About Test Taking Skills For Elementary Students
Best Answers
How should I study for CPT test that is for college? I've been here about 7months. I don't know about English well.
I took a CPT( college placement test) twice and I passed math part, but I don't pass English part that contains Reading comprehension and Sentence skills. I just got one punctuation practical book from my esl teacher, but I can't still catch anything about reading. When I take the test, I don't know many of words. I think my problem is word knowledge, don't I? So, should I study memorizing words or reading a book?
If reading a book is better to me, what book is more better? I've read word smart junior when I studied for asvab test. Is elementary student's book is better to me?
I need some suggestions.
Thank you.
Andrew D replied: "Go over basic math again and some algebra. Don't score low on the math or it will stall your progress through college. You are going to do what you are going to do on english parts. If you know how to read, comprehend and spell it will be fine. There are less english classes you need for graduation with most majors than there is math."
What do you think of the following article? EXTRA HELP
When Special Education
Goes Too Easy on Students
Parents Say Schools
Game System, Let Kids
Graduate Without Skills
By JOHN HECHINGER and DANIEL GOLDEN
August 21, 2007; Page A1
GREENPORT, N.Y. -- On June 25, 2006, Michael Bredemeyer threw his tasseled cap in the air and cheered after getting his high school diploma. Two days later, his parents mailed the diploma back.
[More Data on Mainstreaming]
* * *
Plus, read more about the challenges of integrating special-needs students, at WSJ.com/Mainstreaming.
Michael, now 19 years old, has learning disabilities and finished high school at a seventh-grade reading level, despite scoring above average on IQ tests. The Bredemeyers say he passed some classes because teachers inflated his grades and accepted poor work. By awarding him a meaningless diploma, they say, school officials avoided paying for ongoing instruction.
"I felt proud because he had worked so hard," says Michael's mother, Beverly, her voice breaking. "You don't want to take that away from him. But you knew it wasn't real. What's he going to do in the future? Will he be able to go to college and get a job?"
The Bredemeyers represent a new voice in special education: parents disappointed not because their children are failing, but because they're passing without learning. These families complain that schools give their children an easy academic ride through regular-education classes, undermining a new era of higher expectations for the 14% of U.S. students who are in special education.
Years ago, schools assumed that students with disabilities would lag behind their non-disabled peers. They often were taught in separate buildings and left out of standardized testing. But a combination of two federal laws, adopted a quarter-century apart, have made it national policy to hold almost all children with disabilities to the same academic standards as other students.
The 1975 statute now known as the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act promoted putting special-education students in mainstream classrooms. The 2001 No Child Left Behind Act said schools would be punished if disabled children don't pass the same state tests as other students. It also requires states to set standards for high-school graduation rates and meet them for all students, including those with disabilities.
By some measures, the extra attention is paying off. Test scores and classroom grades of disabled students are rising, and their high-school graduation rate increased to 54% in 2004 from 42% in 1996.
But critics say some of the gains have come because schools have learned to game the system. For instance, federal rules allow states to make "reasonable accommodations" to help disabled students pass tests and graduate, such as allowing extra time on exams. Some schools, say critics, are giving students too much help, for instance by guiding students to the right answers on multiple-choice tests.
MAKING THE GRADE
• The Issue: Some parents of students with learning disabilities say their children are graduating too easily.
• The Background: Federal laws raised school standards, but left loopholes. Increasingly, special-education students get special help to pass tests.
• The Problem: If schools game the system, those students move on without the skills they need.
From 2000 to 2005, special-education fourth graders showed more improvement in reading and math than the general population on an important benchmark test, the National Assessment of Educational Progress. But accommodations also increased. In 2005, 70% of fourth-grade special education students received some sort of accommodation while taking the math portion, up from 44% five years earlier. In reading, 63% used accommodations in 2005, up from 29% in 2000.
On tests used to measure compliance with No Child Left Behind, more states are permitting students with disabilities to use calculators on arithmetic tests or have reading-comprehension tests be read aloud. Massachusetts education commissioner David Driscoll warned school administrators in February that an alarming number of special education students -- a quarter or half in some cases -- were receiving such accommodations on state exams. With unclear guidelines, "People start driving trucks through loopholes," he said in an interview.
Some school districts have an informal policy against failing students with disabilities even if they miss many classes or aren't learning. "I can go into any school we represent and have somebody tell me we have to pass special education students" to avoid being blamed for not providing the right services if students fail, says Janet Horton, a Texas special-education attorney. Federal law says special-education students should receive a "free appropriate public education," but it doesn't prohibit failing them.
Mardys Leeper and Carol Merrill, former teachers at West Philadelphia High School in Pennsylvania, say a special-education administrator there ordered them to pass special-education students. Ms. Leeper says she made concessions for students with disabilities, such as letting them write shorter essays or copy paragraphs she wrote onto a word processor rather than composing their own. But when those students didn't make an effort, or skipped class, both teachers say they sometimes sought to fail them -- only to have the administrator insist on passing grades. The reason they were given: Students had met the goals of their federally mandated individual education plans, IEPs, spelling out goals and services for each special-education student.
"Students who weren't even participating, even trying, we couldn't fail them," says Ms. Merrill, an English teacher who retired this year. Even if they couldn't read, "I had to give them a 'D.'"
The administrator couldn't be reached for comment. Brenda Taylor, head of special education for the Philadelphia school district, called the matter a "breakdown in communication." The district has no written policy against failing special-education students, she says. But rather than being "punitive" if a student performs poorly or cuts class, she says, the district prefers to revise a student's IEP. "We're not in the business of failing students," Ms. Taylor says.
