A report developed by the ten organizations
participating in the Learning Disabilities Roundtable
Sponsored by the Division of Research to
Practice
Office of Special Education Programs
U.S. Department of Education
Washington, DC 20202
July 25, 2002
TABLE OF CONTENTS
SPECIFIC LEARNING DISABILITIES: FINDING COMMON GROUND . . .
. . . . .1
INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
METHODOLOGY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Initial Planning and Response to “White Papers”
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Two-day Meeting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Draft Statements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Final Meeting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
STATEMENTS OF CONSENSUS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Nature of Specific Learning Disabilities . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Identification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Eligibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Intervention. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Professional Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
CONCLUSION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
ACHIEVING BETTER OUTCOMES - MAINTAINING RIGHTS: AN APPROACH
TO IDENTIFYING AND SERVING STUDENTS WITH SPECIFIC LEARNING DISABILITIES .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . 15
BACKGROUND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
The Issue. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
The Challenge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
A Proposed Solution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Potential Administrative Benefits of this Approach . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . 19
Personnel Requirements for Implementation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . 20
Questions, Concerns and Resources Needed to Support this Approach. . . . .
. 22
Moving Forward . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Selected Resources. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
APPENDIX A: CONSENSUS STATEMENTS . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
APPENDIX B: PARTICIPANT LIST . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
SPECIFIC LEARNING DISABILITIES:
FINDING COMMON GROUND
INTRODUCTION
Approximately 2.8 million students have Specific Learning
Disabilities (SLD), making up 51 percent of all individuals receiving special
education services under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
(22nd Annual Report, 2000). The identification of these individuals, and the
system designed to address their needs, is of fundamental concern to a vast
spectrum of people, including families, professional educators, and policymakers.
In preparation for the reauthorization of IDEA, as well as implementation
of the No Child Left Behind Act, the Office of Special Education Programs
(OSEP) has convened researchers and policy organizations concerned about individuals
with SLD in a series of events designed to review the major issues in the
field and develop statements of consensus on what is valued and should be
promoted to improve programs for these individual students. The goal is to
find common ground.
This report summarizes the consensus statements developed
by the Learning Disabilities Roundtable, coordinated by the National Center
for Learning Disabilities (NCLD), which convened on February 4 –5, 2002
and June 17-18, 2002 in Washington, D.C., as part of the OSEP Research to
Practice Learning Disabilities Initiative. Roundtable participants included
member organizations of the National Joint Committee on Learning Disabilities
(NJCLD). To understand the context for the statements contained in this report,
background leading up to the Roundtable meetings is presented below.
Background
On August 27 and 28, 2001, more than 200 researchers, practitioners,
policymakers, and parents of individual students with SLD attended the Learning
Disabilities Summit: Building a Foundation for the Future, held in Washington,
DC. This event was part of the OSEP-sponsored Learning Disabilities Initiative
on issues related to the identification of individuals with SLD. The Summit
showcased a series of research papers prepared by nationally recognized experts
in the field. The papers synthesized and organized the most current and reliable
research on key issues in the identification and classification of individuals
with SLD. Following the Summit, OSEP organized roundtables of key stakeholders.
This report represents the work of the learning disabilities organizations
that make up the National Joint Committee on Learning Disabilities (NJCLD),
in their effort to examine the research papers and find issues on which there
exists common ground to all organizations, as well as those that are unique
to certain groups.
Roundtable participants worked together to define
areas of consensus on essential issues related to the nature of
specific learning disabilities, identification, eligibility, intervention,
and professional development. The remainder of this report is
divided into three sections: 1) description of the methodology
used to facilitate the consensus-building process, 2) a narrative
description of the statements of consensus developed by the Roundtable
participants, and 3) a brief conclusion. Following the conclusion
is a report developed by a Roundtable sub-group describing a promising
problem-solving approach to identifying individuals with specific
learning disabilities (see Exhibit A). Appendices include the
list of Roundtable consensus statements and the names of the Learning
Disabilities Roundtable participants.
