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         Illinois Disabled & Special Needs Schools:     more detail
  1. Interagency agreements: Improving the transition process for young children with special needs and their families (FACTS/LRE information series) by Dale Borman Fink, 1993

61. The Council For Disability Rights
Advancing rights and enhancing lives of people with disabilities special Parents of Unique needs Kids (SPUNK). POBox 20850, Chicago, IL 60620
http://www.disabilityrights.org/guide3.htm
The Council for Disability Rights Advancing rights and enhancing lives of people with disabilities CDR HOME
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A Parent's Guide to Special Ed / Special Needs Part II - Resources Friends of Special Education does not endorse any of the groups or agencies listed, nor do we make any representations as to how effective or ineffective they are in providing services. The following list of resources includes federal, state and local agencies mandated to provide services to children with special needs; legal assistance agencies and programs that specialize in special education and/or human rights/discrimination/disability issues; and advocacy and support groups. Some listings and descriptions of services provided were obtained from the Directory of Self-Help and Mutual Aid Groups (8th Ed.), 1996-97 edition of the Human Care of Metropolitan Chicago Services Directory, Directory of State Services for People with Disabilities, and a resource list compiled by the Family Resource Center on Disabilities. For some listings, there may be several addresses and phone numbers if the agency or group has several offices throughout the state. Other listings that may have more than one office may only list one address and phone number for intake and referral to the office closest to you. Access Living . 614 West Roosevelt Road, Chicago 60607

62. The Council For Disability Rights
Advancing rights and enhancing lives of people with disabilities Article 14 is specific to special education matters. illinois School Code.
http://www.disabilityrights.org/glossary.htm
The Council for Disability Rights Advancing rights and enhancing lives of people with disabilities CDR HOME
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A Parent's Guide to Special Ed / Special Needs Glossary of Special Education Terms Prepared by Dr. Joy J. Rogers, Professor, Loyola University School of Education Achievement/ability discrepancy. A criterion often used to determine whether a child has a learning disability. It asks, is the child working up to expectations? One "formula" for determining the presence of a discrepancy has been promulgated by the Illinois State Board of Education. Some districts have developed their own. Some scholarly texts offer alternative formulae. ADA - Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. This law follows the principles established under Section 504. It provides for the protection from discrimination of persons with disabilities and allows claims for compensatory and punitive damages. Adaptive behavior. A sort of "practical intelligence." It is usually measured by scales that identify how well a person manages within his or her own environment. ADHD - Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder.

63. Special Education
special Education and Disabilities Resources from the Resource Center special needs Education (SNE) project, an Internet service providing resources for
http://www.usd116.org/special_education.htm
Hearing Impaired Services
Special Education Links
Check this site for continued growth as we add pages for all of the services we provide. The Department of Special Education provides programs for handicapped children, aged 3 to 21. A full range of special programs are available through the following programs and services:
  • Programs for Students with Mild Mental Disabilities Programs for Students with Moderate Mental Disabilities Programs for Students with Behavioral/Emotional Disorders Services for Students with Learning Disabilities Early Childhood Education Services for Speech and Language Impaired Students Programs for Students with Severe/Profound Multiple Disabilities Services for Hearing Impaired and Deaf Students Services for Visually Impaired Students Programs for Students with Physical Disabilities Home /Hospital Instruction School Social Work Services School Psychological Services Occupational Therapy Physical Therapy Cunningham Children's Home (On-Grounds Classes) Pre Natal Class Chapter I ESEA (Remedial Services) Wrap-Around Services
  • As you probably know, Urbana School District #116 strives to meet the educational needs of individual children through long range planning and through the day-to-day assessment of on-going programs. Speech and language is one of the more frequent special education services provided in our schools. It is the practice for the speech and language clinician to screen children for possible problems in speech and language that may interfere with a child's ability to communicate effectively with other children and his/her teachers. This screening will be done during the first two (2) or three (3) weeks of school. If it is found through the screening that a child needs the services of a speech and language clinician, parents will be notified by the school where the child attends.