Only 19 states require all students to earn the same kind of diploma, according to a recent University of Minnesota survey. Some of those states let special-education students amass fewer course credits to earn the degree, the survey found. Other states give substitute certificates, in some cases called IEP diplomas, to special-education students who don't qualify for standard diplomas.
Many special-education parents are happy to see their children advance through school and graduate. Reggie Felton, director of federal policy for the National School Boards Association, says special-education students learn more in regular classes even if they're given a break on assignments or grading. The federal government recently decided to triple the percentage of students allowed to take easier tests, to 3% from 1%. Some legislators have proposed exempting more students.
But the rebellion against too-easy passing is growing, says Pam Wright, who with her husband has co-authored books on special education issues and operates a Virginia-based information clearinghouse for special-education parents. She estimates she now receives more than 1,000 email messages a year from parents lamenting that their children with disabilities take mainstream courses but aren't being taught as much as their classmates. Dozens of parents have contended in recent administrative appeals that their children did not deserve the diplomas they received, she says.
The family of Alba Somoza, who has cerebral palsy and speaks only with the help of a computer, filed one such case. Alba drew national attention in the 1990s when her family successfully pushed to include the then-third grader in a regular classroom. Then-President Bill Clinton backed her cause, and Alba, now 23, graduated with honors from a New York City high school in 2002.
Last year, Alba and her family filed an administrative case claiming her education was a sham. A school report prepared weeks before she graduated showed she had language and math skills at an elementary school level, court records show. "You cannot shunt children through -- you cannot scam them through the system," says Alba's mother, Mary.
[Michael Bredemeyer]
Since shortly after she graduated, New York has been paying for a special program for Alba that costs $400,000 a year -- including a full-time teacher, an aide, transportation and extensive technology. The city says it is doing so out of compassion, not legal obligation. The family is seeking to continue the public funding another year to help Alba receive enough education to work as a museum docent.
The Somozas lost the administrative case, but a judge in U.S. District Court in Manhattan ruled in the family's favor earlier this year and ordered another hearing. Rather than develop a program that would help Alba reach her academic goals, teachers lowered the curriculum's "level of difficulty" and removed "large and meaningful portions of its substantive content," the judge said. One teacher testified that he did most of the work on Alba's final project in 2002. New York officials say the school properly adapted the curriculum for a severely disabled student.
In northern California, Jennifer McGowan, an 18-year-old who is deaf in one ear and suffers from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and learning disabilities, was supposed to graduate from Vacaville Unified School District in June. She didn't get her diploma -- because her family won a court injunction to stop it.
In an interview, Jennifer said she often received A or B grades for poorly completed work or, at times, when she didn't do assignments at all or show up for class. Achievement tests she took in January 2005 showed that she had the math and reading skills of an elementary-school student, according to her administrative complaint.
The school district denies her grades were inflated and said she showed her proficiency by passing a high-school exit exam. John Aycock, Vacaville's superintendent, said teachers did "a great job working with Jennifer." Jennifer says she failed the exit exam several times despite intensive preparation. "They just wanted to pass me and let me fly by," she says. The school system says it's not unusual to make several attempts to pass.
At the Mercer Island school district in Washington state, the family of a girl with severe learning disabilities complains that, instead of the intense instruction she needed to master reading and math in eighth and ninth grades, teachers showered her with accommodations: a peer note-taker, a peer to read materials to her, oral exams, reduced assignments and a calculator on math tests.
At an administrative hearing, the family -- whose names are not disclosed in the court papers -- sought to force the school system to pay for her private schooling. Noting her strong A and B grades, the district successfully argued that accommodations were helping her learn. In U.S. District Court in Seattle, a judge hearing an appeal of the case disagreed last year, saying the system improperly relied on accommodations rather than instruction, and has returned the case to a hearing officer to determine financial relief for the family.
Boxes of school correspondence and Michael Bredemeyer's old tests and assignments line the hallways of his family's weather-beaten saltbox house in Orient, N.Y., on Long Island's North Fork. Michael's parents are demanding public funding for more services until age 21, to which students are entitled unless they graduate, so he can improve his academic skills for college.
John Bredemeyer, a county public-health inspector, and his wife, Beverly, had high hopes for Michael, who has a strong work ethic and a knack for repairing machines. But once he entered public middle school in nearby Greenport, his parents worried that teachers were letting him skate through classes and tests.
Michael, who has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and learning disabilities including dyslexia, says in some classes he "definitely earned" a passing grade, but others were "borderline." He took regular classes except for one period a day. "A little more one-on-one" instruction would have helped, he says.
On state achievement exams, Michael's IEP permitted him extra time, simplified instructions and guidance from a teacher to slow him down if he rushed through answers. But when he completed the eighth-grade math test, his special-education teacher also took him to the resource room and directed him to redo problems he had answered incorrectly. According to a memo from Greenport Superintendent Charles Kozora, the teacher "exceeded the intent" of Michael's accommodations, boosting his score. The state investigated and invalidated Michael's test.
[Revolt]
Mr. Kozora said the school system had only two cases of testing irregularities in six years, few conflicts with parents over special education and "many successes" among students with disabilities. The district says achievement, and not cost, dictates its decisions on graduating students.
When Michael was a junior at Greenport High, his chemistry teacher passed him with the minimum grade of 65, even though he says he spent much of the class doodling and playing solitaire on his laptop. Checking his assignments and tests, his parents couldn't understand how he could be passing.
