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November 6, 2008
NASDSE Works!
CHARTER SCHOOLS AND SPECIAL EDUCATION
Since 1998, NASDSE has
become a national leader on charter schools and special education as
charter school authorizers and operators try to understand their
responsibilities vis-à-vis this group of students. NASDSE’s charter
schools initiatives have been the primary source of support on this
topic for all of those involved with charter schools in the 40 states
and the District of Columbia where charter schools are part of the
education community.
NASDSE’s work has evolved from an initial study that
examined special education requirements in charter schools to the
creation of a website that contains state-specific Primers on Special
Education in Charter Schools, copies of state-specific Primers for
13 states that have participated in creating those resources as well as
many other resources related to this topic.
The states that have worked with NASDSE to develop Primersare: CA, GA, HI, ID, MD, MI, NJ, NM, OH, and TN. Primers are
currently pending for MA, MN and WI.
Although the project officially ended at the end of September 2008,
the website will continue to be maintained. Whether you are a state
official, a teacher or a researcher be sure to visit he project’s
website, which has been expanded with new and enhanced resources
including six new Special Reports, links to state-specific primers and
video presentations that summarize each of the Primers – the
Background Primer on legal issues and legislation, the AuthorizerPrimer, the Operator Primer and the Primer for
State Officials who work and oversee charter schools. You can access the
website at www.uscharterschools.org/specialedprimers.
DEAF/HARD OF HEARING EDUCATION INITIATIVE
NASDSE is proud to
offer workshops in states to educate practitioners on the following
vital issues: the foundations of educating students who are deaf or hard
of hearing (DHH), the characteristics of appropriate administrative and
support structures for services, the process for identifying and
assessing individual needs, terminology used in the field and federal
and state policy as they apply to lowincidence populations.
NASDSE’s DHH initiative has provided invaluable
leadership though its seminars in the following states since 2007: MI,
PA, OH, CA, KN, AK, OK, AL, NM, IO, MD, NC, MI, KN, SD. ID and NC.
States have used the seminars tin a variety of ways. For example, some
are using the seminars to develop state plans for students who are DHH
as well as using it as a springboard for on-going community of practice
groups. Others are using the seminar to focus on specific issues such as
literacy, educational interpreter certification and service provision
as well as technology. NASDSE is proud that states have used the seminar
for the preparation and advocacy of important legislation around
interpreter issues.
PROJECT FORUM
Project Forum has been a
fixture at NASDSE for more than 25 years. They provide valuable research
and information to practitioners and policy makers on a variety of
current special education issues. The topics researched recently range
from “the state of the states” to local implementation of universal
design for learning (UDL). The topics researched are generated from
practitioners and policy makers and are recommended by an advisory board
to OSEP for consideration. The Project Forum website features a section
for “topic suggestions”, so if you have an area of concern or
confusion, feel free to let Project Forum know. This is your research
project!
Project Forum and CAST are excited to announce that they
are conducting a month-long online policy forum on universal designs
for learning (UDL) implementation! A kickoff webinar provided background
on UDL. To register for this exciting and informative online event and
to view all of Project Forum’s relevant documents please visit their
website at: www. Projectforum.org Project Forum also recently conducted a
forum on meeting the needs of students with disabilities who are
homeless. The policy forum discussed ways of improving collaboration
between those with responsibilities under the McKinney-Veto Homeless Act
and those with responsibilities under IDEA. A summary of the issues and
recommendations generated by the participants will be available soon on
the Project Forum and NASDSE websites.
IDEA PARTNERSHIP
NASDSE is pleased to announce that
the IDEA Partnership has been refunded for another five years through
the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Special Education Programs
(OSEP)! The IDEA Partnership facilitates interaction and shared work
across professional and family organizations around common interests.
The IDEA Partnership works with leaders in 33 states to facilitate a
new, deer type of leadership and partners with 55 national organizations
to facilitate collaboration across stakeholder groups in an effort to
facilitate a deep understanding of and share in work on “big issues” in
education. One way in which the IDEA Partnership accomplishes its goal
is through Communities of Practice (CoP). A CoP is quite
simply a group of people that agree to interact regularly to solve a
persistent problem or improve practice in an area that is important to
them. CoPs exist in many forms, some large in scale and dealing
with complex problems, others small in scale and focused on a problem at
a very specific level. CoPs are a way of working that invites
the groups that have a stake in an issue to be a part of the problem
solving. The CoP develops its own schedule or ‘rhythm’ for
interacting and creates mechanisms to communicate that give access to
all the members. The IDEA Partnership’s CoP’s are broadly based
around the following themes: NCLB/IDEA collaboration; school behavior
health; transition, dispute resolution/creating agreement and teacher
quality.
