iep smart goals to improve academics eydie wilson, ph.d. math coach november 3, 2009

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IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

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Page 1: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics

Eydie Wilson, Ph.D.Math CoachNovember 3, 2009

Page 2: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Well written IEP goals will describe what the child will do, when and how he will do it and what the time frame will be for achieving it.

Page 3: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

STUDENT(S)

DATA

Qualitative / Quantitative

SMART Goals – IEP

AIS

Teaching Strategies

Page 4: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Overview

1. Data Analyze Major Trends

Activity 1: Data Statement/Wondering Chart

2. IEP SMART Goals SMART - Define the Characteristics Writing IEP Goal - Present Level Performance

Activity 2: Writing IEP Annual SMART Goals Activity 3: Improving IEP Annual Goals

3. Academic Intervention - Question: What can we do as teachers? Teaching Strategies

Activity 4: Identify and Define Strategies

Page 5: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Data

Types of DataAnalyze Major TrendsActivity 1: Data Statement/Wondering Chart

Page 6: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Data

Qualitative (Describes a situation soft data – audio/video/transcripts) Classroom-based assessments (Direct Observation, Interviews,

case study) Assessments – EClass, Written Documents (logs / check sheets)

Quantitative (Numerical data defines a situation) Measurable and verifiable data that is amenable to statistical

manipulation NYS Standardized Tests GPA/ ranking Surveys Logs / check sheets

Page 7: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

NYS Math: Levels 1 and 2Performance Indicators – G4

Levels 1 and 2

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

Incorrect Answered

Stud

ents

The Indicators are: Number Sense and Operations, Statistics and Probability, Algebra, Geometry, Measurement

Page 8: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Activity 1: Data Analysis Questions

Analysis - Focus on performance

1. Data Statement: Indicate the Trends

2. Questions: Using the graph – Analyze and discuss the possible reasons for the high rate of incorrect answers

Page 9: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

SMART Goals

SMART Goals CharacteristicsActivity 2: Writing the IEP Goals

Page 10: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

What Are SMART GOALS?

S pecificM easurableA ttainableR ealisticT imely

Page 11: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

S pecific

Goals should be … Specific - > Say what you want to achieve Target areas of academic achievement, functional performance

(behavior) to be taught Clear to anyone that has a basic knowledge of the student’s

academic needs Answer the six "W" questions:

Who - is involved? What - do I want to accomplish? Where  - Identify a location. When - Establish a time frame. Which - Identify requirements and constraints. Why - purpose or benefits of accomplishing the goal.

Page 12: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

M easurable

Goals should … Be reasonable and objective Describe what a student can accomplish within a 12

month period Enable a teacher to assess the child’s progress

Page 13: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

A ttainable

Goal should be .. Reasonable, and Realistic Feasible in terms of available resources Action-oriented – written with action verbs

Page 14: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

R ealistic

Goals should … Results-oriented, relevant, reasonable Focus on the end results you desire rather than the

activities necessary to get there P.S. Progress and Performance must be

monitored – Quantitative or Qualitative Assessments

Page 15: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

T imely

Goals should be Time-based, tangible - grounded within a time

frame Enable you to monitor progress at regular

intervals T can also stand for Tangible - When your goal is

tangible you have a better chance of making it specific and measurable and thus attainable.

Page 16: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Why use them?

SMART goals help educators become more accountable and responsible for the child's learning

Enables teachers to write measurable and objective IEP Present Level Performance (IEP pages 3,4,5) and Annual Goals

Page 17: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Academic Annual Goal

Statements that emanate from the present levels of performance which

1. Are measurable terms describing skill, knowledge or behavior that the student is going to work on during the next twelve months

2. Includes steps that provide directions for the teacher/related service and help the students work toward goal

3. How goals will be measured

Page 18: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

PLP into Annual SMART Goal

Page 19: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

How To Write SMART Goals

Identify specifically (e.g. Math, Behavior) what needs improvementConsult the data!What are the greatest areas in need of

improvement? Dig deep and get specific (disaggregate!)