In a letter, the school principal acknowledged that the final grade was a "miscalculation" and should have been 56.6, or an F. The school offered to let him make up his lost credits by volunteering in the town library. When his parents balked, he was instead placed in courses in sociology and psychology. On one psychology pop quiz, five of Michael's seven answers were marked wrong, but a failing grade was crossed out on the paper and a passing score of 65 was substituted. The school district declined comment.
For a senior English assignment, he received an A for one untitled paragraph. "I believe competition today has changed dramatically," he wrote. "Back in the day, sports was some of the only sports that had competition. Today, everyone wants to compete and only be successful. School work, school sports, major league sports, all involve high amounts of success and competition. Competition today has become very extreme." His English teacher, Michael Connolly, said he didn't remember the assignment and had no comment on the grade.
On standardized tests, Michael had mixed results: On the SATs, which have a 200 to 800 scale, Michael received 330 and then 370 in two tries on the reading test, in the bottom 10% of all students nationally. On math, he scored 460 both times. He failed two state exams and passed five others. His school grades put him in the bottom one-third of his class.
A month before graduation, the Bredemeyers debated whether he should accept the degree. "I wanted to have it," Michael says. "Get it and forget it."
On graduation day, a school band played "Pomp and Circumstance." Michael's parents, his sister, his grandmother, aunts and uncles watched as he walked up to the podium and a school official handed him a purple diploma case with his name etched in gold letters.
Michael says he knew his parents might not let him keep it. "I had a feeling they'd do something like that," he said, shrugging. "I'll eventually get it back, one of these days, months, years." This summer, Michael has been mowing lawns and picking up trash at a state park for $9 an hour. This fall, he plans to enter his second year at Suffolk County Community College, which does not require a high-school diploma. Last semester at Suffolk, he received a D-plus in freshman composition, D's in statistics and Western Civilization and an F in the history of rock 'n' roll.
Write to John Hechinger at and Daniel Golden at
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butterflyhouser replied: "I understand parents fustration. but i think problem is grouping allldisabled children as one, disabilities like children vary. two examples my sister has dislexia she just graduated nursing school, exceptionly bright, my 4 yr old had stroke at 2 months and is serverly MR she started school last year according to texas stupid laws they both would just be passed on. Some students need extra help Some need compassion disbilites vary to much for blanket politcy either way"
jdeekdee replied: "YES!! THis is all TRUE!! YOu can go to message boards, groups, ect all over the internet for special needs kids parents, and find this all over.
Special ed is CORRUPT all over the USA.
Been there done that WAY TOO LONG
The parents of special ed kids THINK their child is learning properly, but if they really research they will find the opposite. It's not hard to figure it out. Schools do this because there is no accountability, no one to enforce the schools to follow the special ed laws and teach the kids properly.
All these things are done with the approval of state dept of education for each state, they are also corrupt.
This is happening not only to special ed kids, but ALL kids because of the 'no child left behind act' NCLB.
This federal law mandates for schools to give tests to ALL public school children, to see how well the SCHOOL is doing and NOT the child! And the schools get more money based on the kids test scores.
BUT, schools tell the kids lies, say they will FAIL if they dont' pass these tests, ALL they teach in schools is what is going to be on these tests. The kids are VERY stressed out, the schools put SO MUCH PRESSURE on the kids to pass these tests. It is sickening and an outrage!
You ask ANY public school teacher. They will tell you the same. But the teachers have their hands tied. Lots of them HATE this, but they have no choice. They can't TEACH anymore, they have to spoon feed kids the info to memorize for the tests so the school can GET MORE MONEY
The teachers treat the kids like ROBOTS and feed them information they are to memorize so they will pass these tests so the school will get MORE MONEY!!
AND, some schools 'fix' the kids tests so they will PASS so the school will get MORE MONEY.
Some schools will not count the lowest scores to the gov't, so the school can get MORE MONEY. This was on front page of yahoo news, it happened in GA.
I have read LOTS of studies, reports, news articles, etc that this is coming out of the woodwork all over the USA. Dont' surprise me a bit.
The curiculum in schools is dummied down, so the work is too easy for the kids, so they will pass the tests so the school will GET MORE MONEY!!
I thank GOD for homeschool!! Schools are not about helping the children to learn. They are about doing all the corrupt things they can to get more money!!
Some kids I have read about in news reports graduate as valedictorian, go on to college and have to drop out in a very short time because the college work was TOO HARD.
Schools make their work TOO EASY so the kids will pass the NCLB tests so the schools can get MORE MONEY"
Hope replied: "A special ed. child has a team to come up with an IEP, and the parents should have been part of that team and did something long before the child was receiving a diploma."
janetrmi replied: "I saw this with my own eyes when I was a substitue teacher for a class of deaf students in a hearing school. One deaf student came up to me very upset, because she found out that she was not getting a real high school diploma. All she was getting was a certificate for attending this high school.
Parents are failing to be their children's advocate. They mistakenly believe that the schools will take care of their disabled kids. The schools don't have the means and the staff to spend extra time with these kids. They need to develop an IEP and make sure the schools follow the IEP and also make sure themselves that their disabled child is on target with their education.
I am a child of the 60's. As a deaf child, there were no such thing as special education classes etc. My parents were told to send me to a deaf school, which my mother refused to do. She helped form a group of parents that advocated for their deaf kids and petitioned the General Assembly to pass laws allowing disabled children to be put into the public school system. What everyone failed to realize was that not every disabled child can function or learn in a public school setting. As a result of these laws, a majority of schools that were geared to children with disabilities have closed down.
