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Initial Referral Overview
It is important to identify students who are
having difficulties as early as possible in
order to help them succeed to their optimum
potential. Often teachers, who are exposed to
many students with a wide range of ability
levels, are the first to notice that a child’s
behaviors or skills are significantly different
from those of other students his/her age. When
this happens, the teacher will usually discuss
his/her observations with the parents,
counselor, and/or administration to begin the
intervention process. The intervention process
is better known as the Pyramid of Intervention.
Interventions are provided in addition to the
core instruction that the student is already
receiving in his/her regular education
classroom(s). Through the Pyramid of
Intervention, a student can be referred to Tier
III, also known as a Student Support Team (SST).
The SST is a team of members who are actively
involved in the child’s education progress.
The team meets regularly to discuss
concerns and implement interventions specific to
the child’s needs.
Although SST is a regular education procedure –
not a special education process – special
education personnel are sometimes consulted to
suggest modifications and share their expertise
about specific academic and behavioral areas.
State rules and regulations require that
multiple, research-based interventions be
provided to the child through the SST prior to a
referral for a special education evaluation.
In some
cases this can be bypassed when the need is
apparent and justification is submitted. When
problems are identified, students may be
referred for evaluation to determine if they are
eligible for special education services.
If the problem has a medical basis, a physician
may alert the parents to irregularities that
cause problems that might affect educational
performance. A wide range of difficulties from
developmental, physical (such as vision,
hearing, attention, or motor problems),
emotional, or cognitive differences might signal
the need for an evaluation.
If parents suspect that their child may be
having problems at school, they should contact
the child’s teacher or counselor at the school
he/she is attending to explore options to help
the student succeed.
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How to tell if a child may have a physical,
emotional, or mental disability
To help you recognize if a disability might be
present in a child you know, the following
checklist of common early signs has been
compiled. However, it is not a complete list,
nor is it a professional evaluation. It is only
a guide.
Early signs that a child may have a problem
The Child’s Sight
·
Child’s eyelids droop
·
Child frequently complains that eyes hurt
·
The eyelids are red, watery, puffy, and
encrusted
·
There is a crossing of the eyes: one or both
eyes may be affected
·
At age 1, child cannot focus on small objects in
order to pick them up
·
Child frequently rubs the eyes, as though they
itch or hurt
·
Child holds head in awkward or tilted positions
when looking at something
·
Child moves eyes excessively
·
Eye pupils are of uneven size
The Child’s Hearing
·
Child talks very loudly, even shouts during
normal conversations
·
Child speaks very softly, almost in a whisper
·
When called from another room, child does not
respond
·
Child complains that one or both ears ache, or
that a liquid “runs” from the
ears
·
At age 6 months, child does not turn toward the
sounds of voices or noises
·
When there is sound, the child always turns the
same ear in the direction of
the sound
The Child’s Speech
·
At age 1, the child is unable to say such basic
words as “mama” and
“dada”
·
At age 2, cannot give the names of toys or
members of the family
·
At age 3, is unable to repeat simple rhymes or
common television musical
jingles
·
At age 4, speaks in sentence fragments, cannot
say short, complete
sentences
·
At age 5, cannot be understood by people outside
the immediate family,
only those “used to” the child’s speech
habits
The Child at Play
·
At age 1, the child does not respond to a call
by looking directly at an
adult; and cannot figure out simple
problems (finding objects hidden
under (cup)
·
At age 2, cannot identify body parts or match
like objects, does not
recognize self in mirror
·
At age 3, cannot recognize own name or
understand use of familiar objects
·
At age 4, unable to name colors, tell the action
in a picture or count to 2
·
At age 5, cannot make simple comparisons such as
which is prettier or
heavier, count up to 4 or understand
“yesterday”, “today”, or “tomorrow”.
·
At age 6, unable to distinguish left from right,
understand size and weight
relationships, count to 6 or understand
numbers to 10.
The Child in Motion
·
At age 1, the child cannot sit without support,
pull self to standing position,
reach for objects or pick up objects with a
pincer grasp
·
At age 2, is unable to walk alone, kick a large
ball, scribble or build a
tower with 2 or 3 blocks
·
At age 3, cannot walk up or down stairs, pedal a
tricycle, run without
falling, turn the pages of a book, copy circles
or draw a cross-mark
·
At age 4, cannot balance on one foot, jump from
bottom step, catch a
bounced ball, close a fist and wiggle a
thumb or trace a diamond shape
·
At age 5, unable to turn somersaults, pump
his/herself on a swing, fold a
paper triangle from a 4-inch square, print
a few capital letters or cut with
scissors on a straight line
·
At age 6, cannot skip on alternate feet, jump
rope, throw a ball 10 feet
away so it can be caught; print his/her name,
draw a person (including
head, trunk, arms and features) or lace shoes
For additional information, please call the
Special Education Department at 229-482-3966.
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