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         Washington Disabled & Special Needs Schools:     more detail
  1. The Power of the Arts: Creative Strategies for Teaching Exceptional Learners by Sally L. Smith, 2000-12-01

41. Special Needs Childrens - Port Angeles School District
What special needs are provided for in the Port Angeles School District? Behaviorally disabled; Communication Disorders; Gross Motor and Orthopedically
http://www.portangelesschools.org/students/special-needs-children.html
Students Schools Administration Directory ... Advanced Search
Serving Children with Special Needs
Philosophy
Special Services programs are a supplement to, not a replacement for, the regular school program.
What is common school age?
A child between the ages of 5 and 21 is considered common school age, as defined by Washington State law. The Port Angeles School District does provide Special Services to students with disabilities between the ages of birth to age 21.
Upon the analysis of assessment information, a child is found to have a cognitive, academic, physical, or adjustment disability which makes it impossible to achieve up to his/her capacity in the regular classroom, he/she may be eligible to receive Special Services program assistance when specially designed instruction is required. Degrees of disabilities which meet eligibility criteria are defined in the Rules and Regulations as set forth in the Washington Administrative Code (WAC), Chapter 392-172.
What will an assessment include?
What special needs are provided for in the Port Angeles School District?
The Port Angeles Special Services provides appropriate programs, services, or referral services for the following individual disabilities:

42. LD OnLine - Schooling The Learning-Disabled Child Abroad
must attempt to satisfy the special needs of this child while not losing track of 2 No Easy Answers The Learning disabled Child at Home and at School
http://www.ldonline.org/article.php?max=20&special_grouping=&id=831&loc=15

43. LD OnLine - Disabled By Paperwork?
The paperwork, they say, has even driven special education teachers out of the In addition, she said, schools need improved technology, and training for
http://www.ldonline.org/article.php?max=20&special_grouping=&id=65&loc=49

44. Services In School For Children With Special Needs: What Parents Need To Know -
that substantially limits a major life activity is considered disabled. Children with special needs are guaranteed rights to services in school
http://www.aacap.org/publications/factsfam/83.htm
S ERVICES IN S CHOOL FOR C HILDREN W ITH S PECIAL N EEDS: W HAT P ARENTS N EED TO K NOW No. 83 Some children experience difficulties in school, ranging from problems with concentration, learning, language, and perception to problems with behavior and/or making and keeping friends. These difficulties may be due to one or more of the following: physical disorders, psychiatric disorders, emotional problems, behavioral problems, and learning disorders (or disabilities). These children with special needs are usually entitled to receive special services or accommodations through the public schools. Federal law mandates that every child will receive a free and appropriate education in the least restrictive environment. It also entitles children with special needs to receive extra services. To support their ability to learn in school, three Federal laws apply to children with special needs:
  • The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) (1975)
  • Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of l973
  • The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) (l990).
Between states, there are different criteria for eligibility, services available, procedures for implementing the Federal laws, and procedural safeguards. It is important for parents to be aware of these laws and regulations in their particular area.

45. MY TEACHERS PAGE
This site is from the special needs Education (SNE) project, an Internet service providing resources for parents, teachers, schools, and other professionals
http://www.eagle.ca/~matink/teacher.html
Home Page Ontario Curriculum Libraries
Just For Kids
... Themes
TEACHER RESOURCES
During the year, I will be adding resources for teachers to this site. These resources will be teaching tools and topics that will cover many facets of education. If you have additional sites that you have found to be useful or any topics that you would like me to research and display the results here, please use the handy e-mail link to send them to me. I would also appreciate you letting me know if any of the listed links are no longer active in order for me to keep these pages as up-to-date as possible.
Table of Contents
Special Education General Special Education Sites Attention Deficit Disorder Behaviour Exceptionalities Communication Learning Disabled ... Holidays Page
Special Education
General Special Education Sites
  • Special Education - BC - On-line Documents

  • This site has several on-line resource documents for teachers. Topics include: Visual Impairments, Hearing Loss, Gifted Education, Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, etc.
  • CEC ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities and Gifted Education

  • ERIC EC gathers and disseminates the professional literature, information, and resources on the education and development of individuals of all ages who have disabilities and/or who are gifted. This site has a wealth of information!