As I said before, it is up to the parents to be their children's advocates. The public school system is ill equipped to educate disabled children."
kel m replied: "First off let me say that I am a special needs student. I have an IEP: Individualized Education Plan I see all the other special needs student on a daily basis. After reading this article I do agree that many students with IEP don’t participate in class and then skate through the class with a D. what was published in the article is true, many are give reduced choices on multiple choice test, instead of 4 choices they get 2 or 3. How ever the article seemed to focus all of the blame on the schools, and say that the parents were innocent and wanted their children challenged.
This is a BOLD face fabrication! I have had an IEP since I was in the 3rd grade, and I am about to graduate High school and let me tell you 99% of parents only want there kids to get that diploma. They don’t care if their child has skills, or if the reason that they kid is failing is because the kid never turns things in on time, back talks the teachers when they bother to stay awake or don’t even show up at all. I plan on being a Special needs teacher, so I have seen some of the crap that special needs teachers have to take. when report cards are sent out and little Johnny or Suzy have FAILED some classes, they don’t question the student, no they call little Johnny or Suzy's special needs teacher and chew them out because the teacher didn't give them a D, they don't care that the kid was sleeping during a test or refused to do homework. All they want is for their kid to pass; they don’t really care outside of that.
Yes the article pegged the school system right, it is very flawed but that isn't the only problem. It parents would instill a work ethic into their children this wouldn't be such a big deal."
Question for Elementary School Teachers? 1. What type of degree in needed to become a teacher (grades k-8)? A Bachelor's or Mater's degree?
I plan to major in elementary education
In my state (Illinois) one must
a) pass the IBST test (Illinois basic skills test for education) in order to be allowed to major in this subject
b) complete 80% of courses
c) then pass and area of concentration test before being allowed to do field work (student teaching)
d)complete and pass student teaching with a "B" average or higher
e) complete portfolio and prepare for the exit program which involves taking the test to become state certified
Are these steps and requirements similar to the one you (teachers) had in your state or University?
murry0117 replied: "In Maryland all of the tests you need to take are taken after you complete the program (or are near the end). We take the PRAXIS. The Praxis I is a basic skills test, similar to the SAT. The Praxis II is subject specific to your area of certification.
I don't know about everywhere in Maryland, but at my college I did have to be accepted into the education program. However, it was based on grades and teacher recommendations, not a test.
You also need to complete student teaching with a minimum grade (I have forgotten what it is at this point--it's been a while since I've done it). You also have to pass all of your education courses with a minimum grade requirement.
There is also a portfolio that needs to be created and shared before graduating."
Do you have to be a genius to get perfect SAT scores? Why does everyone freak out about them? I was just wondering..Everyone seems to be really nervous.. Im still a sophomore, but is it really that hard? I used to go to a private elementary school that taught awesome standardized test taking skills, and all the standardized tests ive taken so far have been perfect (im not showing off or anything...) My teachers even think its really weird that I don't get perfect test scores usually, yet i never get anything wrong on standardized tests...And when I went to public school in 6th grade, every student acts like standardized tests are super hard when they really aren't.. ? Its basically process of elimination, and in English especially, its just comprehension and analyzing the material you are given to read..
airbender replied: "I'm in seventh grade and started prepping a year ago. Anything's easy if you have lots of time to prepare for it. Get an SAT prep book, and start learning the material."
I have been working with special education students this year? in various schools - elementary, middle, senior high - and am
shocked by the fact that most of the students are just behavior
problems. Parents want the schools to correct what they did wrong with their kids. Some, I agree, have deep seated emotional problems, but most of them are just brats.
If they don't want to read out loud or take a test they say they don't want to, or throw the paper/book on the floor. They disrupt the classes for other kids and are dealt with by being ignored (because they want attention) or with psychology (which never works.) I've seen some pretty bad behavior and heard some rough language.
Can anyone who is a special ed teacher tell me why this is allowed? These kids are not learning and do not want to learn.
Mostly, their parents do not care about them.
I feel so sorry for the teachers who have to deal with this. They are not using their skills - just baby sitting brats. This is called Resource Special Ed.
I am only at each school for one or two days as a substitute and have no say in the way the class is run. I see that some teachers have given up on certain kids, and I don't blame them at all.
Holly Wood replied: "Students act out for two reasons: to avoid something or attain it. For example, the student may act out to avoid his work because it is too hard for him, and hasn't been differentiated, this happens a lot in special ed, especially resource, where at the middle school level, the resource teacher is expected to serve as a homework helper by the regular ed teachers, even though this is like giving the child a fish, instead of teaching him to fish!!
Students also act out to gain something such as attention. Many special ed students crave attention from teachers and other students, sometimes because they are very insecure due to the lack of academic abilities.
Disabilities are NO EXCUSE to act out, and shouldn't be tolerated in the classroom. Teachers need to take a long, hard look in the mirror and ask themselves, "Am I serving this child the way he needs to be?" I have seen several beautiful turn arounds in behavior when I have responded the the student's needs appropriately. For example, if you have an ADHD student that is always up and chatting or running around, one solution is to let him serve as classwork checker and board cleaner. Every time he finishes a few problems in class, make sure his answers are correct and let him go around and check his classmates' papers! He is learning, helping others and staying on task. He can clean the board after checking that it is okay as well. He will feel important as well. Spend your time as a teacher differentiating assignments so that student's can do them independently and feel successful. Collaborate with the regular ed teacher so your student doesn't get marked down, and write modified assignments into the IEP! Good luck!"
jdeekdee replied: "By law, any child that is in special ed can only be qualified to be in it if their 'problems' are causing them to not be able to access the curiculum and suceed in the classroom.
