Thanks for the great work from all of the educators who attended the Foundations of Special Learning Needs training at UIC last Friday! Check back on the SLN Blog to read the posts from the participants as they apply what they have learned!
Sponsored by the Southern Illinois Professional Development Center - part of the Illinois Community College Board Service Center Network
Monday, May 6, 2019
Monday, April 8, 2019
Preparing Students with ASD for College and Career
As the number of students diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) continues to rise, many students with ASD are now graduating from high school with the goal of entering postsecondary education and the workforce. Unfortunately, research indicates that most graduates with autism will have “a difficult time following high school for almost any outcome you choose – working, continuing school, living independently, socializing and participating in the community, and staying healthy and safe. To complicate matters, many such youth begin their journey into adulthood by stepping off a services cliff” (Roux, et al, 2015, p. 8). Part of this might be understood as resulting from the limited availability of appropriate services in adulthood. But some of the responsibility can be attributed to the limited or, at times, simply inadequate, transition programming provided by schools.
Join ICSPS for a day of exploring resources, discussing strategies and engaging in dialogue around supporting students with ASD as they transition to postsecondary and the workforce. This day long workshop will explore the Autism Training and Technical Assistance (ATTA) project – the resources that have been developed to be used by students with ASD, their family members, secondary and postsecondary educators and staff, employers, and members of the community, to better understand the transition process, the unique barriers faced by individuals with ASD, and to assist in working towards or providing equitable access in the workplace/postsecondary setting.
April 26, 2019
9:30am – 2:30pm
Holiday Inn & Suites
3202 East Empire Street
Bloomington, IL 61704
9:30am – 2:30pm
Holiday Inn & Suites
3202 East Empire Street
Bloomington, IL 61704
Event Flyer:
Tuesday, March 26, 2019
Swipe Right for Digital Literacy: Take Your Adult Learners from Analog to Digital
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Mandy Dwyer shares ideas and provides direction to the IACEA participants! |
Mandy Dwyer, Cathy Kramer and Ramien Manson of Joliet Junior
College provided an interesting IACEA session on integrating technology into tutoring,
into the adult education classroom, and into Workforce Development program. Mandy
and Cathy are Special Learning Needs Specialists as part of the ICCB Instructional Staff Professional Pathways. In this capacity, they serve as expert resources
within their program providing insight into reaching the needs of special
learners through effective instructional strategies. They also serve the entire
state when they share interactive resources that can be immediately used to increase
digital literacy among students, including those with adaptive needs. We
certainly “like” the way they are teaching and reaching by providing inclusive
instructional tools!
Cathy Kramer inspires with her wealth of knowledge and experience! |
Thanks to Cathy and
Mandy for making a difference! To learn more about becoming a Special Learning
Needs Specialist, contact Sarah Goldammer at sgoldam@siue.edu.
Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Teaching to ALL While Meeting the Needs of Special Learners
Monday, March 11, 2019
Creating a Connection Between the Illinois Division of Rehabilitation Services (DRS) and Illinois Adult Education Providers
Many thanks to John Marchioro from the Illinois Division of Rehabilitation Services, for sharing information at the IACEA conference. Great response to questions and a wealth of resources to assist as in Adult Ed to know how to best partner with our Title IV folks!
Tuesday, February 19, 2019
Special Learning Needs Sessions at IACEA
Hope to see you at the 39th Illinois Adult and Continuing Educators'
Association (IACEA) Conference Dream, Create, Inspire
Wednesday, March 6 - Friday, March 8, 2019
Wyndham Springfield City Center
Wyndham Springfield City Center
Visit the IACEA website to register: https://www.iacea.net/
Check out these Special Learning Needs focused sessions:
March 6th
Wed. 9-10:15
Creating a Supportive
AND Challenging Classroom to Engage Learners
How do you design a learning environment that fosters
support and acceptance while challenging students to thrive in the competitive
world of college and employment? Discussion will include group dynamics,
managing classroom behavior, and deescalating aggressive behavior.
Bevan Gibson
Sarah Goldammer
Wed. 10:30-11:45
Building Confidence
with Fractions
In this workshop, we will focus specifically on fractions,
an idea that many students find particularly challenging and anxiety-producing.
Learn how to incorporate spoken and written language, student-created sketches,
real-world context, and hands-on activities into your fraction lessons in order
to boost your students’ abilities and confidence.
Becky DeForest
Wed. 10:30-11:45
Building
Trauma-informed Practices to Increase Student Retention
Trauma-informed practices is becoming the 'new thing' in
education. But where does it come from? What does this have to do with grit or
mindsets? And how do you move from research to implementation? Join this
interactive discussion to explore trauma informed practices and learn how to
implement best practices in your program to increase student performance.
