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Antonio, TX |
El Paso Independent School District, Texas
During
this school year, the district focused on two pressing needs: (1)
reducing the number of students in self-contained special education
classrooms, and (2) improving reading outcomes in general and special
education students.
To
address the first need, the director of special education worked
with the Center
for Research on Learning, to implement a model he developed
called the Strategic
Intervention Model (SIM). The model offers new instructional,
organizational, and motivational techniques for teachers and staff.
Its objective is to help general education teachers work with students
with disabilities in a general education setting. SIM includes teaching
devices and routines that are developed and used with the following
goals:
-
meeting the needs of both the group and the individual;
- maintaining
the integrity of the content;
- selecting
the critical features of the content;
- transforming
the content in ways that promote student learning; and
- carrying
out instruction in a partnership with students.
In
order to implement SIM, several administrators went to a training
seminar at the University of Kansas to familiarize themselves with
SIM and how to effectively carry it out in the classroom. To see
how SIM works in practice, these administrators also visited a district
near Houston that was using another version of SIM. They met with
regular and special education teachers, administrators, and the
board of trustees to learn more about implementing the model. When
they got back, they met with and trained special education teachers,
and received highly positive evaluations from these training sessions.
When other teachers learned about SIM, the initiative started to
spread on its own among the district's high schools, with the Office
of Special Services "nudging it along" as well. The Linking
Agent's role in implementing SIM includes providing administrators
with information and research relating to the model, and coordinating
staff development activities to put the model into practice. Starting
in the fall of 2001, the initiative will be expanded to middle schools
and then in elementary schools.
To
improve students' reading skills, EPISD has continued implementing
the Balanced Literacy project, which uses an integrative approach
to teaching reading, combining language and spelling along with
teaching students how to read. The Linking Agent's responsibilities
on this initiative have remained the same: facilitating teacher
trainings, working with a consultant who was hired to assist in
Balanced Literacy's implementation, and keeping principals abreast
of developments involving the project. In addition, the Linking
Agent's activities include coordinating teacher training and staff
development; following up with teachers and staff after these training
sessions; and making sure program assessments are completed and
turned in. The initiative has been endorsed for the entire district,
and is being expanded from K-3 to K-5. It has also scaled up from
9 schools in its first year to 18 in its second, and next academic
year, it will be implemented in even more schools in the district.
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