Collaboration and Partnerships
MTSS
High Incidence Disabilities
UDL
Understanding Behavior
100

Beyond just "instruction," you should conceptualize your role as this—someone who ensures the student’s rights are protected and their voice is heard.

What is an advocate?

100

This tier provides targeted, small-group intervention for roughly 15% of the student population.

What is Tier 2?

100

There are this many total categories generally classified as high incidence disabilities.

What is six?

100

UDL is distinct from "differentiation" because it is designed for all students from the very beginning, rather than being an afterthought for a few. This is known as this type of design. (HINT: It's in the name)

What is Universal design?

100

This assessment is conducted specifically to determine the purpose or reason behind a student's disruptive behavior.

What is a Functional Behavioral Assessment (FBA)?

200

In a collaborative model, this person is considered the "expert" on the student's history, interests, and life outside of school.

Who is the parent (or guardian)?

200

This tier provides the most intensive, individualized support for about 5% of students.

What is Tier 3?

200

This category includes students with ADHD and focuses on physical or mental conditions that limit alertness or vitality.

What is Other Health Impairment (OHI)?

200

Providing a student with a digital textbook, an audio version, and a physical handout is an example of this UDL principle.

What is Representation or (the "What" of learning)?

200

This teaching approach asks us to consider students holistically, acknowledging that their entire lives and stressors follow them into class.

What is Trauma-Informed Teaching?

300

When a special educator provides "Indirect Services," their primary "client" is actually this person, not the student.

Who is the General Education Teacher?

300

This percentage of students should have their needs met through high-quality, universal instruction in Tier 1.

What is 80%?

300

This category is characterized by challenges with social communication and the presence of repetitive behavior patterns.

What is Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)?

300

Giving a student the choice to demonstrate their knowledge through a video, an essay, or a live presentation falls under this principle.

What is Action & Expression (the "How" of learning)?

300

In special education, we conceptualize all behavior as being a form of this.

What is Communication?

400

Limited English proficiency, inflexible work schedules, and previous negative school experiences are all examples of these.

What are Barriers to Parent Involvement?

400

This framework is the academic-focused hierarchy used to match instruction to student needs.

What is RTI (Response to Intervention)?

400

This category describes students who may display internalizing (anxiety/withdrawal) or externalizing (aggression) characteristics.

What is Emotional Behavioral Disorder (EBD)?

400

This principle is focused on sustaining student effort, persistence, and self-regulation to keep them motivated.

What is Engagement (the "Why" of learning)?

400

This is the primary goal of a Functional Behavioral Assessment (FBA): to determine this for a student’s behavior. HINT: (It's in the name).

What is the function (or the "Why")?

500

These are the two primary methods of professional partnership between general and special educators.

What are Direct and Indirect collaboration?

500

This framework is the behavior-focused hierarchy that offers supportive consequences to promote positive student actions.

What is PBIS?

500

This is the most prevalent high-incidence category, impacting areas like reading, math, or written expression.

What is Specific Learning Disability (SLD)?

500

While traditional instruction often views the student as the "problem" to be fixed, UDL views this as the primary barrier to student success. There are TWO correct answers to this question, either one will earn you points.

What is the Curriculum OR the Environment?

500

To conduct an FBA, teachers collect data on these three things: what happened before the behavior, the behavior itself, and what happened immediately after.

What are Antecedents, Behaviors, and Consequences?

M
e
n
u