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Questions About AT Consideration

 
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Do you have to write down every classroom tool used by every student with a disability?    

Not necessarily. It depends on whether that student needs that specific tool in order to accomplish the educationally relevant tasks. The IEP team must decide this for each student. That is what consideration is.

I try to think what I would want to know if the student moved and enrolled in my classroom. The IEP should tell me what tools, if any, the student needs in order to succesfully complete educational tasks. If it doesn't do that, then our IEP team would need to "reinvent the wheel" by starting from scratch to figure out what tools are really critical for this student. In the mean time, for how ever long that takes, the student experiences unnecessary frustration and possibly the tools this student needs in order to be successful, whether those tools are standard classroom tools in some environments or less common tools specifically designed to be assistive technology.

What is the difference between a standard classroom tool that is readily available and assistive technology?

Kim Hartsell, Director of the Georgia Project for Assistive Technology explains it this way.

A standard tool is a tool that is available to and used by students in the general education population. This may include tools such as Alphasmarts, calculators, and computer-based word processing applications. Special education students may also use and benefit from these tools that are generally available. Typically the school system would not have a legal obligation to make these tools available. Rather they would make them available through curriculum and technology initiatives within the school system. A standard instructional technology tool becomes assistive technology when the IEP team determines that the student can't accomplish the educationally relevant tasks without it or when it is necessary for the student to accomplish IEP goals and objectives. So, the Alphasmart that is available to all of the students in the class becomes assistive technology when the student's IEP team determines that he can not accomplish his writing and objectives without it. Once documented in the IEP, the school district then has the responsibility to provide the device to the student.

What is the difference between “AT Consideration” and “AT Assessment”?

Consideration is short, takes place during the IEP meeting, and involves thinking about and discussing what is already known. An Assistive Technolgy Assessment is a seperate process that takes place outside of the IEP meeting and involves the gathering of additional information. Ideally it is conducted by the members of the IEP team with the addition, if needed, of individuals with specific knowledge about assistive technology or other identified areas.