METHODOLOGY
This methodology section outlines the process used by the
Learning Disabilities Roundtable to develop their consensus statements and
formulate this report. The organizations participating in this event from
the National Joint Committee on Learning Disabilities (NJCLD) consist of the
following:
• Association for Higher Education and Disability,
AHEAD
• American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, ASHA
• Council for Exceptional Children’s Division for Communicative
Disabilities and Deafness, DCDD
• Council for Exceptional Children’s Division for Learning Disabilities,
DLD
• Council for Learning Disabilities, CLD
• Learning Disabilities Association of America, LDA
• International Dyslexia Association, IDA
• International Reading Association, IRA
• National Association of School Psychologists, NASP
• National Center for Learning Disabilities, NCLD
The process these organizations employed to develop their
consensus statements unfolded through three steps: 1) initial planning and
response to “white papers,” 2) two-day Roundtable meeting, and
3) developing draft consensus statements.
Initial Planning and Response to “White Papers”
During an organizing meeting that was held in October 2001,
the organizations comprising the NJCLD reviewed the process design, established
a timeline for the work, defined the scope of work, and selected five working
categories that became the focus of the organizations’ responses. The
five areas include the following: Nature of Learning Disabilities, Identification
Process, Eligibility Criteria, Intervention, and Professional Development.
Following this meeting, each participating group reviewed
the “white papers” developed on these topics by leading researchers,
and produced a written response considered to be representative of their organization’s
core constituency. A template was developed and used by the organizations
to provide consistency in the structure across the papers.
Two-day Meeting
Information from the response papers was converged into a
set of charts used to facilitate discussions during a Roundtable meeting held
February 4-5, 2002. Each issue was discussed at length and areas of consensus
and policy implications were discussed for each of the working categories.
Additionally, a working subgroup was formed to study a problem-solving approach
related to identification, eligibility criteria, and interventions. They were
further charged with developing a problem-solving approach for the group to
consider.
Draft Statements
Following the two-day Roundtable meeting, a set of SLD consensus
statements was developed by drawing from the following sources:
• Wall notes from the group discussion;
• Specific language from a set of “research group” statements
identified by the Roundtable participants during the two-day meeting;
• Specific language from organizational papers identified by Roundtable
participants during the two-day meeting;
• Statements from the NJCLD Professional Development for Teachers brochure;
and
• The matrix-based statements drawn from the organizational papers,
as revised by the group during the two-day meeting.
The Roundtable organizations were asked to respond to these
consensus statements by revising or deleting them, adding new ones, and as
much as possible, rank ordering them. The organizations edited the statements,
and revised statements were sent back to the organizations for another review.
Each organization responded with feedback.
This report culminates from the process described above.
The body of this report lists the consensus statements with narrative comment
seeking to capture the common and diverse set of voices coming together to
form these statements.
Final Meeting
A clarification meeting occurred in June 2002
to finalize the consensus statements. Following this meeting a
second work group met to analyze and discuss the problem- solving
approach for identifying and supporting determination of eligibility.
A subgroup report describing this approach, with input from the
other Roundtable participants, is included in this document as
Exhibit A.
STATEMENTS OF CONSENSUS
Participants in the Learning Disabilities Roundtable engaged
in a period of reflection, sharing, and feedback to develop common understanding
of the major issues affecting the identification of individuals with SLD,
and to establish statements of consensus on what they believe and value. They
began their work recognizing that the passage of PL-94-142 in 1975 opened
a world of opportunity for individuals with SLD. In the following years reauthorization
of IDEA enabled the educational community to deepen its commitment to all
individuals with special learning needs by expanding the range of service
options to individuals at early stages of development, increasing opportunities
for technical support and staff development, and conducting research on effective
practices. Individual students throughout the special education continuum
have realized enormous benefits from this law. Still, there are improvements
that can be made, in both the identification of individuals with SLD, and
the determination of eligibility for special education and related services.
Participants expressed concern about inappropriate identification
of individuals with SLD, emerging as a problem over the past three decades.