Kathy Olesen-Tracey
Wed. 10:30-11:45
Teaching to ALL While
Meeting the Needs of Special Learners
Do you struggle to meet all the learning needs of the
students in your classroom? In this presentation, participants will be shown
how to take proven effective lessons and modify them to engage ALL learners and
meet special learning needs by involving multiple modalities. Contextualized
work applications and Illinois ABE/ASE Standards will be infused giving the
greatest possible return on lesson investment.
Monica Waller
Wed. 3:30-4:45
A Universally
Designed Classroom: A Space for Everyone
This workshop will offer techniques for utilizing the
concept of Universal Design in your classroom and in your lesson plans.
Participants will leave with the tools needed to create a welcoming and
accommodating class for all students regardless of their learning needs.
Katharine Ward
Daniel Cloward
March 7th
Thurs. 10:30-11:45
Emotional Roadblocks Along
the Student Journey
Discover how students deal with more than just educational
roadblocks, but also emotional roadblocks. During this session, information
regarding emotional roadblocks students face will be discussed and shared.
Learn some common roadblocks your students are facing, and how to help them
steer clear of these roadblocks.
Melissa Koke
Chad Murphy
Thurs. 10:30-11:45
An Overview of The
Illinois Division of Rehabilitation Services (DRS) for the Adult Education
Provider
The Illinois Division of Rehabilitation Services (DRS)
provides solutions for the workforce needs of business customers while
preparing talented, qualified job seekers with disabilities for their chosen
careers. This presentation will provide
adult education partners with an overview of DRS eligibility requirements,
services and referral information. A
question and answer session will also be included.
John Marchioro
Thurs. 2:15-3:30
Learning to Remember:
Teaching Memory Strategies in Adult Education
Focus and memory are essential life and work skills.
Teaching our students to improve their focus and increase their memory capacity
could be the most important topic we teach! Learn what the research on memory
says, how we can use research to inform instruction, and have fun learning to
remember! Classroom ideas and resources will be shared.
Sarah Goldammer
Thurs. 2:15-3:30
Swipe Right for
Digital Literacy: Take Your Adult Learners from Analog to Digital
Integrate technology into your tutoring, adult education
classroom, or Workforce Development program. We will interactively present
resources that you can immediately use to increase digital literacy among your
students, including those with adaptive needs. Surveys, websites, and phone
applications are among the tools you will “Like”.
Mandy Dwyer
Cathy Kramer
Ramien Manson
Thurs. 3:45-5:00
Create a Culture of
Health and Fitness While Hardly Breaking a Sweat
Mountains of research findings laud the positive effects of
exercise on our ability to improve memory and critical thinking abilities.
We'll discuss some simple ways to incorporate activity into your program to
help students stretch their physical and mental fitness to new heights.
Includes accommodations for those with disabilities.
Sean McGahan
Thurs. 3:45-5:00
Learning for All:
Practical Considerations for Inclusivity, Accessibility, and Equity through
Universal Design
In this interactive session, we’ll share a universal design
approach to make your instruction usable for more people. You’ll consider the
impact of the instructional context, technology realities, and compliance
regulations in setting learning goals and developing strategies that allow your
learners multiple means of accessing information and demonstrating knowledge.
Jennifer Maddrell
Jeff Goumas
Monday, January 28, 2019
Tech Ideas from the Field
Thanks to Mandy Dwyer, Literacy Specialist at Joliet Junior College, and newly credentialed Special Learning Needs Specialist, for sharing the following:
I absolutely recommend working with the Disability Services/Center, in order to find creative ways to fund technology to assist students. So many student benefit from read-aloud technology, and have it as an accommodations for their testing, but don't use the technology on a daily basis. Using our D.S. Office, we have enabled Kurzweil/Firefly for our students, which not only reads their texts aloud, but also websites (using the Chrome plugin). It has revolutionized the reading habits of one of our low-vision students.
Smart phones are the optimal resource for technology assistance. Not only are they common among the students, and the apps constantly evolve to meet people's need. Students seem to regard them only as a device to call and text, and the simple act of looking up definitions and using text-to-speech is a brand new world for them. I will definitely spread word of the apps, especially Bigger and Brighter.
I am constantly on the lookout for new ESL/Low GLE reading resources that are interesting. I had heard about California Distance Learning. It seems similar to the News for You online resources, but News for You is a paid resource. California Distance Learning seems more appealing for my community partners.
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