    46. Disabled Sports USA
    52% of those responding were DISSATISFIED with their school’s Physical Education are equally important for children and adults with special needs.
    http://www.dsusa.org/ChallMagarchive/challmag-fall03-physEd.html
    Challenge Magazine Fall 2003 "Adaptive Snowboarding Takes Off Sharing the Joy of Sliding" By Bryan E. Hoddle, Head Coach, US ParalympicsTrack and Field Program motor abilities due to the lack of Physical Education/Fitness emphasis in this country. E-mail response in support of the article was overwhelming. Little did I know that 10 months later, I would be asked to chair a national task force to lobby law makers to do something about Physical Education nationwide. My first objective was to ask teachers and coaches in Washington what was going on at their school in regard to Physical Education. As part of that information gathering, Doug Fulton of South Whidbey H.S. polled coaches and teachers in a five question survey on the Washington High School Track and Field web site (www.watfxc.com). Nearly 100 surveys were returned in just one month, and the responses were fairly consistent. Here is what our task force learned from that survey:
    development? Are schools ignoring these experts? Are our law makers ignoring these experts?)

    47. Parents Of Disabled/Ill Children
    Opportunity for schoolage brothers and sisters of children with special health and developmental needs to obtain peer support and education within a
    http://my.webmd.com/hw/raising_a_family/shc44.asp
    var guid_source = ""; var guid_source_id = ""; //unused var encodedurl = ""; WebMD Today Home
    WebMD News Center

    XML
    News via RSS Member Services
    WebMD University

    My WebMD

    Find a Physician
    Medical Info
    Check Symptoms

    Medical Library

    Health Tools

    Clinical Trials
    ... Women, Men, Lifestyle
    Who We Are About WebMD Site Map Health Topics Symptoms ... MUMS National Parent-to-Parent Network Parents of Disabled/Ill Children Family Voices National. 50 affiliated groups. Founded 1995. (Bilingual) Grassroots organization that speaks on behalf of children with special health care needs at the national, state and local levels. Encourages and supports families who want to play a role in their child's health care. Advocacy. Literature (Spanish and English). WRITE: Family Voices 3411 Candelana NE, Suite M Albuquerque, NM 87107 CALL: 1-888-835-5669 FAX: 505-872-4780 E-MAIL: kidshealth@familyvoices.org WEBSITE: http://www.familyvoices.org VERIFIED: 4/28/2004 MELD (Minnesota Early Learning Design) National. 65+ affiliated programs. Founded 1973. On behalf of children, MELD programs aim to enhance the capacity of those who parent to raise nurtured, competent children. Provides supportive, peer based learning environments and knowledge about parenting at critical stages of child development. Programs serve families who can benefit from strong support and parenting knowledge and strategies, including adolescent parents, low income families, culturally diverse families, or families who have children with disabilities or chronic illnesses. Also provides staff development training and comprehensive parent education materials.

    48. NICHCY: Parenting A Child With Special Needs - Resources
    I wish Dreams and realities of parenting a special needs child. Lab School of washington. (1991). Issues of parenting children with learning
    http://www.kidsource.com/NICHCY/parenting.disab.all.4.6.html
    Parenting A Child With Special Needs: A Guide To Readings And Resources
    Resources
    advertisement
    Credits
    Source
    National Information Center
    for Children and Youth with Disabilities
    Contents
    You Are Not Alone
    The Unplanned Journey

    Supporting And Empowering The Family

    Working With Professionals
    ...
    References

    Resources
    Organizations

    List Of Publishers and Journals
    Forums
    Learning and Other Disabilities
    Related Articles
    Rights and Responsibilities of Parents of Children With Disabilities
    Educating Exceptional Children
    The publications and organizations listed below, as well as the resources listed throughout this News Digest, are only a few of the many that can provide information to parents and families about issues related to disability. Additional support is also available from state and local parent groups, as well as from state and local affiliates of many major disability organizations.
    Obtaining Resources That Interest You
    To help you obtain documents listed in this issue, you will find the names, addresses, and telephone numbers of publishers at the end of this publication. The publisher's name generally appears in the final position in the citation to illustrate, in the example citation below, the publisher is Woodbine House. Example: Sweeney, W. (in press). The special-needs reading list: An annotated guide to the best publications for parents and professionals. Bethesda, MD: Woodbine House.

