A specific learning disability is a
What is a high-incidence disability?
All students go through this
What is a transition?
A type of behavior management tool that the whole school uses.
What is a school-wide positive behavioral intervention and supports (SWBIS)?
Teachers differentiate these
The content, the process, the product, the affect, and the learning environment.
This assessment is used to collect data to support learning.
What is a formative assessment?
Difficulties in identifying letters and their sounds, reading rate, listening, vocabulary, and reading comprehension.
What is dyslexia?
A four-step model that includes an ecological assessment, intervention and preparation, generalization to the new setting, and evaluation in the new environment.
What is a transenvironmental programming?
Measures student behavior, determines why, where, and when a student uses these behaviors, identifies the variables that appear to lead and maintain the behaviors, plans for appropriate interventions.
At the end of instructional units, they allow you to differentiate your assessments to meet the strengths and challenges of individual students.
What are tiered assessments?
This assessment is used to collect data to document student learning.
What is a summative assessment?
A disorder in one or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or using spoken or written language that may appear as an impaired ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do mathematical calculations.
What is a specific learning disability?
In this step, students must be explicitly taught the hidden curriculum.
What is intervention and preparation?
This analysis is used to collect data to identify the possible antecedents and consequences associated with the student's behavior.
What is an A-B-C Analysis?
This model is utilized by many schools to incorporate English language instruction into content instruction.
What is the SIOP model?
Variations in testing administration, environment, equipment, technology, and procedures.
What are testing accommodations?
A communication disorder, such as stuttering, impaired articulation, a language impairment, or a voice impairment, that adversely affects educational performance.
What is a speech and language impairment?
Students must have this when transitioning from school to adulthood.
What is an individualized transition plan?
This kind of praise should be specific to what the student is doing.
What is positive praise?
The three methods of note taking.
What is the chart, timeline, and stepwise methods?
Observations are examples of this kind of assessment.
What are real-time assessments?
Orthopedic impairments, other health impairments, cerebral palsy, spina bifida, multiple disabilities, Tourette Syndrome, and Autism Spectrum Disorder are all examples of
What are low-incidence disabilities?
A program that offers students academic and support services to help them learn English and academic content, adjust to the new culture, and make the transition to and succeed in inclusive classrooms and society.
What is a new-comer program?
An action is taken or a stimulus is given after a behavior occurs. The action or stimulus increases the rate of the behavior or makes it more likely that the behavior will occur again.
What is positive reinforcement?
Students work collaboratively with their peers to achieve a shared academic goal.
What is cooperative learning?
Observational & Sociometric Techniques and Self-Concept & Attitudinal Measures help teachers measure this.
What is the social and behavioral performance of students?