    64. Service Learning: Disabilities And Special Needs Students And Service-Learning:
    special Education/Disabilities Links. Scotts Valley, CA NSLC, nd Articles and Resources “Students with special needs Prove They Can Serve Too.
    http://www.servicelearning.org/lib_svcs/bibs/disab_sel/
    Library Services Bibliographies Disabilities and Special Needs Students and Service-Learning: Selected Resources (Search Tips) Source: National Service-Learning Clearinghouse, March 2004. http://www.servicelearning.org National Service-Learning Clearinghouse. Special Education/Disabilities Links . Scotts Valley, CA: NSLC, n.d. Articles and Resources Available Online Constitutional Rights Foundation. “ Service Learning and Special Education Service Learning Network 9 no. 2 (2002). http://www.crf-usa.org/network/net9_2.htm Corporation for National and Community Service. Learn and Serve America Program Directory . Learn and Serve America. For a selection of examples of service-learning programs involving special needs students, you can search the directory for keywords such as "disabilities" "disabled" "special needs" or "special education". Institute on Community Integration. Yes I Can: a Social Inclusion Curriculum for Students with and without Disabilities . Minneapolis: Author, 2001. http://ici.umn.edu/yesican/

    65. Service Learning: Service-Learning And Individuals With Disabilities Performing
    Implications for school inclusion of students with disabilities are The I CAN Project is designed to teach special needs kids of school age and post
    http://www.servicelearning.org/lib_svcs/bibs/indiv_disab/
    Library Services Bibliographies Service-Learning and Individuals with Disabilities Performing Service (Search Tips) Source: National Service-Learning Clearinghouse, September 2003 Articles and Resources Available Online Constitutional Rights Foundation. “ Service Learning and Special Education Service Learning Network 9 no. 2 (2002).
    Service-Learning NETWORK takes a look at schools and community groups that are applying service-learning to special populations. Cynthia McCauley describes an innovative program at Bay County High in Florida where special-education and mainstream students work in cooperative-learning groups to address community needs. Oregon teacher Bev Jackson writes about an effective program that uses service-learning as a key teaching methodology to keep at-risk students in school. Cynthia Belliveau and Sarah John of the Pennsylvania Student Service Alliance discuss the importance and feasibility of creating strong service-learning partnerships and collaboratives in their special-education initiatives. Cathleen Micheaels describes the newly opened East Bay Conservation Corps Charter School (EBCC) in Oakland, a pioneering school and research institute with a mission to incorporate service-learning and citizenship education throughout its curriculum. Kleinert, H. and Owens, J.

    66. Youth With Special Needs - Learning Disability
    Children with learning disabilities need more time to think and complete Vocational special needs. Homewood, IL American Technical Publishers, Inc.
    http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/specialneeds/lrndisab.html

    Cerebral Palsy
    Deaf/Hearing Impaired Epilepsy Learning Disability ... Other Health Impairments
    Learning Disability
    Alfred A. Strauss, M.D., in the 1940s, was the first to describe the behaviors of children now identified as learning disabled or LD. Children and adults with learning disabilities are not mentally retarded or "slow to learn;" rather, most of these individuals have average or above-average intelligence.
    For an individual with a learning disability the messages to the brain become jumbled. This makes it difficult for them to learn in one or more of the academic areas; however, they can learn and become successful. For example, you may recognize some of these individuals who had LD: Thomas Edison, Albert Einstein, Beethoven, Louis Pasteur, Woodrow Wilson, Winston Churchill, and Nelson Rockefeller. They learned to compensate for their difficulties by learning in ways that are different from how other people may have learned.
    Experts believe that there are between 6 to 10 million children with some type of learning disability. Research indicates that undetected learning disabilities may be the problem of a large number of children who do not do well in school.

    67. Graduation For Students With Disabilities In PA Letter To Superintendent
    Graduation for Students with Disabilities in PA Dear Dr. Johnson I am a parent of a child with special needs from the Selinsgrove School District.
    http://www.kidstogether.org/graduation-letter to superintendent.htm
    KIDS TOGETHER, Inc.
    Graduation for Students with Disabilities in PA
    Mrs. Debra Brubaker Letter to Superintendent
    April 19, 2005
    Dear Dr. Johnson:
    I am a parent of a child with special needs from the Selinsgrove School District. My daughter, Ashley Brubaker, is junior, attends the learning support program in the morning and the Work Activities Center in the afternoon. When she is a senior, she will have enough credits to graduate; but we have decided to keep her in the Work Activities Center, or the newly acquired apartment program, until she is 21 so she can receive additional training, with the hopes of entering the work force.
    I always assumed my daughter would be able to participate in graduation ceremonies with her class (although not receiving her diploma). However, I was told (by Cindy Vennie, the Director of Special Education) this is not possible—the practice of the Selinsgrove School District is students staying in the school system could not participate in graduations ceremonies until they are officially leaving the school. I know the final decision lies with our school board.
    I have recently discovered many school districts allow their students with special needs to participate in graduation ceremonieswithout receiving their diploma, and allowed to continue their education within the school district until the age of 21.