They can't be put in special ed ONLY for bad behavior. The bad behavior has to be affecting their learning.
What are the teachers suppose to be doing to help them?
In some cases, a child will still 'act out' if what the teacher is doing to help them is not helping them.
In this case, the IEP needs to be changed to something that WILL help them.
I can understand what you mean, though. If they truly dont' WANT to learn or try, then it doesn't matter HOW you help them or WHAT you use to help them.
I have heard that lots of schools just put kids in special ed so the school can GET MORE MONEY.
In some cases it has nothing to do with the parents and/or kids being 'bad'.
I have heard of schools putting kids in special ed against thier parents consent, which is ILLEGAL.
I really agree with Holly Wood's answer. Very good."
Matt Berry replied: "Psychotherapy DOES in fact work if done properly and the proper techniques are used. Thinking like you do, is the reason why teachers and aides get burned out on their jobs. Many times, there are reason behind the behavior. Sometimes the person literally needs to be taught how to control their behavior. If the targeted behavior is not addressed, then the student will not improve. Yes, planned igonoring works some of the time, for some behaviors, and for some people but not for all. A huge problem is the fact that so many teachers are not trained effeciantly on behavior mng. They use ineffective methods, such as taking away break/recess, writing sentences, etc.
On average, I would have to disagree with you to the fact that most are just behavior problems. If you are talking about the reason why they are placed into special ed. Sp-ed and regular ed students, both can exhibit behvaioral problems."
meridocbrandybuck replied: "Please do not call special education students brats. Special education students are no more likely to be brats than regular ed students.
If the students are out of control or disruptive, then there should be a discipline plan in place. This is not a problem of poor parenting alone. This is a problem of poor, unfocused classroom disclipine and a poor special ed department which is not addressing behavior.
Yes, there are sorry parents out there. But there are also sorry teachers.
In addition, sometimes kids with learning disabilities have these behaivor problems as a defense against having to struggle with work. In short, it's better to be thought of as "bad" than as "stupid". These students would give anything to be able to do the work but they have experianced failure so much they've given up. This is a problem which must be addressed directly and explicitly.
Just my two cents."
SPED teacher replied: "Students are in special education because they qualify by law.
Unless you are professional trained with at least one of the degrees that the teachers, psychologists and therapists have, then you should not snap to such judgments.
Psychology techniques do work. They all take time. Rapport can also be a key factor. Students accept some people and reject others.
Parents are often tired after 24/7 times years of care and attention. The patience of a saint should not be expected of them.
You should feel sorry for the kids who have such strong feelings that they cannot live normal lives. Some are there because they come from drug addicted parents. Some are there from medical mistakes. Some are there because of genetic problems. Some of them are there for unknown reasons, but they do exist and someone with compassion needs to meet their needs. I suggest you substitute for some other class."
IS that an ADD? Or what??? I usually study hard and I spend between 4 to 7 hours daily on home works and stuff. After I finished I always I have dinner then go to sleep with out having any kinda of activity cuz I’m afraid that my thinking will be disturbed and confused when I entertain my self with anything such as socializing with others or watching TV.
I do have a social phobia, and low self trust.
Plus I have irritability emotional nature and am over excited over small things.
When I was a kid 7 years old I quitted school for one year (reason of War) during this period I had no education or revision.
So I forgot everything that are basics about reading writing and learning by heart. When I came to this country which I hate I had troubles in reading and writing things…no teacher could take care of me and develop my skills to the normal which I should have. I just used to tell the teacher what things I have in mind and she would write down the answers to me on the Test’s papers. I was beaten so many times by parents cuz I could not learn by heart things that were simple to an elementary student. I DO still have trouble in learning by heart and I spend hours on jus one page rehearsing it cuz I’m afraid that the information will vapor instantly after I finished. So I have put my self in this prison til the day I die.
Please I really need help.
Consider that I do not have enough money to go to a psychic or a therapist there too expensive, and my family almost gets their primary needs.
I always try to be aware of my mental situation by surfing on the internet and read.
Ms T replied: "I don't like to put labels on people, but it doesn't sound like you have ADD. It seems like you may have some other issues to address though. I can suggest that you spend about $6.95 and buy the paperback book called "Dianetics The Modern Science of Mental Health". It is available in most bookstores like B. Dalton or Waldenbooks and it may give you some solutions to your study habits as well as some other problems you have going on."
Attila replied: "Dear Cicili,
You appear to have been through a lot in the course of your lifetime, and I am happy to inform you that most states offer government programs that you can apply for, free of charge. The down side of it is that you will have to apply for their services which usually involves waiting in long lines and then waiting some more before you can even be considered to be eligable for them. However, My advise to you is to swallow your pride and go to your local Department of Social Services. You can locate them in the blue pages of most phone books, or by calling information and asking for the phone number and adress of your local D.S.S. offices. Once you have made an appointment to speak to a social worker, you will be required to fill out a questionaire/application for assistance. Request medical assistance first. If the application asks what type of medical assistance you need, write in "Psycological, and testing for any learning disabilities that you feel you may suffer from but have gone undiagnosed all of these years." The amount of help you may recive may depend on the worker assigned to you. If you feel you are not being taken seriously or that your assigned worker is giving you the old "Beuracratic Runaround" you may request to be assigned another worker. State your problems and what you feel may be the consiquences of these abnormalities. If you suffer from depression, say so! If you are frightened that your problems are progressivly getting worse, SAY SO! From reading your question, it seems appearant that you need someone to help you with what may or may not be a psycological defect. Don't let that term frighten you......Please!
