morningstar excerpt 1.pdf
Your Complete Guide to Transition Planning and Services
Your Complete Guide to Transition Planning and Services
by
Mary E. Morningstar, Ph.D.
University of Kansas
Lawrence
and
Beth Clavenna-Deane, Ph.D.
Keystone Learning Services
Ozawkie, Kansas
Contents
I'm Responsible for Transition Planning . . . Now What Do I Do? ..... 1
Getting Started: Learning the Basics of Transition Planning and Services ..... 2
Key School Personnel: The Secondary Special Educator and Transition Coordinator ..... 3
Making It Happen: Implementing Effective Transition Programs and Services ..... 6
Transition Assessment ..... 7
Transition Planning ..... 8
Family Involvement ..... 8
Student Involvement ..... 8
Transition-Focused Curriculum and Instruction ..... 9
Interagency Collaboration and Community Services ..... 11
Systems-Level Infrastructure ..... 11
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 12
Chapter Appendix 1: Skills and Knowledge Checklist for the Transition Specialist ..... 13Transition Planning From Compliance to Quality ..... 21
Getting Started: Understanding the IDEA Requirements for Transition ..... 21
When Transition Planning Starts ..... 22
Who Is Involved in Transition Planning ..... 23
Writing Transition Individualized Education Programs ..... 27
Interagency Collaboration ..... 36
The Age of Majority and Transfer of Rights ..... 36
The Summary of Performance ..... 37
Making It Happen: Creating Quality Transition Planning Approaches ..... 38
Understand that Transition Is a Process ..... 38
Keep the Student Actively Involved in the Process ..... 40
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 40
Online Resources ..... 43Student-Directed Planning and Involvement ..... 45
Getting Started: Defining Self-Determination and the Student's Role in Transition Planning ..... 46
Making It Happen: Supporting Student Self-Determination ..... 48
Selecting Self-Determination Curricula ..... 50
Assessing Self-Determination ..... 52
Data Collection and Evaluating Student Progress ..... 54
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 54Family Involvement: Engaging Families During Transition ..... 67
Getting Started: Why Are Families So Important? ..... 68
When Are Families Involved in Schools? ..... 68
Understanding the Family Systems Framework ..... 69
Making It Happen: Supporting Families During Transition ..... 77
Create Welcoming Places ..... 77
Increase Family Involvement ..... 78
Understand Cultural Reciprocity to Develop Partnerships With All Families ..... 83
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 84
Online Resources ..... 89Transition Assessment: The Cornerstone of Transition Planning ..... 91
Getting Started: Defining Transition Assessment ..... 92
A Comprehensive Process ..... 92
Individualized Education Programs and Transition Assessment ..... 93
Making It Happen: Implementing a Student-Centered Transition Process ..... 93
Types and Approaches to Transition Assessment ..... 94
Implementing the Transition Assessment Process ..... 98
Building a Transition Assessment Toolkit ..... 100
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 105
Online Resources ..... 109School Engagement: Keeping All Students in School ..... 111
Getting Started: Understanding Student Engagement ..... 112
The Consequences of Dropping Out ..... 112
Defining Student Engagement ..... 113
Making It Happen: Strategies to Promote Student Engagement ..... 116
Consider "The ABCs of Disengagement" ..... 117
Create Multi-tiered Systems of Support ..... 117
Use Data to Keep Students on Track ..... 120
Use Proven Interventions ..... 124
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 131Inclusion in General Education: Strategies for Embedding Transition Into Academic Content ..... 135
Getting Started: Understand That Access to the General Education Curriculum Is Critical to Transition Outcomes ..... 136
Learn the Role of the General Education Teacher in the Transition Individualized Education Program Meeting ..... 136
Understand the Common Core and Other State Standards ..... 137
Making It Happen: Embedding Transition Skills Within Core Academic Content ..... 138
Provide Access to the General Education Curriculum ..... 140
Provide Instructional Supports for Learning: Accommodations and Modifications ..... 141
Access the What, How, and Why of Learning Through Universal Design for Learning ..... 142
Use Assistive Technology to Support Learning and Transition ..... 144
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 145Preparing for Employment and Career Development ..... 147
Getting Started: Planning for Careers ..... 148
Effective Career Development: An Evidence-Based Practice for All Students ..... 148
