Grand Canyon University Language Disabilities Case Study
Description
Age: 10
Stephanie is a fifth grade student who is intellectually disabled and also has a severe language disorder. She is 10-years-old and spends a great portion of her day in self-contained settings. She receives speech therapy from a speech pathologist for a minimum of 30 minutes, four days a week. The rest of the time her language needs are supported by the special education teacher. She does attend a general education fifth grade classroom daily for 60 minutes for English language arts instruction, per her parentænbsp;request. An instructional assistant accompanies her to class.
Stephanieænbsp;oral expression skills are in the below average range. She struggles with oral expression speech, expressive language, and meanings of words. Her speech is limited and she usually has poor decoding and reading comprehension skills. Her reading level is at a low first grade level, reading simple stories with a Lexile level of 275-400. Her favorite book is If You Give a Mouse a Cookie by Laura Numeroff. Stephanie writes very little and relies on the Picture Exchange System as her primary form of communication.
Stephanie attends the fifth grade English language arts class for exposure to more appropriate grade level content and socialization. She requires frequent breaks and one-on-one support from an assistant when participating in the general education setting. The special education teacher and assistant work with the general education teacher and follow the modified curriculum from the state department of education.
For standardized grade-level testing, Stephanie participates in the yearly Alternate Assessment. The assessment is administered orally by the teacher and a proctor is present. The assessment is multiple choice and the administrator can accept eye gazing, finger pointing, and verbal responses to answer questions. The assessment is not timed and the teacher can apply the 10 response rule: If the student does not respond after 10 questions, the teacher can end the assessment.
Assignment:
Use the LA Mini-Unit Template®bsp;to complete this assignment.
Part 1: Student Goal
Write a measurable reading comprehension goal for Stephanieænbsp;IEP. Within the goal, incorporate an alternative and augmentative communication system to support her communication and learning.
Part 2: Mini-Unit
Compose a mini-unit of three ELA lesson plans for the general education classroom that incorporates your ELA standards for teaching reading comprehension to fifth graders.
For each lesson plan include differentiated activities and assessments for Stephanie that use the AAC system identified in Part 1 to allow her to access the curriculum and address her measurable IEP goal.
Part 3: Rationale
Provide a 250-500 word rationale that explains how your mini-unit instructional choices are developmentally appropriate for teaching the content standards, and how the differentiated activities and assessment will allow Stephanie to meet her goal and fully access the curriculum. Address how your accommodations and differentiation create a supportive learning environment that encourages self-advocacy, increases independence, and emphasizes safe and ethical use of information and technology for Stephanie.
Unformatted Attachment Preview
Part 1: Student Goal
Part 2: Mini Unit
Day 1
Day 2
A. Lesson Title,
Objectives, and
Brief Summary
B. National/State
Learning
Standards
C. Vocabulary and
Academic
Language
2019 Grand Canyon University. All Rights Reserved.
Day 3
D. Materials and
Resources
E. Instructional
Strategy/Strategies
F. Summary of
Instruction and
Activities for the
Lesson
G. Lesson
Differentiation
for Stephanie
Using AAC
H. Pre- and PostAssessments
I. Assessment
Accommodation
for Stephanie
Using AAC
Part 3: Rationale
References
2019 Grand Canyon University. All Rights Reserved.
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