    49. Project HappyChild Shop - Aisle 2 - New Inventions Helping Disabled Children
    New inventions helping disabled children switches for Nintendo consoles and go-karts http//www.happychild.org.uk/fr/advt/shop/special.needs/index.htm
    http://www.happychild.org.uk/fr/advt/shop/special.needs/
    English deutsch italiano norsk ... Project HappyChild has 14 areas click any area to access
    Welcome to the
    Project HappyChild SHOP please support our advertisers!
    their funding has helped to make this website
    possible - see also our Sponsors page
    New inventions helping disabled children -
    The PATHWAYS DEVELOPMENT GROUP in Seattle, USA have designed some amazing switches and interfaces which allow disabled children to play Nintendo consoles - you can see photos here of their interfaces for ALL THREE main Nintendo consoles: for use with NES for use with Super NES for use with NINTENDO 64
    Pathways Development Group in Seattle have now received CE Mark certification for their interface for the Nintendo® N64 console. This means that this wonderful invention which allows disabled kids to play the N64 on an equal footing with their able-bodied friends, can now be sold in the United Kingdom and Europe, as well as other areas of the world. UK distributors for the N64 interface are TFH Ltd, in Worcestershire - tel. +44 (0)1299 827820 or e-mail , and if you're in the US or Canada, contact Mike Andrews at PDG (toll free) on 1-877-742-4604 or locally 1-425-742-4674, fax 1-425-745-9279, e-mail See the Surplus Resources page for details of free videos showing these interfaces and switches in action, and for further background information, see Mike Andrews' report in our

    50. WorkSource - Special Needs Populations
    WorkSource,Central washington. Whether through counseling, helping to provide required equipment for special needs or career guidance, we can help you
    http://www.cw1stop.org/special.htm

    Kittitas
    Yakima Toppenish Sunnyside ... Community Transition Dislocated Workers When the business you work for suddenly goes out of business, or your employer down-sizes and lays you off, you might be eligible to receive assistance from WorkSource. We can try to find you another job in a similar field, or maybe we can help get training for you toward a new career. We can help you in similar ways if you have recently been divorced, and you were dependent on your spouse for your support. Let us help you get trained and into a job where you can become self-sufficient. Contact your local WorkSource Center to answer your questions about the Dislocated Worker Program, and how we might be able to help you! Learn more about Dislocated Worker services, and whether you are eligible at go2worksource.com Top of Page Disabled Workers If you qualify, WorkSource has Vocational Rehabilitation Counselors who are trained to help you find the perfect employment opportunities. Whether through counseling, helping to provide required equipment for special needs or career guidance, we can help you find and maintain job satisfaction. You may find these resources useful...

    51. School Choice For Special Ed
    states be allowed to adopt school choice programs for disabled students coupled Under that program, if parents of a special needs child with an
    http://www.cato.org/dailys/07-16-02.html
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    School Choice for Special Ed
    by Marie Gryphon and David Salisbury Marie Gryphon is a policy analyst and David Salisbury is director of the Cato Institute's Center for Educational Freedom . They co-wrote, " Escaping IDEA: Freeing Parents, Teachers and Students Through Deregulation and Choice ," released on July 10. Last week, the President's Commission on Excellence in Special Education released recommendations for the nation's troubled special education system. Proposing that states be allowed to adopt school choice programs for disabled students coupled with extensive continued regulation of both public and private schools the commission got it half right. A Cato Institute policy analysis released right after the commission's report shows that real reform requires massive regulatory relief in addition to parental choice.

    52. A Bad IDEA
    Seven years ago, my younger son was classified as learning disabled. Also, school officials can often exclude special-needs students from high-stakes
    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.

    53. More Choices For Disabled Kids - Policy Review, No. 112
    More Choices For disabled Kids Policy Review, No. 112. And if the special-needs child leaves the school for any reason, the supplemental funding
    http://www.policyreview.org/apr02/andrews_print.html
    Printer Friendly Version
    (Original Version) More Choices For Disabled Kids By Lewis M. Andrews f the opponents of school choice could have their way, the national debate over the use of public money to subsidize private schooling would turn on the subject of special education. With research demonstrating the overall success of school voucher programs in Milwaukee and Cleveland, and with the constitutional issue of public funding of religiously affiliated schools headed for resolution in a seemingly God-tolerant Supreme Court, defenders of the educational status quo have been reduced to fanning fears that government support of greater parental choice would transform public schools into dumping grounds for difficult-to-educate students. Rethinking Schools naacp Seventeenth Annual Report to Congress on the Implementation of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act , over The argument that school choice must inevitably create special education ghettos would appear to have been strengthened by the recent adoption of market-based education reforms in New Zealand. In the late employees with a new Ministry of Education staffed by only people and putting each local school under the control of a community board of trustees. At the same time, the government abolished school zoning, allowing children to transfer freely between schools, even to private schools, at state expense.