There are programs available to you, free of charge as well as financial help if the therapy demands that you sacrifice a paycheck or any other sort of monies you might have recieved in order to attend the required treatment appointments. It's not easy and it can sometimes be demolalizing and embarresing, but the rewards could turn out to be an enormous help to you and give you the self confidence to move ahead in your life, without having to give up things that give you personal enjoyment, such as television or friends or just normal interaction with others! One thing.......There may come a time when you feel that nobody cares and you don't feel the effort is worth it. Cicili......Don't let it get you down! Don't give up trying! With the continued effort you put forth, you just may finally find out how to cope with your feelings of inadiquicy and low self esteem. The trick is to be PERSISTANT! Keep applying until they get so tired of dealing with you that they finally get you the help you need.
I wish you the best and hope you will take my answer seriously. It just may save your life! It saved mine.
Sincerley,
Attila"
Guillermo replied: "your wisdom is disturbing
you have learned how things happen
and you live accordingly
continue to learn how things happen
you act accordingly, then you forget
you learn how things happen and you do not dismiss the single principle as total nonsense
your work is not futitle
THESE ARE LIES: (5)
any principle that does not get you love or money or power must be useless
a silent mind is a dumb mind
selflessness is no way to get ahead
virtue is for fools
kindness is weakness
this is a problem for you: because your only allegiance is to how things happen
people who do not see how things happen naturally think your behaviour has no basis in reality
your silence and your manner are disturbing
your motives seem obscure
you are hard to figure out
the problem comes back to the fact thatThe Principle is not a thing and cannot be defined
that does not make sense to some people; it makes perfectly good sense to you
it is not easy to understand a person whose foundation is invisible
He got up
rebuked the wind and said to the waves
"Quiet! Be Still! "Then the wind died down and it was completely
calm
he said to His disciples,
"Why are you so afraid? Do you still have no faith?"
They were terrified and asked each other,
"Who is this?
Even the wind and the waves obey Him!""
KC replied: "Attention Deficit is the inability to remain attentive to subject you attempt to learn for a reasonable length of time. It is usually treated with stimulant drugs that would make a person with out the disorder seem like they are on speed. For a sufferer of ADD, it makes them able to concentrate better. The drugs are prescribed after testing and professional diagnosis.
There are coping skills that could help you. Try studying with music playing. Study for short times and take frequent, but short breaks. Study different subjects back and forth.
You may have a highly developed creative ability, if you do, you can pursue art or some career in art. People have higher tolerance for ADD type symptoms in creative people.
Consider getting professional help with pubic assistance. I know of a family that considered ADD as the problem when the child complained that they had difficulty concentrating on things they wanted to do, things they liked, not just subjects in which they didn't have an interest.
There may be cost-effective ways to get help on line, try the link below:"
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Source(s):>
Gym_CheerGirl replied: "what are you asking?"
Pre-IEP Outline?? Please help. I'm so lost? PLEASE help me with this. I have NO IDEA what I'm supposed to do with all this information and I've never even seen an IEP. I have asked my college instructor for help with this and keep being referred back to the information I have below.
Can anyone help me????
INSTRUCTIONS::::: Pre-IEP Outline: Prepare an outline for an upcoming Individual Education Plan (IEP) meeting based upon the information contained in the University of Phoenix Material “Psychological Report.” Your Pre-IEP Outline must include measurable goals, objectives, and benchmarks for the student based upon state standards. You should also consider student eligibility, justification for a least restrictive environment, and special accommodation\ns in the outline. Consider each of the following stakeholders as you prepare your Pre-IEP Outline:
a.General education teacher
b.Special education teacher
c.Parent
d.District administrator
e.Evaluator
Psychological Report
Use the information contained in this Psychological Report to prepare an outline for an upcoming IEP meeting. Your Pre-IEP Outline must include measurable goals, objectives, and benchmarks for the student based upon state standards. You should also consider student eligibility, justification for a least restrictive environment, and special accommodations in your outline. Consult the course syllabus for more details regarding this assignment.
Note: The information contained in this Psychological Report is fictitious and is not intended to represent any particular person/student.
Name:Debbie
Date of Birth:2/6/1999
Chronological Age:6.10
Ethnic Background:Caucasian
Grade:First
School:Kelsey Elementary School
Teacher:Ms. Smith
Test Date:12/12/2005
Examiner:Psychologist, Speech and Language Specialist, and Classroom Teacher
Reason for Referral
Debbie was referred for evaluation by her mother, Ms. Laura, for the following reasons:
•Reading comprehension problems
•Speech and language problems
•Written language problems
•Math problems
The results of the evaluation will be used to determine present levels of functioning and the relation to academic performance and to plan appropriate interventions.
Background Information
Debbie is a pleasant 6-year-old girl. She was enrolled at Toyland Elementary in California for a short period of time before moving to Arizona. Her Kindergarten teacher referred her for assessment, but she moved before the assessments were completed. Therefore, no further action was taken. Debbie appears to be a healthy girl and developmental milestones were within normal limits. Vision and hearing are also within normal limits. She normally speaks at an appropriate speed in clear tones. Her articulation is age appropriate; however, a language deficiency is suspected.
