Reference, Education, Special Education, Schools: Visually Impaired deaf and blind students across the state of colorado. The New York Institute for special Education Private who are blind or visually disabled, emotionally and http://www.combose.com/Reference/Education/Special_Education/Schools/Visually_Im
Extractions: Top Reference Education Special Education ... Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind (AIDB) - Comprehensive education and rehabilitation system serving children and adults who are deaf, blind and multidisabled. California School for the Blind - Provides comprehensive educational services to students of California who are visually impaired, deaf/blind, and visually impaired/multi-handicapped from infancy through age 21. These services will be provided in order to empower students to lead vocationally, personally, and socially satisfying productive lives leading to their highest level of independence. Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind - Public residential school for students who are sensory impaired. Georgia Academy for the Blind - Georgia's only residential school for the blind. The school also has programs for deaf-blind and multidisabled children. Governor Morehead School - Provides a free, public education and other services that address the social, physical, intellectual and emotional aspects of the total development of children with visual impairments. Idaho School for the Deaf and Blind - Serving students throughout Idaho.
Learning Disabilities OnLine: Finding Help - LD Schools students with learning disabilities, individuals with LindamoodBell Learning Processes (colorado) Provides research school is for special needs students ages 5 http://www.ldonline.org/finding_help/ld_schools/
Extractions: To find other help resources select a topic from the list and click GO Select a Topic US - National Organizations US - Federal Agencies US - State By State Resource Guides Canadian Resources Information By Phone International Links LD Schools On-line Resources Parent Advocacy US State Departments of Education If you are a professional interested in listing your services, sign-up online now! US Schools Please contact the schools for updated information. A C D F ... W A Spring Ridge Academy (Arizona) Spring Valley, AZ : boarding school for girls with attention deficit disorder, learning disabilities, low self esteem or other challenges. 13690 South Burton Road, Spring Valley, AZ 86333 - (520) 632-4602
Extractions: Early On Lead Poisoning Positive Behavior Support No Child Left Behind ... Detroit Parent Network Where to find help for a child in Michigan Anywhere in the U.S. , or Canada What's New? Help Text Menu ... Translate Last Updated: Article of Interest - Inclusion Meeting S pecial N eeds An emotional school-choice battle: Segregated or mainstream? Because they live in Jefferson County, the Bouchers did have an option: Fletcher Miller School, which opened in Lakewood 40 years ago especially for kids with special needs. Ryan, 14, has been at Miller five years. He has learned such skills as dressing himself and brushing his teeth, things his parents say they believe he never would have picked up in a regular school.
Social Skills Groups For Special Needs Students Significantly disabled or special needs children are often classroom, with no identified disability were included Dahlia Street, Denver, colorado, 80207, USA e http://www.ispaweb.org/en/colloquium/nyborg/Nyborg Presentations/Todd.htm
Extractions: Denver Public Schools PURPOSE: Children who have special needs often experience isolation as a result of their disability. They face greater challenges in the area of social skills for many reasons including: self contained classes, missed or misinterpreted peer communications, and delays in language development. Even with partial mainstreaming, social circles are already formed, circles of friendship which the special needs child may find difficult to enter. Significantly disabled or special needs children are often seen by teachers and peers as coming into the regular education class as an outsider, as opposed to children with minor disabilities who belong in the class and go out for additional help or therapy. The purpose of the group is to facilitate the development of social skills including: making friends, being a friend, turn-taking, asking for help, initiating conversation, joining social groups, appropriate expression of feelings, recognizing and choosing appropriate behaviors, and reading other people These skills are interwoven with pragmatic language skills. TARGET GROUP: Our initial groups focused on hard of hearing children who had been identified with a mild, moderate, or profound hearing loss and placed in a self contained classrooms The curriculum we developed soon proved useful with students who had other disabilities, including ADHD, emotional disabilities, and developmental delays. Reverse mainstreaming was introduced so students in the mainstream classroom, with no identified disability were included also. No students with severe conduct problems or thought disorders were included.
Colorado Springs School D-11 Equal Opportunity is an ongoing program to accommodate special student needs A person is disabled if he or she has colorado Springs School District 11 / Privacy Policy Copyright http://www.cssd11.k12.co.us/eeoc/disable1.html
Extractions: Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 What is Section 504? Section 504 is a portion of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 outlining the civil rights of persons with disabilities. Section 504 covers preschool, elementary and secondary school policies involving placement of children with physical and mental disabilities. This legislation states: "No person with a disability can be excluded from or denied benefits of any program receiving federal financial assistance." Every school district must have a Section 504 Coordinator to help the schools meet the requirements of this act, to answer questions and to ensure that there is an ongoing program to accommodate special student needs. How is "disability"defined under Section 504? A person is disabled if he or she "has a mental or physical impairment which substantially limits one or more of a person's major life activities. These include caring for oneself, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, breathing, learning, and working." When a condition does not substantially limit a major life activity, the individual does not qualify under Section 504.
