Chat with us, powered by LiveChat The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) requires that specific topics be covered in an Individualized Education Program (IEP) meet - Writeedu

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) requires that specific topics be covered in an Individualized Education Program (IEP) meet

 

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) requires that specific topics be covered in an Individualized Education Program (IEP) meeting. The IEP team consists of general education teachers, special education teachers, a psychologist or counselor, administrators, parents/guardians, speech therapist, occupational therapist, and on occasion, the student and student advocate. Typically, a special education teacher serves as the case manager and is responsible for inviting attendees to the meeting and coordinating the meeting according to policies and regulations. Effective communication, interpersonal skills, problem solving skills, and data-driven decision-making are all prerequisites to facilitating a successful IEP meeting. Often, a school district will provide a checklist for teams to follow when developing and discussing the IEP to help ensure all responsibilities are met.

View "FIEP: A Facilitated IEP Meeting," paying special attention to the structure and collaborative nature of the meeting, the specific components of the IEP, and ways that the meeting demonstrates adherence to laws and ethical principles that govern special education. Note when viewing this example meeting that the administrator is the facilitator rather than the special education teacher, who would typically lead the meeting.  

In a 1,000-1,250, articulate your knowledge of IDEA and the IEP process. This should address the following:

  • Summarize IDEA. Include discussion of professional practice standards and how these are used to guide the special education teacher in ensuring key components of the law such as free appropriate public education (FAPE), appropriate evaluation, least restrictive environment (LRE), and procedural safeguards are upheld (approximately 250 words).
  • Explain the importance of collaboration between members of the IEP team. Include discussion about who should be included on the IEP team, how parents and students participate in decision-making, which IEP team members’ attendance is required and which is optional, and how CEC Ethical Principles and Professional Practice Standards guide collaboration and execution of the IEP process (approximately 250 words).
  • Describe the IEP process. Explain what IDEA indicates must be done before, during, and after an IEP meeting. Include discussion of why executing the IEP process according to the established standards is essential to avoid due process disputes (approximately 250-500 words).
  • Identify the major components of the IEP and explain why each is important. Discuss the specific legal, ethical, and policy responsibilities related to developing the IEP to ensure it meets the educational, developmental, and medical services requirements for students with disabilities and their families. (approximately 250 words)
  • Consider what you saw in "FIEP: A Facilitated IEP Meeting" and describe the key takeaways you will consider as a new teacher participating in the IEP process (approximately 100 words).

Support with a minimum of three scholarly resources.

IDEA and the IEP Process – Rubric

Collapse All IDEA And The IEP Process – RubricCollapse All

IDEA Summary

12 points

Criteria Description

IDEA Summary

5. Target

12 points

IDEA summary, including discussion of professional practice standards and how these are used to guide the teacher in ensuring key components of the law are upheld, is thorough and includes substantial details.

4. Acceptable

10.2 points

IDEA summary, including discussion of professional practice standards and how these are used to guide the teacher in ensuring key components of the law are upheld, is sound and includes relevant details.

3. Approaching

9 points

IDEA summary, including discussion of professional practice standards and how these are used to guide the teacher in ensuring key components of the law are upheld, is minimal and missing key details.

2. Insufficient

7.8 points

IDEA summary, including discussion of professional practice standards and how these are used to guide the teacher in ensuring key components of the law are upheld, is poor and lacks details.

1. 1: No Submission

0 points

Not addressed.

IEP Team Member Collaboration

9 points

Criteria Description

IEP Team Member Collaboration

5. Target

9 points

Explanation of the importance of collaboration between members of the IEP team, including discussion about who should be included, how decisions are made, required attendance, and how ethical principles and professional practice standards guide collaboration and execution of the IEP process, is extensive.

4. Acceptable

7.65 points

Explanation of the importance of collaboration between members of the IEP team, including discussion about who should be included, how decisions are made, required attendance, and how ethical principles and professional practice standards guide collaboration and execution of the IEP process, is complete.

3. Approaching

6.75 points

Explanation of the importance of collaboration between members of the IEP team, including discussion about who should be included, how decisions are made, required attendance, and how ethical principles and professional practice standards guide collaboration and execution of the IEP process, is underdeveloped.

2. Insufficient

5.85 points

Explanation of the importance of collaboration between members of the IEP team, including discussion about who should be included, how decisions are made, required attendance, and how ethical principles and professional practice standards guide collaboration and execution of the IEP process, is incomplete.

1. 1: No Submission

0 points

Not addressed.

IEP Process

12 points

Criteria Description

IEP Process

5. Target

12 points

Description of the IEP process, including explanation of what IDEA indicates must be done before, during, and after an IEP meeting and why executing the IEP process according to the established standards is essential to avoid due process disputes, is thoughtful and in-depth.

4. Acceptable

10.2 points

Description of the IEP process, including explanation of what IDEA indicates must be done before, during, and after an IEP meeting and why executing the IEP process according to the established standards is essential to avoid due process disputes, is accurate and detailed.

3. Approaching

9 points

Description of the IEP process, including explanation of what IDEA indicates must be done before, during, and after an IEP meeting and why executing the IEP process according to the established standards is essential to avoid due process disputes, is vague and missing key details.

2. Insufficient

7.8 points

Description of the IEP process, including explanation of what IDEA indicates must be done before, during, and after an IEP meeting and why executing the IEP process according to the established standards is essential to avoid due process disputes, is inaccurate and/or inadequate.

1. 1: No Submission

0 points

Not addressed.