    54. Washington Parent Article
    A large selection of styles widths for fitting special needs. The Lab School of washington Tutoring for all ages (5adult) in MD, DC and VA with 11
    http://washingtonparent.com/html/specialneeds/akok_listings.html
    April 2005
    Resources Shoe Train, LTD

    11325 Seven Locks Rd., Cabin John Mall, Potomac, MD, 301-299-9662. Create-A-Story
    Play sessions and art therapy for children of all ages. Sensory integration, art therapy, developmental play activities, story telling and infant stimulation.
    Bethesda, MD, 301-365-7907. Fairfax County Park Authority - Adapted Leisure Services
    One-to-one assistance with recreation and leisure programs for people with physical and/or developmental disabilities.
    www.fairfaxcounty.gov/parks, 12055 Govt. Center Pkwy., Fairfax, VA, 703-324-8565. Imagination Stage's AccessAbility Program
    Theater arts classes, companies and summer camps for children with disabilities and special needs - developmental, cognitive and physical. See ad in All Kinds of Kids for more information.
    www.imaginationstage.org, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, MD, 301-280-1644. John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
    Accessibility of programs and arrangements for accommodations for children and adults with special needs by advance request.
    www.kennedy-center.org/accessibility, 2700 F St., NW, Washington, DC, 202-416-8727.

    55. New Horizons For Learning Online Journal: Fall 2004
    One Response to special needs in the Classroom Utilizing College Students as University of washington Pipeline Program Director explains her outreach
    http://www.newhorizons.org/journal/journal44.htm
    New Horizons for Learning Online Journal
    Vol. X No. 4, Fall 2004
    From the Editor
    Dee Dickinson The Autumn issue of New Horizons for Leaning's online Journal focuses on special needs from a broad perspective. Following, you will find articles on facilitating and improving the learning of students with specific disabilities, Title I students, and those who do not speak English as a first language. You will also learn about schools, districts, and even a whole State that have been especially successful at beginning to bridge the "achievement gap." We include as well articles about meeting the needs of gifted students and older learners. Reports on conferences devoted to the arts as tools for learning and developing the imagination, and articles about learning in different parts of the world add further dimensions to the Journal. On September 16 we will open an online discussion area related to a conference that the IslandWood environmental learning center and New Horizons for Learning co-sponsored this summer. It will be located in the Meeting Spaces area of our website (you may access the link below the opening graphic of this website's home page .) The area will include handouts from the presenters and Nancy Margulies' mindmaps of the presentations. The area is open to all who are interested. As always we welcome your questions and responses to the information we offer. The Winter Journal, to be posted in December, will focus on differentiated instruction and we welcome your suggestions. You are also invited to submit related articles on your work to

    56. Parent Coaching, Disabled Kids And Advocate
    special needs are able to attend the school of their parent s choice, A parent writes Our middle school twins are polar opposites in personality.
    http://adhdnews.com/feb2001.htm
    Disabled Kids, Child Advocate and Parent Coaching
    ADHD News and Information Home ADHD Articles 2001
    "Hey, Mr. President, Don't leave the disabled kids behind!"
    by Philip Matthew Stinson, Sr. Esq.
    www.specialedlaw.net

    The proposal is comprised of a variety of key components, many of which would be implemented during the re-authorization of the ESEA. First, the President proposes to close the achievement gap by accountability for high standards as measured by annual academic assessments in Reading and math, as well as consequences for schools that fail to education disadvantaged schools. Second, the President proposes to improve literacy for creating a new emphasis on Reading in early grades and Early Childhood Reading instruction. Third, the President proposes to expand program flexibility and reduce government bureaucracy by allowing commingling of Title I funds with other federal and state funds, increasing funding for technology grants, reducing duplicative efforts by consolidation of grant programs, and creating a charter option to limit requirements of grants for those state and local educational agencies willing to be subjected to rigorous standards of accountability. Fourth, the President proposes to reward success and sanctioning failure by developing a system of accountability rewards through annual assessment of students in grades 3-8, "No Child Left Behind" rewards for schools that have made the greatest progress in improving the achievement of disadvantaged students, and reduction of federal funds at the discretion of the Secretary of Education for states that fail to meet their performance objectives and demonstrate results in academic achievement.

