Dave and I were there along with the following staff.
- Mr. George Principal of Elementary school
- Mrs. K- Dominic's current teacher
- Kris- Dom's EI Special Ed teacher who comes to work with him
- Lena- School Psychologist for Elementary school
- Susie- EI Speech Pathologist
- Barb- the Elementary Special Ed Teacher
- Mrs. B- Dominic's assigned Kindergarten Teacher
- Susan- Elementary Speech Pathologist
- (missing) Robbie- Occupational Therapist
As far as academic achievement and performance, they found that he is still cognitively delayed and will need some help to keep up with his peers. On Communication he is at a 55 mth level (he's 63 months old) for expressive language. He is at 50 mth level for Receptive. So basically he communicates awesome now but when you ask him to do something he doesn't quite understand. He made some improvements on completing tasks but still not up to par. Because of this he has a hard time following directions and answering questions in a classroom.
Socially he has improved quite a bit but is still delayed. He needs to learn to share, follow rules, play with peers. They described him quite abit as a loner which makes me sad. Here is what exactly is wrote on his IEP from the teacher's standpoint.
Dominic s active in the classroom often touching other students, getting in their space, or moving around in his set. His attention to task varies. Sometimes he is very engaged in the activity while other times he is completely turned around looking away from the source of instruction. he has difficulty understanding personal boundaries as well as classroom expectations At times it appears as though he acts on impulse without realizing he is breaking a class rule, such as when he takes objects out of the center areas around the classroom. It doesn't appear as though he is doing this deliberately to be defiant but rather he is playing and just wrapped up in what he is doing. There are tims when he is defiant and resists adult instruction especially when it is a table time activity that is little interest to him.
When he was 4, his EI teacher had me have him tested for ADHD which he scored borderline ADHD/more oppositional. I don't believe she ever put it in his folder though. It seemed to me they were trying not to just slap the title on him so I went ahead and told them that we expected this as he had been tested for ADHD and did score that he did indeed have ADHD but we chose not to medicate.
The Sensory Processing testing we did a few months back did identify him as a SID child/student (THANK THE LORD!! ANSWERS! OMG!) Just hearing that finally made me just about start crying right there at the table as they read it. I had my head looking down just shaking my head in agreement. Based on classroom observation by EI, testing his Teacher and I both took they will be giving him OT to work with this and fine motor skills since he still can't hold a pencil right.
So here's his accommodations this year
- classroom visual schedule
- seating close to teacher
- removing extra materials from work area
- clear explanation of behavior explained in a way he can understand
- prepare for changes n chdule but maintain consistet schedule as much as possible
- allow additional time for responding to tasks
- demonstrate activities or directions that need to be completed
- frequent prompting and redirection
- small group instruction as much as possible
- frequent repetition of new concepts
- use of visual cues and hands on learning
- teacher will use behavioral charts for rewarding
- Special ed teacher will check in twice a month for updates
On District and State Assessment testing he will be given additional time, a small group environment, demonstration o directions, and use of visual cues as allowed.
We made a Behavior Intervention Plan with strategies, consequences, and crisis management (lets hope that never is needed!) Dominic has always had a very hard time controlling anger. At Early Intervention, he hit, kicked, screamed, slapped teachers and bus drivers. They would have to restrain him, rock him, put him in a quiet place to settle down. Now he hasn't been hitting much but he won't move to where he needs to go, runs away, screams, cries, etc.
So anyways that is a summary of the meeting. In all it was a hour and a half long! We had a book of papers to take home and go through. It went very well though, I'm pleased, alittle worried about no summer services but we'll try homeschooling as much as possible this summer to see if we can keep him on task and caught up.
No comments:
Post a Comment