A recent and exciting example of IDEA Partnership work
surrounds school-based mental health. For the last five years, 21
national organizations and 5 federal technical assistance centers have
annually joined with 13 state teams to bridge education and mental
health and through the national CoP on School Behavioral Health.
The community members represent those working at the policy, practice
and consumer level and work together on an array of issues.
Between annual face-to-face meetings, the community
interacts through web meetings, conference calls and an interactive
website sponsored by the IDEA Partnership, www.sharedwork.org.
Currently, 1,700 stakeholders work together on the shared work site and
13 states have teams that are working across agencies and across groups
to apply the community strategy at the state and local level.
A major accomplishment of the community has been to
completely plan, review proposals, select presenters and host the
National Conference on Advancing School Mental Health, which is attended
annually by more than 700 participants. During the recent 13th Annual
Conference on Advancing School Mental Health that took place on
September 25-27, 2008 in Phoenix, AZ, the Community’s Youth Practice
Group sponsored the opening keynote Ross Szabo of the National Mental
Health Awareness Campaign who delivered a personal refection on
depression and suicide drawn from his book, Behind Happy Faces.
In the second keynote, the National Association of Secondary School
Principals (NASSP), a founding member of the national CoP, framed
talking points for participants to engage their members at the local
level by concretely making connections between school-based mental
health and the high school reform principles articulated in its
publication, Breaking Ranks. To learn more about the National
Community as well as all the communities of practice and follow the work
of the states and the practice groups, register at www.sharedwork.org.
ANNUAL CONFERENCE
NASDSE will be hosting its annual
conference in Kiawah Island, SC. from October 18-21. The theme this year
will be “Formula for Success: Providing a Highly Capable Workforce.”
Speakers include leading national experts who will help inform states
about how to ensure that individuals who work with students with
disabilities are effectively trained to meet diverse student needs. For
more information please visit the NASDSE website at www.nasdse.org (click on ‘Events’).
After the conference, presentations will be available on the NASDSE
website.
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT SERIES
NASDSE is pleased to
offer a new series of four professional development conferences. These
conferences are purchased by the state directors of special education
and are available for unlimited viewing and use in those states. This
series of four telecasts brings nationally-recognized experts to your
state using technology, providing an affordable means of quality,
cutting-edge personnel development for a variety of stakeholders.
Subscribing states receive unlimited rights to rebroadcast and reproduce
these conferences for in-state, non-commercial use, providing maximum
flexibility to utilize the series to best meet local and statewide
professional development needs for state directors of special education,
state education agency staff, local administrators, teachers, related
service providers, higher education faculty, families, youth leaders,
community leaders and other stakeholders. The topics to be covered in
the 2008-2009 schedule include:
News You Can Use: Resources and Supports for Students
with Autism and their Families – October 10, 2008
Partners in
Progress: Youth/Young Adult Leaders for Systems Change – December 5,
2008
From Computers to Classrooms: Tackling Bullying in Today’s
Schools – March 20, 2009
Understanding the Big Picture: Federal
Policy and its Impact on the Classroom – May 1, 2008
For more information and to find out how to access this
invaluable professional development series, contact your state
department of education or visit the NASDSE website at: www.nasdse.org.
NASDSE Publishes!
Recognizing that Response to
Intervention (RtI) is a emerging and groundbreaking initiative, NASDSE
offers a series of publications in an effort to inform and guide the
field at the national, state, district and building level. Take a moment
to visit NASDSE’s website to view these documents as well as our large
collection on additional publications on varied aspects of special
education at: www.nasdse.org. Click
on any title below to view additional information.
• Response to
Intervention: Policy Considerations and Implementation
• Response to
Intervention Blueprints for Implementation: School Building Level
•
Response to Intervention Blueprints for Implementation: District Level
•
Response to Intervention: Research for PracticeTo learn more about
meeting the needs of students who are deaf or hard of hearing, click on
the link below.
Meeting the Needs of Students Who are Deaf or
Hard of Hearing: Educational Services Guidelines
Below are links to
the most recent Project Forum documents. To access the documents, click
on the relevant link below.
• Coordinated Early Intervening Services (CEIS): Policy Forum (Sept.
‘08)
• Financial Responsibility for Students with Disabilities: A
Special Case (Sept. ‘08)
• State Eligibility Requirements for
Specific Learning Disabilities (July ‘08)
• Universal Design for
Learning: Implementation in Six Local Education Agencies (June ‘08)
NASDSE Advocates!
NASDSE advocates on behalf of its members, the
state directors of education, to promote the legislative agenda agreed
upon and adopted by the board of directors each January. To view a copy
of NASDSE’s legislative agenda go to: www.nasdse.org and click on
‘Government Relations.’
