There is a growing number of students in your district who do not respond to PBIS or MTSS, and whose behavior hijacks your staff. What is the bio-neuro-trauma connection and how do you respond? How can you create professional development to help all staff understand the students presenting with trauma-related behaviors, and how best to support them? Session includes lecture and tools for planning.
Parents play a crucial role in promoting positive mental health outcomes for students. This is especially true with students with emotional and behavioral disabilities. Educators often face challenges in effectively supporting parents. Participants will gain an understanding of effective approaches to support parents of students with mental health challenges.
_x000D_ As an administrator, having a structured approach to handling difficult and unexpected situations, such as school refusal and chronic absenteeism, is crucial. Your team looks to you for guidance in collaboratively problem-solving with families. In this session, we will explore how you can support the process by establishing effective procedures, initiating productive conversations with families, and maintaining a supportive learning environment once the student returns to school._x000D_
This session will focus on executive functioning and how it can be addressed from a multidisciplinary approach. Learn about the components of executive functioning, how your special education team can assess and collaborate using their data and reflect on your current practices and readiness to support students with executive functioning needs in your district. Also, you will have the chance to explore executive functioning programs and curricula commonly utilized in educational settings. This session will further provide insights into the strengths and weaknesses of each program, enabling your team to make informed decisions on selecting the most suitable executive functioning interventions to meet the ever-growing needs of your students. You will not only gain practical knowledge but also develop a comprehensive plan and framework that can be seamlessly integrated into your school site. Walk away equipped with actionable strategies and a clear road map to drive positive change within your educational environment.
The CSBA Golden Bell Award Caring–Accessible–Resources–Emotional Well Being Program is a comprehensive/data driven support program that serves all district students and seeks to authentically connect students with highly trained staff: person-to-person and heart-to-heart. Each student brings their own story; some with a smile and eagerness to learn - others hungry and carrying heart breaking trauma. Knowing these challenges, it is imperative that we connect to meet their academic growth and social-emotional wellness.
Since the Covid 19 pandemic, the number of requests to public school districts and charter schools for out of home special education placement in a residential treatment center (“RTC”) has considerably increased. Whether the placement is one suggested by an IEP team, or based on a parent demand, deciding to place a student residentially is complicated and places a significant financial burden on a school district. School districts face a challenging task determining whether an RTC placement, one of the most restrictive options on the continuum of services, is what is required to provide a FAPE for a student. The consideration is often accompanied by anguished parents and guardians who do not have the ability to manage care for the child in the home and no other resources are available to address their child’s needs. _x000D_ _x000D_ It is essential for school districts to develop a defensible and appropriate process to assist IEP teams in determining how to support a student to avoid the need for an RTC placement. Equally as important is being aware of the necessary legal considerations when an RTC placement is being considered or has been requested. _x000D_ _x000D_ This presentation will review the robust intervention processes required of school districts to address the depth and plethora of educationally related mental health needs with which our children with disabilities present. The empirical data resulting from robust interventions in turn inform the necessity for a public school to provide an RTC placement to meet its FAPE obligations to the student. Attendees will be provided with a suggested (and defensible) determination process (procedural and substantive), including educationally related mental health assessments, “wrap” services, behavior intervention supports, intensive individual supports, etc._x000D_ _x000D_ The presentation will further cover statutory requirements and recent legal decisions related to residential placement requests. The focus will be on the judicial decisions in each circuit and how these apply to the various standards for determining whether or not a public school district bears responsibility for an RTC as a means of providing a FAPE. From “is the need for an RTC segregable from the learning process” to “is the RTC supportive of the student’s education” to “are the medical, social, or emotional problems intertwined with educational problems”, and finally to “is the placement primarily to aid the student to benefit from special education”, courts have struggled to articulate a meaningful standard. The standards themselves are not instructive or able to be easily applied. They are ambiguous and always lend themselves to arguments for and against RTC placement to provide a FAPE. However, examination of the factual patterns of various judicial decisions and how these amorphous standards are applied in specific circumstances leads to more fruitful analyses, more likely defensible IEP decisions, and importantly, programs and services which appropriately address needs of students with disabilities.
If you want to be prepared for a due process case, whether it's your first case or not, this session is for you. We will talk about the process of due process, and examine several recent OAH cases, from start to finish. With all of the different types of complaints, if you end up in a due process hearing, you want to be prepared. From the moment you receive a due process complaint (or even before), there are steps you can take to minimize your liability exposure. This session will examine the steps to take to be sure you, and your staff, have strategies to handle any due process case.
Many school districts are seeing an uptick in chronic absenteeism. While many solutions are discussed from the perspective of truancy and the attendance office, for some students, absenteeism is intertwined with social emotional learning, mental health and disability. _x000D_ _x000D_ The presentation will incorporate the latest case decisions, hot-off-the-presses law, and boots-on-the-ground practical advice.