use the most effective interventions, modifications, and accommodations
• Each teacher doesn’t have to start from scratch
Areas for Collaboration
Academics and Learning (cont) The most effective way to prepare for the
future is to keep the student from being too overwhelmed to function in the present
The best way to help the student function in the present is to ask or require of her only what she can do
Collaboration helps all team members understand what the student can and can’t do
Preparation and Planning for Effective Team Meetings Sharing data in advance allows all team
members to prepare for a meaningful, problem-solving process Assessment results Observations Possible goals and benchmarks
Preparing the student for the meeting allows him to consider what issues he’d like to see addressed
Formal Assessments
Results of formal assessments should:Be an accurate reflection of the studentBe consistent with and help explain
what team members’ experience with the student
If they’re not, every effort should be made to understand the inconsistencyThe team members’ diverse expertise
can help find the answer
Why Formal Assessments May Be Inaccurate Does the student generally do better or
worse on a test than in the classroom? Does the student have difficulty
answering if he’s not sure of the answer?
Does the test address more concrete questions, whereas class assignments delve into more abstract issues?
Why Formal Assessments May Be Inaccurate
Can the student answer questions about rules of pragmatics, but not apply them in real-life situations?
Is the student dependent on a particular cue that wasn’t available during testing?
Formal and Informal Observations
All team members should discuss their observations at team meetings
When a formal, written observation report is written, it should differentiate between:Descriptions (concrete observations)Impressions (attempts to interpret what
the behaviors mean about and to the student)
Formal and Informal Observations
Suggestions, recommendations, and questions for the team to address should logically follow from the descriptions and impressions
If observations are not consistent across team members, possible reasons for the inconsistencies must be explored, just as with assessments
Quality Observations
Should include examples of when the student is doing well and what the teacher may be doing to support that successNoting when unusual behaviors (e.g.,
rocking) occur in conjunction with desired behaviors may help the team recognize them as problem-solving, rather than problematic behaviors
Goals and Benchmarks
The most meaningful and useful goals and benchmarks are based on an understanding of what what the student does and does not understandNot just what he can or cannot do
Benchmarks are most achievable when they address the very smallest steps that come next
Teams Can Work Together to Improve Goals
One team member suggested:“Brandon will increase awareness of
and use of abstract language and thought”
Together, the team improved that goal to read:“Brandon will differentiate questions of
fact and opinion.”
Teams Can Work Together to Write Better Benchmarks Rather than this broad, ambitious benchmark:
“During discussion of a story, Brandon will answer questions such as ‘What do you think about …?’ and ‘What might happen next?’ with one prompt 50% of the time.”
The team collaborated to come up with smaller, more focused benchmark: “Brandon will identify questions of opinion,
possibility, or personal preference as questions that do not have a right or wrong answer, one out of four attempts.”
Long-Term Goals
Rather than simply recording parents’ long-term goals for their child, the team should discuss them in the context of the student’s current functioning, including Maladaptive functioning Missing skills
Then, small steps toward improved skills and functioning can become the short-term goals and benchmarks
Factors That Contribute to Positive, Effective Collaboration
1. Team members are open to hearing, reflecting on, and trying to understand each participant’s observations and concerns.
Factors That Contribute to Positive, Effective Collaboration
2. Team members make an effort to understand the student (his strengths and challenges and how they impact his learning), as well as his responses to academic, social, and behavioral expectations at school.
Factors That Contribute to Positive, Effective Collaboration
3. Team members work to understand and show respect for the student’s perspective, whether or not it conforms to that of the team members or the student’s classmates, and work to help the student learn about the perspectives of others.
Factors That Contribute to Positive, Effective Collaboration
4. Team members are interested in and willing to provide support and develop expectations that the student can meet (a manageable environment).
Conclusions
The best plan for a student with ASDs allows him to be who he is,experience an educational
environment he can manage, and(step by small step) learn to live
and function adequately in the world as it is
Conclusions
The likelihood of success increases when team members work together to understand the student.