Education Week - Diplomas Count - Issue 34, 2015 - (Page 8)
Blake Yee, center,
watches his MY VOICE
presentation with his
father, Steven Yee,
and mother, Rolyn
Yee, at the Supported
Training Experiences
Post Secondary
(STEPS) building in
Naperville, Ill., along
with Kate Bruno, far
left, a case manager
and support teacher in
the program. As part
of the program,
youths with disabilities
prepare a multimedia
presentation to
showcase their
post-graduation plans.
After K-12, Students Must Be Self-Advocates
T
he first few years after
high school are a huge
period of change and
growth, when many
students fumble
through the process
of learning to be independent.
For
students with disabilities, who
are now graduating from high school
and entering higher education in
greater numbers than ever before,
the transition can be even more jarring,
and the need to develop selfreliance
more critical.
"Many students with disabilities
... experience educational programs
which stress compliance and teach
them to second-guess their instincts
and defer to others," said Julia Bascom,
the director of programs for the
Washington-based nonprofit Autistic
Self Advocacy Network. "When you
couple that with the bullying our
students face, we tend to find a significant
need for explicit, supportive
instruction in self-advocacy skills."
CHANGING SUPPORTS
To a large degree, students with
disabilities must do the same college-
and career-planning that any
high school student would undertake:
understanding what courses
are needed to qualify for a college or
degree program, working through
financial aid, and so on.
But there's also a lot that most students
on track to college don't have
to think about. For example, accommodations
and services for students
with disabilities after high school
are no longer provided through the
individualized education programs
required under the federal Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act.
They are provided instead through
the legal framework of two other
federal laws, the Americans with
Disabilities Act and Section 504 of
the Rehabilitation Act, which do not
require the same level of supports.
"We send them off to college where
8
EDUCATION WEEK s JUNE 4, 2015
TEACHING ADVOCACY
In college, students are expected
to manage their own paperwork
and time. While a student's high
school iep might include extra time
for assignments, a student in college
would be expected to just take
fewer classes per semester. And all
students are expected to seek out
support services on their own.
Under federal law, schools must
draft a transition plan with a student
with disabilities, no later
than age 16, focused on his or her
strengths, preferences, and interests.
While self-advocacy is supposed to
be part of that planning, there is no
specific reporting on it. A 2004 federal
longitudinal study found only
3 percent of students with disabilities
in general education classrooms
were specifically trained to speak
and plan for themselves.
A forthcoming study in the journal
Career Development and Transition
for Exceptional Individuals
found transition programs stressing
self-determination are more
strongly associated with students
with disabilities showing better
higher education, employment, and
independent-living outcomes. Specifically,
those programs included
goal setting, such as students establishing
their own iep targets, and
autonomy, such as students making
their own post-high-school plans and
taking ownership for learning while
everything they are used to in high
school-repetition, structure, assignments
broken down-is gone,
and we fail to provide them with
an understanding of themselves
as learners and how to work using
their strengths and around their
areas of weakness," said Elizabeth
C. Hamblet, a learning specialist at
Columbia University and the author
of the 2011 book Seven Steps
for Success: High School to College
Transition Strategies for Students
with Disabilities.
they were in school, according to the
study's authors, Valerie L. Mazzotti
and Dawn A. Rowe, both special
education assistant research professors
at the National Post-School
Outcomes Center at the University
of Oregon, in Eugene. But, Ms. Mazzotti
warned, "We don't have any
data on where these skills are being
taught or how often."
A separate report in the federal
longitudinal study found that while
nearly seven in 10 students with
disabilities said they understood
what services they would need to
deal with their disability, less than a
third said they often gave their opinions
on services to professionals they
interacted with.
Sometimes, school supports can
be "more harmful than helpful" in
a student's transition to the adult
world, said Daniel Kish, the founder
and president of the Long Beach,
Calif.-based nonprofit World Access
for the Blind, which teaches blind
children self-advocacy and mobility
skills. When blind students, or
other students with disabilities, are
restricted in physical education or
extracurricular activities because of
concerns for their physical or emotional
safety, Mr. Kish said, it does
more than make a student's college
résumé less competitive.
"This has devastating consequences
to social development,
which, of course, affects career
readiness. ... [Students] are guided
around everywhere with the idea
that this is safer and more efficient,
but all this does is cause all capacity
for freedom of movement to atrophy."
"The
biggest problem here," Mr.
Kish added, "is [when] extra time
and modifications are being allotted
liberally without regard to the
fact that the real world won't make
such allowances."
When possible, Ms. Hamblet recommends
that schools begin to taper
off accommodations that would not
be available in college or work for
11th and 12th graders. "Anything
that involves adults doing things for
students are things that need to be
closely examined," she said.
FINDING A VOICE
Self-advocacy training should go
beyond simply teaching students to
replace old supports with new ones
and instead help them start to find
their own voices.
A former high school special education
teacher, Toni R. Van Laarhoven,
said often students in iep
meetings with parents and teachers
"just sit silently, or people would ask
them yes-or-no questions."
In response, Ms. Van Laarhoven,
an associate professor of special and
early education at Northern Illinois
University in DeKalb, launched
Multimedia for Youth to Voice Outcomes
Individually Created for Empowerment,
or my voice.
Preservice special education teachers
work with high school students
with disabilities planning for life
after high school. Together, each pair
discusses the student's interests,
strengths, and weaknesses. The student
also learns PowerPoint, video
editing, and other skills needed to
put together a multimedia presentation
on his or her postgraduation
plans.
At the end of the program, students
give presentations to their iep teams,
including parents. At one meeting,
Ms. Van Laarhoven recalled, "The
young man's parents kind of had in
their minds that the student would
live in a group home and work in a
structured environment, but the kid
said, 'No, I want to go to college and
live with some friends,' " she said.
"The presentation was life-changing
for him." s
Scan this tag with your smartphone
for a link to Ms. Hamblet's
article,"Nine Strategies
to Improve College Transition
Planning for Students With Disabilities."
www.edweek.org/links
By Sarah A. Sparks
Alyssa Schukar for Education Week
http://www.edweek.org/links
Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of Education Week - Diplomas Count - Issue 34, 2015
Education Week - Diplomas Count - Issue 34, 2015
Inside
After Special Ed., Path Is Less Certain
DATA OVERVIEW: Students with Disabilities In School and Work
BY THE NUMBERS: Hearing Impairment
Md. Senior Opts For University Geared To Students With Hearing Impairments
In College, Students Face Choice: Seek Help or Go It Alone?
BY THE NUMBERS: Emotional Disturbance
At Lab School, Pennsylvania Student Prepares for Career In Culinary Arts
After K-12, Students Must Be Self-Advocates
BY THE NUMBERS: Specific Learning Disability
On Road to College, Georgia Student Learns To Speak for Herself
For Job-Oriented Students, Work Experience Is Critical
Discipline Policies Push Students Off College-and-Career Path
BY THE NUMBERS: Autism
Budding Politician Sets Sights on College
State Diploma Requirements Vary
Common Core: Will Bar Rise For Students With Disabilities?
BY THE NUMBERS: Intellectual Disability
In Virginia, Jobs Enable Twin Brothers To ‘Walk Taller’ After High School
Graduation Rates Reach New Highs, But Gaps Remain
TABLE: Graduation Rate Tops 80 Percent
State-by-State Data
Education Week - Diplomas Count - Issue 34, 2015
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