Below is a list of some of the issues and bills
supported by NASDSE during the 110th Congress:
THE INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES EDUCATION ACT
(IDEA)
In anticipation of the upcoming reauthorization, NASDSE’s
board of directors has begun to examine its reauthorization principles.
Once the principles have been adopted, they will be posted on the NASDSE
website.
NASDSE supports the following IDEA full funding bills:
H.R.
821 (Van Hollen) “Everyone Deserves Unconditional Access to Education”
H.R.
526 (Larson) “Full Funding for IDEA Now Act” and
S.1159
(Harkin/Hagel)”The IDEA Full Funding Act”
To read NASDSE’s response to the recent Part B Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking issued by the U.S. Department
of Education, click on the following link: http://www.nasdse.org/Portals/0/IDESA%20suppl%20regs%20-final%20072808.pdf
THE NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND ACT (NCLB)
Although
2008 did not see the reauthorization of NCLB, a great deal of
legislation was introduced in the 110th Congress. Below is a list of
proposed legislation that NASDSE has publically supported.
H.R. 3430
(Napolitano) “Mental Health in Schools Act”
H.R. 4100 (Woolsey)
“Instructional-Level Assessment Pilot Project”
H.R. 1424
(Kennedy/Ramstad) “The Paul Wellstone Mental Health & Addiction
Act”; and
S. 3573 (Murray) “Promoting Innovations to 21st Century
Careers”
To read NASDSE’s response to the Title 1 Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking recently issued by the U.S. Department of Education,
click on the following link:
http://www.nasdse.org/Portals/0/CommentsonTitleIregs0608.pdf
MEDICAID
H.R. 5613 (Dingell/Murphy)
“Protecting the Medicaid Safety Net Act of 2008”
S. 2819
(Rockefeller/Snowe) “Economic Recovery in Healthcare Act
June 17, 2008
Subject: New Project Forum
Document
Synthesis of Two Reports on Critical Issues for Special Education in
Charter Schools
http://projectforum.org/docs/Synthesisof2ReportsonCriticalIssuesforSpEdinCharterSchool.pdf
This
Brief Policy Analysis is a synthesis of two reports developed for the
website, Primers on Implementing Special Education in Charter Schools. A
background on charter schools is given prior to the syntheses of the
reports. The two reports each focus on a distinctive type of charter
school: 1) schools designed for students with disabilities and 2)
virtual charter schools. In the case of the charter schools for students
with disabilities report, the author shares legal and policy contexts
and typical issues. Regarding virtual charter schools, the report shares
information on how special education is handled in this context. An
observation section is provided following the report syntheses.
Additional copies are available from NASDSE; however, there are no
restrictions on copying because this document was produced with federal
funds. This document is available for downloading at http://www.projectforum.org
Additionally, Project
Forum"s site has over 100 documents available for download.
Wednesday, January 16, 2008 1:21 PM
Two new documents have just been added to the website that was
created to contain information about implementing special education in
charter schools. They are the first resources in a new section of the
website entitled Special Reports. One
document addresses issues related to charter schools designed
specifically for students with disabilities and the other
focuses on special education in virtual charter schools.
The direct link for download is http://www.uscharterschools.org/cs/spedp/print/uscs_docs/spedp/reports.htm
Many other resources are also available on this Primers
on Special Education in Charter Schools Website at http://www.uscharterschools.org/cs/spedp/print/uscs_docs/spedp/home.htm
New
Publications from NASDSE
The
National Association of State Directors of Special Education, Inc.
(NASDSE) has recently published two books. One is entitled Meeting the Needs of Students Who are Deaf or Hard of
Hearing: Educational Services Guidelines, which
describes essential program elements and features that must be
considered when designing appropriate services for students who are deaf
or hard of hearing, including those students with multiple
disabilities. The other book is entitled The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act:
Comparison of IDEA Regulations August 3, 2006 to IDEA Regulations March
12, 1999, which provides a section-by-section
comparison of the old IDEA regulations to the new final regulations
released by the U.S. Department of Education on August 3rd. The ordering
forms can be viewed by clicking on the respective title above.
As promised, we have
placed on the NASDSE website copies of the presentations and handout
materials from the 3rd National Summit on Successfully Serving Students
with Disabilities in Charter Schools held in November in Indianapolis. You
can reach these files by scrolling down the web page at the following
link: http://www.nasdse.org/projects.cfm?pageprojectid=16
You
can also reach this web page by going to the NASDSE main page at www.nasdse.org and selecting
Projects and then TA Customizer. Please share these downloads with
anyone you think would be interested in them.
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