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Importance of Individual Education Plans for Students with Learning Disabilities
Individual Education Plans (IEP) pay special attention to the needs of the students. But just how important are catered plans? Read this article for a brief explanation of IEPs in the educational realm.
0 commentsThe Art of the Seating Chart
Some tips about creating seating charts from a teacher who believes such charts to be important to classroom management.
0 commentsHelping Kids Succeed and Live Up to Expectations
Children Live Up to What you Believe of Them. Too often teachers, guidance counselors and administrators write students off that are capable of great things. Never dismiss your students, it's your job to inspire, believe and help light the fire of learning in their souls.
2 commentsPreparing for an IEP
There are several things that parents should and should not do when attending an IEP meeting for their child. First and foremost parents need to come prepared, being forearmed with information is in the child’s best interest. Parents should not...
0 commentsHOW TO INVOLVE PUPILS IN OWN LEARNING: For Teachers & Parents Helping Children - SMART IEPs & Self-Monitoring
This is for teachers and parents to help Involve children in their own learning. What a pupil needs, SMART IEPs and self-monitoring; the benefits of pupil-input and setting goals and targets.
6 commentsTeaching Intellectually Disabled Students (Formerly known as MR)
A discussion of what mental retardation is (intellectually disabled), how it is classfified and what teachers can do in their classes to help these students succeed.
3 commentsIs your child being negatively labeled at school?
We are trying to keep my son from being labeled BD (behavior disorder) and have an I.E.P in place. I would strongly recommend this if you feel that your school is not addressing your child's issues because they do not fall under the basic norms for a disability.
2 commentsThe Emotional IEP: Supporting Parents through the Process
Special education teachers wear a series of hats throughout the course of a school year. We are educators, advocates, life coaches, mediators, and often the glue that holds a successful parent-teacher relationship together. These roles are...
4 commentsJob Corps: Career Training for Teens and Young Adults
Job Corps is a great next step after high school. Job Corps provides free vocational training with free room and board included. Find out more about this vocational training program for young adults ages 16 to 24.
0 commentsThe Different Types Of Learning Disabilities
Find out what the different types of learning disabilities are, the symptoms of each one and what you as a parent can do for your child.
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