What is the Skill (math, behavior, etc) needs improvement

Page 20: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Example 1: PLP Goal

William has difficulty decoding multi-syllabic words which interferes with his reading comprehension and fluency.

Page 21: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Example: PLP -> Annual SMART Goal

In one year, William will decode multi-syllabic words containing prefixes, suffixes and root words. He will correctly decode 20 words in 5 weekly consecutive tests, with no more than 2 errors per test (80%). Progress will be assess by the classroom teacher using quizzes weekly for five weeks.

SPECIFIC - MEASUREABLE - ATTAINABLE - REALISTIC - TIME-BOUND

Page 22: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Writing the Goals … QuestionsQuestions: What do you want the student to know or be able to

do in 12 months, and why can't he /she do it now? What can he / she do now? Identify the starting

point for each area of need and the current skills / knowledge?

What is the current progress? Describe the current progress in the area of need

Is each objective measurable? Will they advance the student from the "Present

Level to the "Measurable annual goals"?

Page 23: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

You can make it measurable by…

Indicating a rate (e.g. 3 out of 4 times, 80% of the time, 5 minutes out of every 10, 75% success)When using a rate, be sure you can specify

and measure the whole part (e.g. 80% of any 15-minute observation)

Measurable Academic Goals

Page 24: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Measurable Behavior Goals You can make student behavior measurable by …

Defining the factors surrounding the behavior precipitating events, such as, "when asked to

work independently," or environmental factors, such as, "when dealing with female authority figures," or other patterns, such as "always after lunch," "in math class," "on the playground.“

Identifying the results of the behavior removal from the classroom has increased [this

behavior]." If this looks like a Functional Behavioral Assessment, it is.

Page 25: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Activity 2:

Improve Annual SMART Goal

Page 26: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Improve This Goal…

Thomas will show evidence of one year of growth in mathematics each year in attendance.

SPECIFIC - MEASUREABLE - ATTAINABLE - REALISTIC - TIME-BOUND

Page 27: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

SMART GOAL: During the 2006-07 school year, given math strategies

(paired association techniques) with frequent repetition and practice to facilitate automatic memory and recall of facts, Thomas will apply strategies to solve multi-step multiplication and division equations. He will demonstrate mastery by achieving 85% accuracy on 5 consecutive quizzes over a period of five weeks.

Original: William will show evidence of one year of growth in mathematics each year in attendance.

Page 28: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Improve This Goal…

Stacy will meet or exceed the State’s writing expectations as measured by the yearly ELA scoring.

SPECIFIC - MEASUREABLE - ATTAINABLE - REALISTIC - TIME-BOUND

Page 29: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

SMART GOAL: During the 2009-10 school year, given multi-

sensory reading instruction, Stacey will demonstrate mastery of the six syllable types by fluently decoding selected passages incorporating all six syllable types. In 5 consecutive weekly quizzes she will decode timed passages with no more than one error per page.

Original: Stacy will improve reading skills as measured by the yearly ELA scoring.

Page 30: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Academic InterventionQuestion: What can we do as teachers? Teaching Strategies Activity 4: Identify and Define Strategies

Page 31: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Teaching Strategies

Common planning Tutoring One-to-one direct instruction Small group Games – Everyday Math, Impact Math Technology – Math Websites Evaluation indicators: Assessments

Page 32: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

General Information

All Students on Levels 1 and 2 must receive AIS

Teachers must complete and submit a monthly calendar (hand-out)

Page 33: IEP SMART Goals to Improve Academics Eydie Wilson, Ph.D. Math Coach November 3, 2009

Conclusion

DATA - Using DATA we are able to indicate objectively the student’s Present Level of Performance.

SMART Goals -Annual SMART Goals are generated based on PLP focused on what will be worked on over a 12 month period

Teaching Strategies -The SMART Goal will be attained through a variety of TEACHING STRATEGIES best suited for the student to achieve the goal.