Kategorier: Alle - sensory - school - relaxation - communication

av Sherry-anne Bryant 9 måneder siden

124

Special Education: Supports & Programs at Manitouwadge Public School

Manitouwadge Public School offers specialized supports and programs for students with special needs, focusing on communication and sensory regulation. The Picture Exchange Communication System (

Special Education: Supports & Programs at Manitouwadge Public School

Special Education: Supports & Programs at Manitouwadge Public School

Classroom Based Supports

UFLI Reading Program
For emerging and struggling readers.

Phonemic awareness, reading fluency, and decoding words.

Used Daily for 30 minutes - 1 hour.

Teacher and/or EA can use UFLI with struggling student.

https://ufli.education.ufl.edu/foundations/

Brain Break
Provides a brain break to the student by allowing the student to use a different part of the brain.

Used when student gets frustrated, bored, overwhelmed, ect.

I learned about brain breaks in my college course ES302.

Listed on IEP

Can be used by teacher or EA.

Can be used for class, or individual students.

Movement Break
The idea is to get the student(s) up and moving for a couple minutes before they return back to task. This allows them to wear off energy.

Used by teacher and/or EA.

Can be used on entire class, or indivdual student.

Can use when students have excess energy, are frustrated, and overwhelmed.

Some movement breaks include Go Noodle, Yoga, Just Dance, a walk in the hall, antiseptic bounce and more.

Can be listed on IEP

Transitions
Many students find it hard to move onto a new subject, change classes, move from instructional time to non-instructional time and more. This can cause escalations in behaviours and so transitions are used to help with these changes in schedules.

Ususally used with an individual student, but can be used with the whole class.

Listed on IEP and safety plan.

Examples are timers, visuals, verbals, and more to help with transitions.

Teachers and EAs can help students with transitions.

Open Court Reading K-5
Open Court Reading is a curriculum based program to teach children to read.

Open court is used every day for about 30 minutes.

https://www.mheducation.com/prek-12/program/microsites/MKTSP-THA19M01.html

Focuses on phonemes, decoding, sounding out, syllables, and more. It is used with books to help the student apply what they have learned to the written word and improve oral fluency.

Used by teacher an/or EA

Usually used as curriculum to teach entire class to read.

Used as a reading intervention for individual students who are struggling.

Listed on IEP.

Specialized Program

TinyEYE
TinyEYE offers remote services to schools with students who need support in the areas of speech-language therapy, counselling, occupational therapy,educational psychology and social work.

Students attend via online video call and recieve services by a trained professional.

Length of services depends on the issues they are experiencing, and how often they attend the program.

https://tinyeye.com/about-us/

1:1 session between student and the therapist.

School Based Supports

EMPOWER
Sick Kids Hospital's EMPOWER helps students to become better readers by offering 5 reading intervention modules including decoding, spelling, reading comprehension, and vobaualry skills for different ages.

EMPOWER is usually taught by the SET.

No other staff member is allowed to teach it. They recieve special training from Sick Kids to teach this program, and if it is taught wrong, it can put the child back several steps in this reading intervention.

EMPOWER can be taught to individual students or in groups of students who are at the same reading level.

Listed in IEP.

Taught daily for 30 minutes to an hour.

https://www.sickkids.ca/en/learning/empower-reading/

Universal Protocol
This is designed for students who have severe behaviours and serves the purpose of helping staff to eliminate crisis situations.

U.P. is applied anytime throughout the day, as many times as needed, to help a student regulate their behaviours.

Listed in IEP and Safety Plan

O.T. Stretching
Students with certain physical exceptionalities may require stretching at schools.

O.T's or staff who are trained by the O.T. can do these stretches.

Helps with muscles that are not used properly and are likely to atrophy without these stretches and also for posture.

We are a ruarl school, so George Jefferies, a service provider who offers P.T. and O.T., come in once a month to work with our students, their EAs, and meet with the teachers and principal.

They have also trained some of the EAs in our building to be able to do the stretches for the remainder of the month. and others to help him with all his daily functions.

https://georgejeffrey.com

Snoezelen Room
Snoezelen is a brand of multi-sensory room that offer a relaxing atmosphere for students who are overstimulated. They offer relaxing sounds, lights, and colours, and gentle activities to help those with sensory needs to calm their systems.

The students in our school who use the Snoezelen room are not to use it when their behaviour is escalated, this is not what it is for.

It is used to help calm their sensory systems and not a reward for escalated behaviour.

Syudents spend 30 minutes a day in the room, with an EA outside the room, but in eyesight.

https://snoezelen.info/benefits-and-applications/

Being along in the room allows them t o calm themselves completely.

Students with autism, brain injury, behaviour challenges, and more use the Snoezelen room.

The Picture Exchange Communication System
PECS

The Picture Exchange Communication System is used to help communicate with non-verbal students, and for non-verbal students to communicate with those around them with the use of pictures.

Most of our teachers and EAs in the school have a few cards on their lanyard.

An X card indicates the word no, or no thank you. A checkmark on a card indicates yes. A mouse on a card indicates quiet or quieter please.

Thse cards can be used in the class, or anywhere in the school.

In the form of a book where they can choose pictures to create sentences showing what they want or need.

In the form of a few cards on a staff members lanyard to communicate to the student what the staff members needs of the student.

PECS is used all day at school and usually at home too.

Listed in IEP