Vitae Greeley, colorado. School Transportation News special needs Transportation Expert. recognized consultant, speaker and expert in transportation for the disabled. http://www.whitebuffalopress.com/vitae.htm
Extractions: 210-614-1396 FAX Bachelor of Arts, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, Colorado. Major: Secondary Special Education-Mental Retardation. May, 1966. Minor: Sociology. Master of Science, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois. Graduate Fellow of the United States Office of Education (USOE). Thesis topic:The Mentally Retarded Offender. October, 1970. Doctor of Education-Special Education Administration, University of Northern Colorado. Greeley, Colorado. Dissertation Topic: Guilford's Structure of Intellect and the Social Intelligence of Juvenile Delinquents. August, 1975. Postdoctoral Study. Educational Technology. University of Northern Colorado. Greeley, Colorado. Distance Learning for Special Populations. November, 1991. Recipient of the Sure-Lok National Special Needs Transportation Award, 2002. Presented at the National Association for Pupil Transportation 2002 Conference, Greensboro, North Carolina. November 3, 2002. Professional Affiliations National Association for Pupil Transportation (NAPT) Texas Association for Pupil Transportation (TAPT) Crisis Prevention Institute (CPI) School Bus Fleet Advisory GroupSpecial Needs School Transportation News Special Needs Transportation Expert Certified Child Restraint Safety Technician (NHTSA, April 2002)
Extractions: Students' Work Including special-needs students in regular classrooms seems to improve student academic performance, data show by Peter Farley AMHERST The inclusive-style classroom may be denying elementary school special needs students the attention they require and the education they deserve, according to some local teachers. But an analysis of available data gives a different picture. Now only one question remains: which method of grouping is most effective in helping students, with and without disabilities, to achieve their expected goals? IDEA requires that disabled students be placed in a setting that constitutes the "least restrictive environment." In other words, the government calls for disabled students to be educated with those who are nondisabled, to the maximum extent appropriate. However, teachers such as Mary Donovan, a fourth-grade instructor at Crocker Farm Elementary School in Amherst, say the law is often misinterpreted. The "least restrictive environment" isnt always the regular classroom for special needs students, Donovan said.
Colorado Coalition For Adoptive Families (COCAF) In colorado Parent to Parent of colorado This is created by a parent with a special needs child including summaries of laws affecting disabled children (Legal http://www.cocaf.org/links_sp_disability_main.asp
Extractions: Disabilities/Special Needs This section contains Disabilities and Special Needs related LINKS and is divided into the following subsections: General About.com: Special Needs Adoption : Resources for those considering adopting a special needs child, including available subsidies, advocating for children, services available and personal considerations. About.com: Parenting Special Needs Children American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry : This web site is designed to help parents and families in understanding developmental, behavioral, emotional and mental disorders affecting children and adolescents. It has an excellent links page to sites dealing with the emotional and psychiatric health of these two age groups. And the 'Facts for Families and Other Resources/Facts for Families' page contains an outstanding list of fact sheets providing concise and up-to-date information on issues and health disorders that affect children, teenagers, and their families. Some of the issues covered include: adoption (excellent), bedwetting, eating disorders, enuresis, foster care, grief, learning disabilities, lying, stealing, substance abuse, suicide, etc., as well as several excellent articles on medications prescribed for children and adolescents. Some, but definitely not all, of the health issues covered include: ADHA, AIDS, anxiety, Asperger's Disorder, autism, bipolar disorder, conduct disorders, depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, oppositional-defiant disorder, PTSD, Self-injury, Tourettes, etc.
Special Needs Family Fun - Abusive Abuse Site sponsored by NBA colorado Christian HomeTennyson teens, seniors, and the disabled, plus information on To provide skills for special educators, counselors http://www.specialneedsfamilyfun.com/files/abusiveabuse.html
Students With Special Needs 4 Graduate School University of colorado at Boulder in Teaching Students with special needs Susan Anderson. Office of Services to disabled Students, presented http://www.colorado.edu/gtp/resources/tutor/specialneeds.html
Extractions: Susan Anderson Marci Page, Terri Bodhaine, and Doris Schrupp, Office of Services to Disabled Students, presented the workshop "Students with Special Needs" for the Graduate Teacher Program 1989 Fall Intensive. The Tutor interviewed them, some of their colleagues, and three students who have used their services. T he Office of Services to Disabled Students (OSDS) is a sub-unit of the University Learning Center located in Willard Hall. Ruth Fink directs the office, which includes Services for the Deaf and Hearing Impaired, Services for the Blind and Visually Impaired, Services for the Physically Disabled, and the Learning Disability Program. The staff of the office of Services to Disabled Students work with individual students to meet their needs and to help them to function independently and effectively in the campus community. Though the population of disabled students on the Boulder campus is relatively small, it is concentrated in undergraduate courses. As teaching assistants and graduate part-time instructors work closely with lower division students, knowledge of the resources provided by the OSDS may help them to facilitate the success of their students.