The teacher tried the following pre-referral strategies with agreement from the mother before a formal request for testing was made.
•Special seating in classroom
•Giving directions one-step at a time
•Giving her more time on tests and assignments
•Giving her fewer problems per page
•Fewer spelling words each week
None of the above appeared to be helping Debbie.
Assessment Procedures
1.Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised (WISC-R)
2.Diagnostic Achievement Battery (DAB)
3.Peabody Individual Achievement Test – R (PIAT-R)
4.Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test –Revised (PPVT-R)
5.Bender-Gestalt Test (BGT)
Observations of Behavior During Testing
Debbie was very cooperative during all of the testing. However, she was slow to process requests made by the examiner. Several times she asked for the examiner to repeat the directions, which could not be done. She moved around in her seat and had to get up and walk around the room a few times. She did not become frustrated and stayed with each task, but needed a great deal of time. The testing was conducted over three consecutive days; each day spending up to three hours with the student. Debbie spent a portion of the time testing while at other times she would talk and/or complete a task that was not related to the assessment.
The psychologist and the speech and language specialist completed the assessments as a team. The classroom teacher contributed notes and reports on the student’s academic skills in her classroom.
Results of Assessment
On the WISC-R, Debbie received the following scores:
WISC-R VERBAL IQ:74
WISC-R PERFOMANCE IQ:91
WISC-R FULL SCALE IQ81
These results indicate that she is functioning in the below average range of intellectual ability with an estimated SFIQ score between 76 and 86.
The following scaled scores were recorded:
VERBAL
TESTSScaled ScorePERFORMANCE TESTSScaled Score
Information5Picture Completion9
Similarities4-Picture Arrangement7
Arithmetic9Block Design5
Vocabulary8Object Assembly10+
Comprehension3-Coding13+
Digit Span7
+ = Relative S
helpnout replied: "These might not help you a 100%, but should get you going in the right direction.
Try this link out, it's to the Guide to the Individualized Education
Program which was developed by the U.S. Department of Education, with the assistance of the National Information Center for Children and Youth with Disabilities (NICHCY).
I would read the guide first, it will give you a better understanding of developing an IEP, towards the bottom their is a sample form which is more like an outline, it explains the different parts of an IEP & what has to be on it, IDEA (individuals with disabilities education act) tells you what information must be included in the IEP, but it does not specify what the IEP should look like, so from state to state the form itself can look different.
Another link to look at would be the Tool Kit on Teaching and Assessing Students With Disabilities: Accommodations , in this they have a variety of accommodations that can be used depending on the student's needs. For example a part you stated was :
"The teacher tried the following pre-referral strategies with agreement from the mother before a formal request for testing was made.
• Special seating in classroom
• Giving directions one-step at a time
• Giving her more time on tests and assignments
• Giving her fewer problems per page
• Fewer spelling words each week"
These were some accommodations the teacher tried which you'll find in the Tool Kit , even though those didn't work there may be other accommodations that would be useful to the student, in the Tool Kit they explain the different types of accommodations, documenting accommodations on an IEP, selecting accommodations from the type of accommodation it is or selecting accommodations according to the student's characteristics, they have the do's and don'ts of selecting accommodations and more."
Does Any know anything about being about being a Teacher's Aide? 1. Which of the following might be a duty of a noninstructional aide?