    57. PORT 2000 March 1996
    The Technology Newsletter for Port washington Educators at Schreiber is comprised of a class for the developmentally disabled, special class students,
    http://www.portnet.k12.ny.us/port2000/news0009.htm
    Port 2000 Newsletter
    Full text of Issue #9
    PORT 2000
    The Technology Newsletter for Port Washington Educators
    March, 1996
    Quotation of the Month: "The best way to have an idea is to have lots of ideas." - Linus Pauling
    DISTRICT NEWS: RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
    There is quite a bit of good news to report since the last edition of Port 2000:
  • The District is seeking candidates for the position of Director of Technology. An advertisement ran in the New York Times in early January and got an extremely good response. A group of parents and teachers will be meeting and interviewing applicants in the coming weeks. It is hoped an appointment can be made this month.
  • An additional computer support position was approved by the Board of Education in January.
  • Carmine Matina, Mark Glass and David Strom (co-chair, Citizens' Adivisory Committee) met in February with the District architect. In the meeting plans were finalized for the bid package for overall infrastructure improvements in the four elementary schools. This package (which the district publishes) is used by various construction companies to produce bids on the actual work. The work will include putting in place electrical and data communications wiring in the classrooms and hallways and connecting up hubs. The plan is to do all four schools this spring and summer.
  • Because of Apple Computer's recent financial problems the District has decided to purchase PCs for use in classrooms.
  • 58. NCPA - Daily Policy Digest - School Choice Helps The Disabled
    Opponents contend that school choice will hurt disabled children. Under the new law, parents of a specialneeds child can receive $6000 to $20000 to
    http://www.ncpa.org/iss/edu/2002/pd072602f.html

    Policy Issues
    NCPA Publications Both Sides Editorial Opinions ... Audio/Visual
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    School Choice Helps The Disabled Daily Policy Digest
    Education Issues / School Choice and Charter Schools
    Friday, July 26, 2002 Opponents contend that school choice will hurt disabled children. However, a recent study finds that just the opposite is true.
    According to a new international study by the Yankee Institute, school choice would greatly benefit disabled children in the United States. In other countries, special education children are thriving far beyond American standards with school choice.
    • In Denmark, where the government's commitment to fund private education dates back to 1899, more than 99 percent of learning-disabled children are educated side-by-side with mainstream children. The number of special school systems in the Netherlands has fallen from 14 to 4 since 1990, when the government began awarding educational stipends to parents of learning-disabled children to use at mainstream schools. In Australia, a 1998 study found that intellectually and physically disabled children who studied in mainstream schools under the country's school choice program were achieving literary and math skills equal to their peers.

    59. Richard Lavoie: Understanding The Learning Disabled Child
    It does not include the developmentally disabled (mentally impaired), What can a parent do to help the special needs child with a learning disorder?
    http://www.growing-up.com/lavoie.html
    Richard Lavoie: Understanding the Learning Disabled Child
    by Linda Proudfoot M T W T his statement, a direct quote from special education expert Richard Lavoie, is more than a concept in a lectureit is the sum and substance of his daily existence. Speaking in San Francisco to a group of 900 parents and teachers, Lavoie had come to illuminate the sometimes mystifying and always frustrating challenge of helping the learning disabled (LD) child. With three Special Education degrees, he speaks with the authority of an expert and the passion of a father with a special needs child. Currently he divides his time between directing a residential school for special needs children in Massachusetts and acting as special education consultant to over 400 school systems in 42 states. E normously popular, Lavoie has appeared before audiences in 49 states, and is booked ahead for the next four years. Blessed with a natural ability to entertain, he uses anecdotes from experiences with his students and family to shed light on what this life-changing disorder can be like. L B W hat we have left are children who typically have average or above average intelligence, but are unable to achieve at their potential. Most of us think of reading disorders, such as dyslexia, but the learning disability can be in one or more of the basic processes involved in understanding or in using language, spoken or written. This can affect the ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell or do math. Some examples are difficulty with visual perception, auditory processing, organizing information, or the ability to revisualize.

    60. Preston | Gates | Ellis LLP :
    special Education Disputes Successful defenses of Bellevue School District in Transportation of special needs Students, Sponsored by the washington
    http://www.prestongates.com/people/profile.asp?id=572

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