They cited issues in the field where repeated concerns have been expressed
regarding the manner in which individuals are identified as SLD, the manner
in which educational services are provided once eligibility has been established,
and the types of services and interventions that are available to educators
and support personnel. The field is concerned about inappropriate referrals
to special education resulting from a process that needs to become more accurate,
timely, and efficient. Further, Roundtable participants believe classroom
teachers are left too often without useful support, even when the referral
and identification process is completed in a timely and efficient manner.
Roundtable participants perceive the upcoming reauthorization
process as an opportunity to rethink the current models used for identification,
determination of eligibility, and service delivery, and to study and consider
promising new models that will address more appropriately the needs of all
students, particularly those with SLD. They pursued this endeavor through
analysis and discussion of issues falling into five categories: 1) the nature
of specific learning disabilities, 2) identification of individuals with specific
learning disabilities, 3) eligibility for services, 4) interventions, and
5) professional development.
At the heart of their beliefs and recommendations,
the Roundtable participants support a comprehensive and coherent
system where each of these five categories is aligned along common
principles. Significant attention was given to the need for a
comprehensive evaluation model that will improve school capacity
to identify individuals with SLD and make informed decisions regarding
eligibility. Problem-solving approaches were identified as promising
practices to consider. Participants believe resources should be
allocated to provide opportunities to further study these models
and provide additional data, including indicators of outcomes
for students with SLD. At the core of a high-quality education
is effective delivery of appropriate research-based interventions
by teachers and other professionals, and on-going monitoring and
assessment coordinated by interdisciplinary teams. Still, participants
expressed concern that positive results and improvement will not
occur unless teachers and other professionals in the system have
the knowledge, skills, and administrative support to implement
these new measures within a collaborative system that brings regular
and special educators, related services personnel, and administrators
together.
For purposes of this process, consensus is defined
as statements the organizations could stand by and support. Statements
of consensus organized by the five categories are presented below,
followed by a brief discussion of each statement.
Nature of Specific Learning Disabilities
Roundtable participants agreed on the following core concepts
as basic elements of the nature of SLD: Specific Learning Disabilities are
neurologically-based, intrinsic to the individual, persist across an individual’s
lifespan at varying levels of intensity, and are not due primarily to other
disabling conditions.
Consensus statements related to these issues are presented and briefly described
below.
• The concept of Specific Learning Disabilities (SLD)
is valid, supported by strong converging evidence.
Participants draw on converging evidence to support SLD as a distinct disability.
There is evidence for heterogeneity of SLD.
There was little support for changing the current definition of SLD, but
organizations agreed on the need for changes in current regulations regarding
identification and eligibility.
• Specific learning disabilities are neurologically-based and intrinsic
to the individual.
Participants support the concept that neurological deficits intrinsic to the
individual are the basis for SLD. Such disorders result in performance deficits
in spite of quality instruction and predict anomalies in the development of
adaptive functions. In discussing these relationships several Roundtable papers
made reference to “marker variables” and “core cognitive
deficits.” The identification of a core cognitive deficit, or a disorder
in one or more psychological processes, that is predictive of an imperfect
ability to learn is a marker for a specific learning disability. Participants
suggest this results in the “imperfect ability to listen, think, speak,
read, write, spell, or do mathematical calculations,” as referred to
in IDEA. Some participants noted this is an incomplete list of behaviors and
should include the concepts of social and emotional development and oral expression.
• Individuals with specific learning disabilities show intra-individual
differences in skills and abilities.
The concept of "unexpected underachievement" was also considered.
Participants believe SLD is characterized by intra-individual variability
in cognitive processing, academic achievement, and life activities. This variability
results in unexpected areas of underachievement.
• Specific learning disabilities persist across the life span, though
manifestations and intensity may vary as a function of developmental stage
and environmental demands.
Because the disorder resulting in SLD is intrinsic to the individual and has
a neurological basis, it does not disappear over time. While Roundtable participants
believe it is important to recognize the life-long nature of the disorder,
they also acknowledge that manifestations and intensity of the disability
may vary for individuals during different stages of development.
• Specific learning disabilities may occur in combination with other
disabling conditions, but they are not due to other conditions, such as mental
retardation, behavioral disturbance, lack of opportunities to learn, primary
sensory deficits, or multilingualism.