IEP Components

12 points

Criteria Description

IEP Components

5. Target

12 points

Identification of major components of the IEP, including explanation of why each is important, and discussion of legal, ethical, and policy responsibilities related to developing the IEP to ensure it meets the educational, developmental, and medical services requirements for students with disabilities, is substantial and insightful.

4. Acceptable

10.2 points

Identification of major components of the IEP, including explanation of why each is important, and discussion of legal, ethical, and policy responsibilities related to developing the IEP to ensure it meets the educational, developmental, and medical services requirements for students with disabilities, is complete and accurate.

3. Approaching

9 points

Identification of major components of the IEP, including explanation of why each is important, and discussion of legal, ethical, and policy responsibilities related to developing the IEP to ensure it meets the educational, developmental, and medical services requirements for students with disabilities, is cursory and somewhat inaccurate.

2. Insufficient

7.8 points

Identification of major components of the IEP, including explanation of why each is important, and discussion of legal, ethical, and policy responsibilities related to developing the IEP to ensure it meets the educational, developmental, and medical services requirements for students with disabilities, is incomplete and/or incorrect.

1. 1: No Submission

0 points

Not addressed.

Participating in the IEP Process

3 points

Criteria Description

Participating in the IEP Process

5. Target

3 points

Discussion of the key takeaways to be considered from the “FIEP: A Facilitated IEP Meeting” as a new teacher participating in the IEP process is realistic.

4. Acceptable

2.55 points

Discussion of the key takeaways to be considered from the “FIEP: A Facilitated IEP Meeting” as a new teacher participating in the IEP process is reasonable.

3. Approaching

2.25 points

Discussion of the key takeaways to be considered from the “FIEP: A Facilitated IEP Meeting” as a new teacher participating in the IEP process is overly simplistic.

2. Insufficient

1.95 points

Discussion of the key takeaways to be considered from the “FIEP: A Facilitated IEP Meeting” as a new teacher participating in the IEP process is unrealistic.

1. 1: No Submission

0 points

Not addressed.

Thesis, Position, or Purpose (ASL)

3 points

Criteria Description

Communicates reason for writing and demonstrates awareness of audience.

5. Target

3 points

The thesis, position, or purpose is clearly communicated throughout and clearly directed to a specific audience.

4. Acceptable

2.55 points

The thesis, position, or purpose is adequately presented. An awareness of the appropriate audience is demonstrated.

3. Approaching

2.25 points

The thesis, position, or purpose is discernable in most aspects but is occasionally weak or unclear. There is limited awareness of the appropriate audience.

2. Insufficient

1.95 points

The thesis, position, or purpose is unfocused or confused. There is very little awareness of the intended audience.

1. 1: No Submission

0 points

Not addressed.

Development, Structure, and Conclusion (ASL)

3 points

Criteria Description

Advances position or purpose throughout writing; conclusion aligns to and evolves from development.

5. Target

3 points

The thesis, position, or purpose is logically advanced throughout. The progression of ideas is coherent and unified. A clear and logical conclusion aligns to the development of the purpose.

4. Acceptable

2.55 points

The thesis, position, or purpose is advanced in most aspects. Ideas clearly build on each other. Conclusion aligns to the development of the purpose.

3. Approaching

2.25 points

Limited advancement of thesis, position, or purpose is discernable. There are inconsistencies in organization or the relationship of ideas. Conclusion is simplistic and not fully aligned to the development of the purpose.

2. Insufficient

1.95 points

Writing lacks logical progression of the thesis, position, or purpose. Some organization is attempted, but ideas are disconnected. Conclusion is unclear and not supported by the overall development of the purpose.

1. 1: No Submission

0 points

Not addressed.

Evidence (ASL)

2.4 points

Criteria Description

Selects and integrates evidence to support and advance position/purpose; considers other perspectives.

5. Target

2.4 points

Specific and appropriate evidence is included. Relevant perspectives of others are clearly considered.

4. Acceptable

2.04 points

Relevant evidence that includes other perspectives is used.

3. Approaching

1.8 points

Evidence is used but is insufficient or of limited relevance. Simplistic explanation or integration of other perspectives is present.

2. Insufficient

1.56 points

Evidence is limited or irrelevant. The interpretation of other perspectives is superficial or incorrect.

1. 1: No Submission

0 points

Not addressed.

Mechanics of Writing (ASL)

2.4 points

Criteria Description

Includes spelling, capitalization, punctuation, grammar, language use, sentence structure, etc.

5. Target

2.4 points

No mechanical errors are present. Appropriate language choice and sentence structure are used throughout.

4. Acceptable

2.04 points

Few mechanical errors are present. Suitable language choice and sentence structure are used.

3. Approaching

1.8 points

Occasional mechanical errors are present. Language choice is generally appropriate. Varied sentence structure is attempted.

2. Insufficient

1.56 points

Frequent and repetitive mechanical errors are present. Inconsistencies in language choice or sentence structure are recurrent.

1. 1: No Submission

0 points

Not addressed.

Format/Documentation (ASL)

1.2 points

Criteria Description

Uses appropriate style, such as APA, MLA, etc., for college, subject, and level; documents sources using citations, footnotes, references, bibliography, etc., appropriate to assignment and discipline.

5. Target

1.2 points

No errors in formatting or documentation are present.

4. Acceptable

1.02 points

Appropriate format and documentation are used with only minor errors.

3. Approaching

0.9 points

Appropriate format and documentation are used, although there are some obvious errors.

2. Insufficient

0.78 points

Appropriate format is attempted, but some elements are missing. Frequent errors in documentation of sources are evident.

1. 1: No Submission

0 points

Not addressed.

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