    68. Children With Special Needs
    special needs Network. Links page on lots of disabilities from Canada s SchoolNet Site. Comprehensive links for the field of school psychology.
    http://classweb.gmu.edu/classweb/awinsler/ordp/specnds.html
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    Children with special needs - Outline General Their excellent DisAbility links page. Good links and information for practically any physical or psychological disability one can think of. Links page on lots of disabilities from Canada's SchoolNet Site. American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry's helpful informational sheets on many issues of child psychiatry and mental health. Comprehensive links for the field of school psychology. National Center for Kids Overcoming Crisis. Helpful descriptions of mental health issues often misunderstood, including ADHD, Autism, Communication Disorders, Conduct Disorder, Fragile X Syndrome, Low Birth Weight Babies, and Parental Grief and Adjustment to a Child with a Disability. From the Youth and Family Services Division, Victorian Government Department of Human Services, Australia. A report on the topic of special education for children with disabilities from the Center for the Future of Children , a component of the David and Lucile Packard Foundation.

    69. The Arc Of Illinois
    The Arc of illinois is committed to empowering persons with disabilities to These programs serve critical needs that cannot be met by local school
    http://www.thearcofil.org/document.asp?did=368

    70. TeachingArts.org : Music Community : General Resources > Special Needs
    Arts For All, an afterschool program in the performing arts for children with A special centralized library for musicians with disabilities features a
    http://www.teachingarts.org/music/directory/17/generalResources/specialNeeds

  • A New Opportunity for University Students of Theatre, Film, and Dance Strategies to Strengthen Arts Educaiton in California Schools (pdf)

  • Music Features
    Advocacy Career Planning Current Information General Resources Model Programs Professional Development Standards - Assessment
    These 2 Ask projects are finished but you can still read answers given to others.
    Top
    General Resources Special Needs American Music Therapy Association Web site of the American Music Therapy Association. Excellent site for anyone in search of a Music Therapist or a Music Therpist looking for a new position. Convention and membership information for clinics and seminars listed. Americans for the Arts: At-Risk Youth AMERICANS FOR THE ARTS is an "information clearinghouse with a 40-year track record of objective arts industry research dedicated to serving local communities and creating opportunities for every American to participate in and appreciate the arts." On the page of the larger site, At-Risk students are addressed with tools for partnerships in an after school setting. Programs include Metropolitan Life Foundation YouthARTS Initiative and Coming Up Taller. Arts for All, Inc.

    71. FMPTIC - Information Links
    special needs Planning http//www.specialneedsplanning.org financial planning for families with a member who has a disability or special needs.
    http://www.fmptic.org/links.html
    Provided below are links that provide additional information:
    www.1p36.com

    Provides information the chromosome disorder 1p36 deletion syndrome. Is an informational guide and resource provider for parents with childeren born with the disorder. ABLEDATA
    www.abledata.com/text2/project.htm
    Provides information on assistive technology and rehabilitation equipment. Americans with Disabilities Act Technical Assistance
    www.adata.org
    Provides a comprehensive resource for information on the Americans with Disabilities Act. ARC Community Support Systems
    www.arc-css.org
    Assists people with disabilities through advocacy, support, training, employment and housing opportunities in Central Illinois. Autism Society of America
    http://www.autism-society.org
    Autism resource web site. Council for Exceptional Children http://www.cec.sped.org Advocates for appropriate governmental policies, sets professional standards, provides continual professional development, advocates for newly and historically underserved individuals with exceptionalities, and helps professionals obtain conditions and resources necessary for effective professional practice. http://www.copaa.net

    72. Parents And The School-to-Work Transition Of Special Needs Youth
    Parents and the Schoolto-Work Transition of special needs Youth For students with disabilities, the challenge of career selection and work preparation
    http://www.kidsource.com/kidsource/content4/special.needs.trans.html
    Parents and the School-to-Work Transition of Special Needs Youth
    by Bettina A. Lankard; ERIC Digest #142.
    advertisement
    Credits
    Source
    ERIC Clearinghouse on Adult, Career, and Vocational Education
    Contents
    Conditions That Necessitate Transition Services
    Laws That Mandate Transition Assistance

    Parents' Desire for Involvement

    Multidisciplinary Teams for Transition Planning
    ...
    References
    Forums
    Learning and Other Disabilities
    Related Articles
    Parenting A Child With Special Needs: A Guide To Readings And Resources
    Individualized Education Programs