A. Accompany a child to and from the lavatory
B. Tutor a child
C. Teach calligraphy
D. Grade homework
2. Some states don't allow teacher aides to
A. take attendance.
B. aid in instructing a class.
C. monitor the halls.
D. supervise a bus.
3. An English-as-a-second-language teacher aide works with
A. high school students in English literature classes.
B. preschool students from Spain.
C. students whose native language isn't English.
D. students in private schools in California.
4. A sectarian school is run by
A. the state.
B. a religious church or denomination.
C. the Department of Education.
D. the parents.
5. Why was Head Start important in the history of teacher aides?
A. It was one of the first programs to pay teacher aides.
B. It reduced the number of teacher aides required.
C. It helped teacher aides to become licensed as teachers.
D. It helped recruit white women and men to act as role models.
6. Which statement is true regarding the structure of the school system in the United States?
A. It's centralized under the Department of Education.
B. It's decentralized.
C. It's controlled by the teachers and their unions.
D. It's managed by the state.
7. Which of the following would be a duty of an instructional teacher aide?
A. Write and design lesson plans
B. Care for sick children, file, and clean the floors
C. Monitor small groups of students, teach (under supervision), and do clerical work
D. Perform all his or her duties outside of the classroom
8. What personal characteristics should a teacher aide have?
A. Patience, good communication skills, a friendly demeanor
B. The ability to speak another language fluently
C. A quiet, shy disposition
D. The ability to teach a lesson independently
9. A common characteristic of regional educational agencies is that they
A. don't hire teacher aides.
B. provide many services that individual school districts couldn't afford.
C. serve all of the school districts in a state.
D. are located in Eastern states.
10. A paraprofessional is a person who
A. assists a professional on a part-time basis when needed.
B. works full time in a school.
C. performs noninstructional duties.
D. usually has had training in how to assist a professional.
11. In most states, a teacher aide who works only in grades seven through nine is considered a(n)
A. senior high school aide.
B. junior high school aide.
C. middle school aide.
D. elementary school aide.
12. On the local level, who runs the public schools?
A. The principal
B. The teachers and the staff
C. The state superintendent
D. An elected school board
13. Which one of the following factors contributes to the importance of teacher aides in schools today?
A. A decrease in the population
B. The decline of women in the workforce
C. The financial crisis in the schools
D. Reduced teacher salaries
14. Montessori schools are an example of what type of school?
A. For-profit
B. Public
C. Sectarian
D. Nonsectarian
15. What's another name for a teacher aide?
A. Teacher assistant
B. Student teacher
C. Assistant teacher
D. Professional volunteer
16. Where should a person who wants to work as a teacher aide in a Roman Catholic school begin to look for the job?
A. Teachers
B. Principal
C. Diocesan Office of Education
D. Bishop
17. An immigrant can work as a teacher aide in the United States if he or she has a
A. high school diploma.
B. green card.
C. tuberculosis test.
D. family history in the United States.
18. The kindergarten movement is important to the history of teacher aides because
A. kindergartens employed the first teacher aides.
B. kindergartens made use of volunteers in the classrooms.
C. kindergartens relieved the teacher shortage.
D. it contributed to the increase in working mothers.
19. What's a minimal health requirement for a teacher aide?
A. All vaccinations must be current.
B. The applicant must have a negative skin test for tuberculosis.
C. The applicant must have a positive skin test for tuberculosis.
D. The applicant must have a chest X-ray.
20. A teacher aide who assists with a school's physical education program and perceptual motor program is called a(n)
A. health care aide.
B. physical education aide.
C. extracurricular aide.
D. special education aide.
This is not for a Teacher's Aide course....this is to earn my hs diploma.
teach2learn0707 replied: "This is obviously and exam of some kind that you are taking to be an education aide. If you feel the need to cheat on it, then you have no business in the education field at all. Good grief!"
fridaygal2 replied: "Better read your course material and then answer these questions yourself. What kind of aide would you be if you rely on others to answer your test/homework questions and then tell your students that they have to find their own answers?"
Is there any grammatical error? try to fix my senteces instead of my paragraph unless that's necessary? But I refused, because I’m afraid of unknown. So I kept studying in China then I graduated from my elementary school. Apparently, I went to middle school afterward. As I got into that school, I was amazed by how stupid the educational system was. Certainly, I noticed how stupid the educational system was in elementary school. But I did know it was that stupid. I noticed there was no weekend, no afterschool, no vacation…The school forces the students to have classes whenever it’s possible, so that they can earn more tuition. And the students must accept that, because of the serious competition in the society. And such serious competition is caused by the population in China. However, competition is good as long as it promotes something. But, as it gets too serious, it is not competition anymore, it is struggle. The better the students want to survive, the better colleges they need to get into. The better colleges they want to get into, the better college entrance examination SCORE they need to get. The better score they want to get, the better High School they need. The better high school they want, the more classes they need to take, and more time they need to spend on studying. And more classes the schools demand students to take, the more money the schools can make. Thus, people cannot stop the school’s evil action, because that relates to their own future, their own benefit. If they refuse to take those extra classes, what they are doing is no doubt committing suicide. Whether the students are willing to take extra classes, they will become willing. Whether the classes are mandatory, they will become mandatory. And the score became the only thing to evaluate a student. Students are no more studying for skills, they are studying for scores. What they are studying is how to get a high score. They have no friends, no family, no emotion, and no dreams. They are nothing more than a test machine. For the younger students, they have no freedom; they have no rights to administrate their own time. What they will do is planned and limited by the school; what they do are all the same; what they study are all the same; likely when they grow up, they are all the same. What the schools are producing are millions of all-the-same’s. According to evolution, when a species loses its variation, it's about to die out.
Mamie replied: "There are some grammatical errors, but the paragraph is so long, that most people aren't going to take the time to read it. So, since you don't want us to fix the paragraphs, will you please fix them yourself and re-submit this? (You should break this up to about 3 or 4 paragraphs to make it acceptable to the reader's eye.)"
Barbara replied: "But I refused, because I'm afraid of the unknown. So I kept studying in China. Then I graduated from my elementary school. As I entered middle school, I was amazed by the stupidity of the educational system. Certainly I had noticed how stupid the system was in elementary school, but I hadn't realized it was that stupid. I noticed that there was no weekend, no afterschool, no vacation. The school forces the students to take as many classes as frequently as possible, so that they can earn more tuition. And the students must accept the situation because of the serious competition in Chinese society, competition fostered by the population of China.
Competition is good as long as it promotes something but when it gets too serious it is not competition anymore ... it is a struggle. The more the students want to survive, the more colleges they need to get into. The more colleges they want to get into, the better their scores must be on the college extrance examination. The better the score they need to get, the better the high school they need to attend. The better the high school, the more classes they need to take and the more time they need to spend studying. The more classes the students need to take, the more money the schools make.
The students are powerless to oppose the ever-increasing workloads imposed by the schools ... they would be sabotaging their own futures. Whether or not the students are willing to take extra classes, they will become willing. Whether or not the classes are mandatory, they will become mandatory. The score has become the only thing to evaluate a student. Students no longer study to acquire knowledge and skills; they study to get a high score. They have no time for friends, family, emotions, dreams. They have turned into test machines.
As for the younger students, they have no freedom, no rights to administer their own time. What they do is planned and limited by the school. Their activities are all the same, their studies are all the same, likely when they grow up they will be all the same. What the schools are producing are millions of all-the-sames. According to evolution, when a species loses it variation it's about to die out.
Added: Very interesting ... and sobering."
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