smart transition planning for students

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SMART Transition Planning for Students Tracy Elger, CESA 2 Pam Jenson, TIG

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SMART Transition Planning for Students. Tracy Elger , CESA 2 Pam Jenson, TIG. Agenda. What is a Transition Plan The SMART Process Wisconsin Data on Transition Steps of the PTP for SMART Planning Data to Determine College and Career Readiness. Transition Plans. Grounded in the IEP - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: SMART Transition Planning for Students

SMART Transition Planning for Students

Tracy Elger, CESA 2Pam Jenson, TIG

Page 2: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Agenda What is a Transition Plan The SMART Process Wisconsin Data on Transition Steps of the PTP for SMART Planning Data to Determine College and Career

Readiness

Page 3: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Transition Plans Grounded in the IEP

In the past…I-8…Transition Plan within the IEP

PTP Present…Postsecondary Transition Plan…in

place of the I-8…Live within the IEP

PTP=Transition Plan Are your student’s transition plans SMART?

Page 4: SMART Transition Planning for Students

SMART Process S=Strategic and Specific-Transition Assessment M=Measurable-Measurable Post School Goals A=Attainable-Transition Services/Course of

study R=Results Based-Monitoring Progress of

Transition T=Timebound-Attainable at each Individual

Student’s Graduation

Page 5: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Why Do We Need a SMART Process for Transition Planning Students with Disabilities Graduation Rates

Students with Disabilities in the Workforce

Students with Disabilities in Higher Education

Students with Disabilities in Independent Living

Page 6: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Dropout Rates

Page 7: SMART Transition Planning for Students

WISEDASH

WISEDASH-DEWS

Page 8: SMART Transition Planning for Students

How Could You Use DEWS with SwD? Print out the student profile Examine the DEWS Outcome Score; check to

see if any of the sub scores are in the Moderate to High level

Supplement with more recent, local data Be sure that the DEWS Outcome Data is current Record information in the Present Levels section

of the IEP Create Transition Plan to address warning signs

Page 9: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Steps of the PTP for SMART Planning Inviting/engaging the student Providing an age appropriate transition

assessment Writing Measurable Post Secondary Goals

Education/Training Employment-through WI Career Clusters/Pathways Independent Living

Annual Goals

Page 10: SMART Transition Planning for Students

The Numbers –Data from the 2013 Survey Although the numbers on the previous slide

look good, the reality still is… 48% Students are competitively employed 42% Students are attending higher education 25% Students are living independently

The need…Every Student a Graduate: College and Career Ready!

Page 11: SMART Transition Planning for Students

The Pressure We must educate the whole child We must attend the child’s daily needs We must prepare the child for their possible

future We must meet the needs of all children We must meet the needs of multiple

stakeholders with differing expectations We must be accountable

The Handbook for SMART School Teams

Page 12: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Steps of the PTP for SMART Planning cont. Designing well planned Transition

Activities/Services Determining a Course of study and 4 year

plan Including outside agencies Giving students their rights once they are age

of majority

Page 13: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Selecting your SMART Transition Team Principal Special Education Director Special Education Teachers General Education Teacher Guidance Counselor/School Psych Para Professional (if appropriate) Parents Student

Page 14: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Transition Assessments A Transition Assessment is needed to complete a

PTP

Quality Assessments are needed for individualized success

Choosing the right assessment to match your students needs is key.

Page 15: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Transition Goals Goals in the IEP must be linked to the

student’s transition needs

Goals must be SMART to allow the student to grow in college and career readiness

Page 16: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Course of Study/4 Year Plan When is a 4 year plan written? How does a 4 year plan translate to a course

of study in the PTP? How do you link the course of study to the

student’s transition goal? How do you monitor a students course of

study?

Page 17: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Data to Determine College and Career Readiness What data should we be looking at?

Where do special education teachers get the data?

Other Ideas?

Page 18: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Predictors of Post School Success Career Awareness Occupational Courses Vocational Education Work Study Paid Employment/Work Experience Test Preparation/Accommodations Inclusion in General Education Program of Study

Page 19: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Predictors of Post School Success Self Advocacy/Self Determination Independent Living Skills Social Skills Community Experiences Family Engagement Student Support Interagency Collaboration Transition Programming

Page 20: SMART Transition Planning for Students

How Can Your School Become a SMART Transition School Make it a priority that every student is college

and career ready. Understand transition and it’s purpose. It is

not the goal for every student just to graduate, but to prepare them for life after high school.

Page 21: SMART Transition Planning for Students

Questions