    The school-to-work transition of the nation's youth has been a major focus of vocational education efforts for the past decade. Educators help students identify their interests and abilities, engage in career education and career development activities, and develop individual education plans. Although these activities are significant, their comprehensiveness and effectiveness are limited by staff and time. "The ratio of students to counselors in public high schools is almost 300 to 1; and school guidance counselors are able to spend less than one hour of every five on career counseling" (Otto 1989, p. 161). Add to this the unique and complicated counseling needs of students with disabilities and it becomes apparent that other actors, primarily parents, must be included in the school-to-work transition of youth. Will defines transition as "an outcome-oriented process encompassing a broad array of services and experiences that lead to employment" (Friedenberg et al. 1993, p. 235). The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) of 1990 defines transition services as "a coordinated set of activities for a student, designed within an outcome-oriented process, which promotes movement from school to post-school activities, including postsecondary education, vocational training, integrated employment (including supported employment), continuing and adult education, adult services, independent living, or community participation" (ibid.). This ERIC DIGEST looks at the challenges of effecting successful transitions, particularly for students with disabilities, and parents' roles in the transition process.

    73. A Bad IDEA
    In addition to the physical and psychological disabilities that IDEA specifically Also, school officials can often exclude specialneeds students from
    http://www.connsensebulletin.com/badidea.html
    A Bad IDEA Is Disabling Public Schools
    'Perverse Incentives' in an Unfunded Mandate
    Just as before the 1997 Reauthorization of IDEA, a concerted attack is beginning on it. Note this commentary's recommendation that the " ' specific learning disabilities' category should be exised from the law" and the statement that "Evidence suggests that the IDEA does not produce academic gains." Education Week
    American Education's Newspaper of Record
    September 5, 2001 A Bad IDEA Is Disabling Public Schools
    'Perverse Incentives' in an Unfunded Mandate By Clint Bolick Education Week The IDEA has become systematically dysfunctional and damaging to public schools. A powerful toxin infects our nation's education system, imperiling the ability of every public school to fulfill its mission. It is not school vouchers or inadequate funding, but the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA. Tracing back to the 1975 legislation enacted to ensure equal educational opportunities for children with disabilities, the IDEA now covers 6.1 million schoolchildren at a cost of $41.5 billion annually, accounting for 40 percent of all new education funding over the past 30 years. Because only 12.5 percent of the money is provided by the federal government, the idea constitutes the largest unfunded federal mandate in American education. Far worse, it creates perverse incentives that have deepened stratification within public education to the detriment of minorities and the poor.

    74. Elsevier.com - Administering Special Education, 7
    Administering special Education, 7 In Pursuit of Dignity and Autonomy calibrated to address the needs of each child determined to have a disability.
    http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/bookdescription.cws_home/704619/description?nav

    75. Elsevier.com - Administering Special Education, 7
    Administering special Education, 7 In Pursuit of Dignity and Autonomy of the educational needs of children with disabilities and their attendant
    http://www.elsevier.com/wps/product/cws_home/704619
    Home Site map Regional Sites Advanced Product Search ... Administering Special Education, 7 Book information Product description Author information and services Ordering information Bibliographic and ordering information Conditions of sale Book related information Submit your book proposal Other books in same subject area About Elsevier Select your view ADMINISTERING SPECIAL EDUCATION, 7
    In Pursuit of Dignity and Autonomy
    Edited By
    Kern Alexander
    , University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA
    Richard C Hunter , University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA
    Included in series
    Advances in Educational Administration, 7

    Description
    The book proceeds from the broad consideration of rights and costs to more specific issues regarding the categorization of children and the disproportionality of the various racial and ethnic groups of children who may be improperly designated as disabled. Within the context of such classifications the book discusses the screening strategies on which the rights of children with disabilities are so delicately balanced. To inappropriately classify a child may result in a form of subtle discrimination or denial of a statutory right to the provision of a particular type of educational instruction or accommodation. As is indicated throughout this book, the assessment methods by which a child's free appropriate education is determined have become a science of considerable importance.
    Contents
    Hardbound, ISBN: 0-7623-1145-2, 200 pages, publication date: 2004