Disability Services | University Of Colorado At Boulder encourage family and guests with special needs to arrive have difficulty walking, will be along colorado Avenue, south A disabled parking permit is not required http://www.colorado.edu/disabilityservices/commencement.html
Extractions: Commencement Information for Graduating Students If you are graduating this semester, and are a student with a physical disability, please contact the Office of Disability Services at 303-492-8671 so that we may make timely arrangements for your access needs at the commencement ceremony. Click here for general information on Commencement for graduating students, family and friends. Information for Guests Seating Seating for the elderly and guests with physical disabilities will be available at the top of sections 109 through 114. For guests with wheelchairs, a special seating area will be available inside gates 1 and 6. Other family members are welcome to sit with these guests. We strongly encourage family and guests with special needs to arrive early. Also, please note: you do not need reservations for disability seating.
R.Olson - Dyslexi And Biology the special needs of children with dyslexia in their schools and homes. Research on dyslexia at the colorado Center for the Study of Learning Disabilities has http://www.fmls.nu/sprakaloss/olsonbiologyeng.htm
Extractions: Research on dyslexia at the Colorado Center for the Study of Learning Disabilities has been a highly collaborative effort across several laboratories. It has included investigations of children's specific reading deficits, related perceptual and language skills, brain activity, brain structure, and their genetic and environmental origins (DeFries et al., 1997). Genetic and environmental influences have been studied by comparing behavioral similarities between identical and same-sex fraternal twins, and by the direct examination of DNA from children with dyslexia and from their parents and siblings. Data from identical and fraternal twins can be uniquely informative about the relative contributions from genes and environment to individual differences in reading, and to the severe reading deficits found in dyslexia. Identical-twin pairs are derived from the same sperm and egg, so they share all their genes. Fraternal twins develop from two different sperm-egg fertilizations, so they share, on average, half of their segregating genes (the small minority of genes that vary across individuals). Thus, fraternal twins have the same degree of average genetic similarity as ordinary brothers and sisters, but like the identical twins, they share the same intrauterine environment, are born at the same time, and then share their family environment.
HandiNet S Disability Links Services for Developmentally disabled in colorado Springs. Page South Hampton Roads Disability Services Board. Young Siblings of Children with special needs. http://www.handinet.org/DOG/S.htm
Extractions: HandiNet's Disability Links S Safe Guard Surfacing Corp. playground safety surfacing SAFE-T-CHILD - Safety Info for Kids SafeTek International, Inc. Saint Johns Electronic Rehabilitation Gopher Site Sam Home, The Specially Adapted Manufactured Home Sammons Preston A Bissell Healthcare Company CIL San Francisco AIDS Foundation San Francisco Down Syndrome Association San Francisco Exploratorium Disabled Access Program Sangre de Cristo Independent Living Center Pueblo CIL SATIS Software SAY - Text-to-speech interface using ASCII/phenomes Sch of the Future S.A. Schizencephaly Schizophrenia Website Schools for the Deaf on the Web ... SCUBATRUST, The Diving for People with Disabilities Screen Magnifiers Homepage SEARCH.COM Seat-A-Robics - Excercise for the Disabled Second Power, Inc., The Self Advocacy Home Page Self Help for Hard of Hearing People, Inc. SHHH California Self Help for Hard of Hearing People, Inc. Self-Help Clearinghouse, The Self-Improvement thru Riding Education SEM University of Delaware Semantic Compaction Systems Minspeak S eemoretours Licensed and accredited tour operators specialising in providing wheelchair accessible and private travel packages to South East Queensland - Australia.