The Stages of Career Development ..... 150
Making It Happen: Building a Quality Career-Development Program ..... 151
Coordinate a District-Wide Career Development Team ..... 152
Build Programs Aligned With the Components of Career Development ..... 152
Meet the Requirements of a Work-Based Learning Program ..... 161
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 162
Online Resources ..... 164
Chapter 8 Appendix: Helpful Forms for Your Career-Development Program ..... 165Preparing for Postsecondary Education ..... 169
Getting Started: How Does High School Compare With Postsecondary Education? ..... 171
Shifts in the Law and Access to Services ..... 171
Shifts in Responsibilities ..... 172
Developing Self-Advocacy and Self-Management ..... 173
Making It Happen: Preparing Students for Postsecondary Education ..... 175
Overview of Prerequisites ..... 175
Postsecondary Survival Skills ..... 177
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 184Preparing for Independent Living and Inclusion in the Community ..... 185
Getting Started: Why Should Community Living Be Considered an Important Postsecondary Outcome? ..... 185
Making It Happen: Preparing Youth for Community Living ..... 188
Teach Self-Determination Skills ..... 190
Teach Independent Living Skills ..... 191
Teach Social Skills ..... 193
Support Participation in Community Experiences ..... 194
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 198
Online Resources ..... 199
Chapter 10 Appendix: Ecological Inventory and Task Analysis Forms ..... 200Preparing for Interpersonal Engagement ..... 203
Getting Started: Interpersonal Engagement and the Impact on Student Success ..... 204
Understanding Multiple Levels of Secondary School Engagement ..... 204
Effective Practices for Teaching Interpersonal Skills ..... 205
Making It Happen: Increasing Interpersonal Engagement ..... 206
Creating Positive School Climates ..... 206
Identifying Students Requiring Targeted Social Interventions ..... 207
Effective Interventions and Strategies for Improving Interpersonal Engagement ..... 210
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 220
Online Resources ..... 221Working With Outside Agencies: Implementing Practices to Promote Interagency Collaboration ..... 223
Getting Started: Understanding Interagency Collaboration ..... 224
Interagency Collaboration and Federal Law ..... 226
Stages Leading to Interagency Collaboration ..... 226
Making It Happen: Building a Collaborative Approach to Transition Planning ..... 229
Strategies for Supporting Youth and Families ..... 229
School-Level Changes ..... 233
Bridging to the Community ..... 235
Community and Systems Change ..... 238
What You Can Do Right Now: Putting Ideas Into Action ..... 241
References ..... 242
Index ..... 256
About the Authors
Mary E. Morningstar, Ph.D., University of Kansas, Department of Special Education, 1122 W. Campus Road, Lawrence, Kansas 66045
Dr. Mary E. Morningstar is an associate professor in the Department of Special Education at the University of Kansas (KU), Codirector of the National Assistance Center on Transition, and Director of the Transition Coalition, which offers online, hybrid, and in-person professional development and resources for secondary special educators and transition practitioners. Her research agenda includes evaluating how secondary teacher quality and professional development have an impact on transition practices and student outcomes, transition planning with culturally diverse families, and facilitating interagency collaboration for improved outcomes. Dr. Morningstar coordinates the online transition master’s program and the teacher education program for teachers of students with significant disabilities, working to transform special education coursework to support inclusive practices in schools and the community.
Beth Clavenna-Deane, Ph.D., Keystone Learning Services, 500 E. Sunflower Boulevard, Ozawkie, Kansas 66070
Dr. Beth Clavenna-Deane has worked with secondary students with disabilities for over 25 years; she began her career as a secondary special education teacher before spending almost 10 years as a transition coordinator. She has provided special education services to students with varying levels of disability ranging from mild to significant. Over the past decade, Dr. Clavenna-Deane has focused her expertise and research on autism, behavior, and social-emotional learning, and on the impact of related characteristics and skills upon the transition to adulthood. She currently provides technical assistance and training to multiple Kansas school districts on making universal, targeted, and intensive supports available for all students needing assistance through the Kansas.