    76. A Tale Of Two Cities
    According to disability experts, this school is not the first to ban latex We can respond to the special needs of students like the high school in
    http://www.2enewsletter.com/LCN journal article.htm
    The following article appeared in Journal 2004 , the publication of the Illinois Association for Gifted Children. It offers a look at who twice-exceptional children are and what they need to be successful. What Can We Learn from a Tale of Two Cities? By Linda C. Neumann This is not about the story by Dickens. This tale was recently reported by the Chicago Tribune newspaper. It is a tale about two school districts in two cities that coped with students’ special needs in two very different ways. The article described how a high school in a Chicago suburb is expecting a student next year with a life-threatening allergy to latex. Officials at the school have started addressing the situation a year in advance. Their goal is to make the school a “latex-free zone” by the time the student arrives. Already, officials have banned all latex products, from medical gloves, to swim caps, to balloons – the standard decoration at school dances and graduation. They have educated the staff and students at the school about the need for the ban, and they have informed parents and other members of the outside community. Local florists, for example, know that the school can no longer accept deliveries of balloon bouquets. According to disability experts, this school is not the first to ban latex products. What sets it apart from others, however, is the lengths to which the school is going to accommodate the student’s special needs. The steps the school has taken go way beyond the requirement of the Americans with Disabilities Act to “make reasonable accommodations.” When asked about the school’s efforts, the principal replied that the school was doing what was “right and doable.”

    77. Special Needs Links
    EDUCATIONAL ALTERNATIVES for CHILDREN with special needs. About OneHanded Typing Related Services for School-Aged Children with Disabilities special
    http://www.kid-power.org/links.html

    78. Loyola Univ. Health System - IL EMSC - Resource Manual For The Nurse In The Scho
    The EMSC School Nurse Task Force has worked to ensure that the When caring for the special needs child, age appropriate guidelines should be utilized
    http://www.luhs.org/depts/emsc/schl_man.htm
    Guidelines for the Nurse in the School Setting The Guidelines for the Nurse in the School Setting must be viewed with the Adobe Acrobat Reader. If you do not have this reader, click here to download a free viewer from Adobe. Guidelines for the Nurse in the School Setting The Illinois Emergency Medical Services for Children (EMSC) program recognizes the unique field of school nursing and the multiple roles that the nurse in the school environment is called upon to perform. The intent of this manual is to provide nurses working in the school setting with a set of emergency care guidelines that can be utilized during the delivery of care to the ill or injured student. In addition, other resources are contained in this manual which school nurses may find useful to reference or integrate into their current practice. The EMSC School Nurse Task Force has worked to ensure that the information presented in this document is accurate and in accordance with professional standards in effect at the time of publication. It is hoped that this document becomes a valuable addition to the resources already available within the arena of school nursing practice. Because schools provide services to students throughout the childhood and adolescent years, it is important when utilizing this resource manual to remain cognizant of pediatric developmental stages as well as "age appropriate" services and information. A baseline understanding of pediatric developmental characteristics and a general knowledge of appropriate approaches in the assessment and management of the varied age groups will be beneficial. The assessment and treatment approach when dealing with an injured or ill kindergartner is quite different from that of a high-school student, especially when considering participation of the child in the decision making process, provision of educational information and level of parental involvement.

    79. People For The American Way - Those Whom The 'Market' Would Leave Behind
    Before Congress passed the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act Students with special needs have also met with a chilly reception in Milwaukee.
    http://www.pfaw.org/pfaw/general/default.aspx?oid=11413

    80. Special Education Resources Directory A-M - Search For A Special Education Resou
    special School 1725 Beverly Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90026 Anger and Frustration can be more devastating to a special needs family than the special need
    http://www.education-a-must.com/seram.html
    Special Education Resources Directory A-M
    Find a special education resource in your state.
    Parenting Support Group for parents, advocates, and attorneys. Ask your questions about special education law, IEPs, 504s... or ask about local resources here.
    Directory N-Z Submit a Special Education Resource AK ... MT
    AK - Alaska
    AL - Alabama
    AR - Arkansas
    AZ - Arizona
    CA - California
    Personal Coaching Systems
    Jennifer Kelley
    Special School
    1725 Beverly Blvd.
    Los Angeles, CA 90026
    Phone: (213) 413-2807
    Fax: (213) 413-2837
    www.personalcoachingsystems.com

    PCS is a K-12, state certified nonpublic school dedicated to serving students within the Autism spectrum.
    CO - Colarado
    CT - Connecticut
    The Forman School
    Special School
    12 Norfolk Road Litchfield, CT 06759 Phone: (860) 567-1802 Fax: (860) 567-8317 www.formanschool.org States Served: ME, NH, VT, RI, CT, NY, MA Boarding school with supporive classroom structure and learning center. Both classroom and learning center teachers receive ongoing training in effective instructional methodologies. Forman teachers are facilitators of the learning process and need to know validated teaching tools. Teachers are trained in understanding learning differences, attention disorders, the most effective teaching processes relevant to their content and task-specific strategies. Kris Keeney Independent Behavior Specialist 1021 Wellington CT Watkinsville, GA, 30677

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