Chairman Branstad Contacts About Guides To Set Record Straight Jody Swarbrick and Parent to Parent of colorado. . the distinct honor of being the most disabled child to Subscribe to the Parenting special needs Newsletter. http://specialchildren.about.com/library/weekly/aa121801a.htm
Extractions: zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Parenting Special Needs Home Essentials ... 101 Family Activities zau(256,152,145,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Autism Behaviors Advocacy Development ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb); Subscribe to the About Parenting Special Needs newsletter. Search Parenting Special Needs Chairman Branstad Contacts About Guides to Set Record Straight Iowa A State of Excellence in Special Education
University Of Northern Colorado Online Study of components of effective schools and the and Service Delivery for Students with special needs. Services for Adolescents with Disabilities, Sitlington, PL http://center.unco.edu/blackboard/sched_sp04/
Extractions: Type course prefix. i.e. EDSE ART 190-970 Art Appreciation Hours: Registration Number: Instructor: Ken Price Text Book: Fichner-Rathus. Art Appreciation, Thomson Learning, Inc. 6th Ed Description: Non-majors only. Required for Elementary Education certification. Introduction to further enhance an understanding and appreciation of the functional and expressive nature of architecture, painting, sculpture and the applied arts. (GenEd) ART 190-971 Art Appreciation Hours: Registration Number: Instructor: David Zaher Text Book: Fichner-Rathus. Art Appreciation, Thomson Learning, Inc. 6th Ed Description: Non-majors only. Required for Elementary Education certification. Introduction to further enhance an understanding and appreciation of the functional and expressive nature of architecture, painting, sculpture and the applied arts. (GenEd) BAMK 260-970 Introduction to Marketing Hours: Registration Number: Instructor: Michael Leonard Text Book: Gary Armstrong, Philip Kotler. Marketing: An Introduction, Prentice Hall, 6th Ed. ISBN #0-13-035133-4
Cognitive And Developmental Diabilities Resources Resource Center A center in colorado that provides Parents who have disabled children and want to special needs Education Network A Web site created under the http://waisman.wisc.edu/www/mrsites.html
Extractions: Cognitive and Developmental Disabilities Resources (in alphabetical order by title) ACDD The Web site of the Alabama Council for Developmental Disabilities. AAMR The Web site of the American Association on Mental Retardation. AAUAP The home page of the American Association of University Affiliated Programs for Persons with Developmental Disabilities. ADA and Disability Information A WWW page with links to other Web and Gopher sites dealing with the Americans with Disabilities Act and disabilities in general. ADA Information Center On-Line A Web site of information about the Americans with Disabilities Act, made available by the ADA Project. Located in Columbia, Missouri, the ADA Project is one of ten regional centers funded by the National Institiute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, a division of the U.S. Department of Education. Their purpose is to provide technical assistance and training concerning the ADA to businesses, institutions, agencies, and individuals. The project serves the four state region of Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska. Adaptive Computing Technology Center The University of Missouri Columbia, Department of Campus Computing, Adaptive Computing Technology (ACT) Center's goal is to implement adaptive computing in a manner which enhances integration of people with disabilities into the higher education environment.
Inclusion In Middle Schools. ERIC Digest. six middle schools in one colorado school district and look for ways to include special needs students as for students with learning disabilities Themes and http://www.ericdigests.org/2002-3/inclusion.htm
Extractions: Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Elementary and Early Childhood Education Champaign IL. Inclusion in Middle Schools. ERIC Digest. Current legislation supports the concept of including students with disabilities in the general education classroom but leaves many wondering, "Is this approach working?" Determining the effectiveness of this practice is a task not easily accomplished. The term itself-inclusion-is not found in any law and is used inconsistently in the educational community. Inclusive programs differ greatly from district to district, both in definition and implementation. Variables such as amount and nature of support provided to the regular classroom teacher differ dramatically from district to district, sometimes from school to school and child to child, and are not easily controlled for research purposes. This Digest discusses the rationale for inclusion of students with mild to moderate disabilities in middle schools, explores recent research on inclusion, and discusses barriers to implementation. OVERVIEW The rationale for inclusion has never rested on research findings, but on principle. Proponents insist that the integration of students with disabilities is inherently right, compared often to the same right to racial integration. The generally accepted concept of inclusion is that students with disabilities attend classes with their general education peers with direct support from special educators.
Media Study Finds special needs and disabled Populations Satisfied with CHCS Awards Grants to colorado Access, American Public Human Services Association, and http://www.chcs.org/info-url3967/info-url_more.htm?frame_id=3969
Colorado Charter School Frequently Asked Questions most charter schools apply for colorado Charter School the basis of need for special education services the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act http://www.cde.state.co.us/cdechart/faq.htm
Extractions: Colorado Department of Education What is a charter school? A charter school is a public school operated by a group of parents, teachers, and/or community members as a semi-autonomous school of choice within a school district, operating under a contract or "charter" between the members of the charter school community and the local board of education. Who may apply for a charter? Any person, group, or entity may apply for a public school charter, which includes non-profits or education management organizations. The Charter Schools Act prohibits private school conversion or a home-school charter. How many charter schools are there and is there a limit on the number that can be approved? As of the 2001-02 school year, there are 89 charter schools operating in Colorado. The number of charters schools that have opened each year averages between 12 and 15. There is no limit on the number of charter schools that may be approved. What are the first steps to starting a charter school?
Civil Rights - My Child's Special Needs - Parents - ED.gov OSEP State Monitoring Reports colorado. contains the most recent Office of special Education Programs for high school students with disabilities who plan to http://www.ed.gov/parents/needs/rights/list.jhtml?page=1&size=50&oldsize=10&sort