A number of participants believe implementation of the current definition
and regulations regarding identification of SLD has resulted in a heterogeneous
population, often overlapping with other conditions. This has led to the erroneous
inclusion of those with other learning and behavioral problems into the learning
disability category and excluded others with SLD. Participants support the
concept that SLD may occur in combination with other disabilities, but it
is not due to these conditions.
• Specific learning disabilities are evident across ethnic, cultural,
language, and economic groups.
Roundtable participants draw on research to support the concept
that students with SLD can differ in terms of ethnic, cultural, language,
and economic experiences. Specific learning disabilities occur within each
of these groups.
Identification
Improving the process and methods used to identify individuals
with SLD was a central issue addressed by the Roundtable. Participants expressed
concern about the current process that uses ability-achievement discrepancy
formulas as the primary criteria for identifying individuals with learning
disabilities. They expressed concern that discrepancy formulas are unreliable
and are not a valid marker for SLD. Participants responded by supporting the
need for conducting a comprehensive evaluation that draws from multiple sources,
including informed clinical judgment, and by suggesting further study and
development of an approach schools can use in the future. A problem-solving
approach was discussed as a promising process for the field to consider and
study in a variety of settings. Finally, participants stressed the need for
regular educators to assume a greater role in the identification process through
a collaborative relationship with special educators and related service personnel.
Consensus statements related to these issues are presented and briefly described
below.
• Identification should include a student-centered, comprehensive evaluation
and problem-solving approach that ensures students who have a specific learning
disability are efficiently identified.
Participants support existing IDEA requirements for a comprehensive evaluation
that will use multiple measures, methods, sources of information, and clinical
judgment to identify individual students with SLD. Important sources cited
by the Roundtable participants include, but are not limited to, interviews
with teachers and family members, standardized tests, teacher logs, student
products, student records, observations, and continuous progress monitoring
of performance. This statement is shaped by the guiding principle that no
one particular measure or source is capable of providing sufficient information
for accurately and reliably identifying individuals with SLD. A comprehensive
evaluation will provide an accurate assessment of student strengths and weaknesses
and should assist in identifying needed services and interventions.
Participants also stress the need for interdisciplinary teams
to collect, review, and interpret data from these sources using a valid problem-solving
approach. Such an approach must be capable of distinguishing between students
who have specific learning disabilities and students with mental retardation
and other disabilities, as well as those with no disabilities who may experience
learning problems due to lack of adequate instruction and other factors.
Participants believe a comprehensive evaluation approach
should be designed and validated to guide the identification of students with
learning disabilities. Participants expressed frustration with the current
emphasis on ability-achievement discrepancy formulas, stating that as practiced
in schools they have not proven to be a valid approach to identifying individuals
with SLD. In addition, they express concern that the current process provides
limited information regarding needed instructional interventions. These participants
point to emerging evidence suggesting there may be promising new approaches
to strengthen this process.
One example currently being implemented and studied is a
problem-solving approach, which has implications for both identification and
eligibility decisions. A Roundtable sub-group met to study, discuss and analyze
this approach. Their report, Achieving Better Outcomes - Maintaining Rights:
An Approach to Identifying and Serving Students with Specific Learning Disabilities,
follows the concluding section of this document as Exhibit A. This Exhibit
reflects input from the various organizations participating in the Roundtable,
recognizing the benefits and challenges to such an approach.
• Regular education must assume active responsibility for delivery
of high quality instruction, research-based interventions, and prompt identification
of individuals at risk while collaborating with special education and related
services personnel.
The vast majority of individuals with SLD will begin their educational experience
in a regular education classroom. These teachers are responsible for all students
in their classrooms, including those experiencing difficulty. This involves
providing high quality instruction for all students, but it also focuses critical
attention on the need for regular education teachers to promptly identify
individuals at risk, and the key role they play in providing high quality,
scientifically-based interventions as mandated in the No Child Left Behind
Act.
The Roundtable participants acknowledge that
special educators and related service providers have a special
role in working with individuals with SLD who require specialized
instruction designed to meet their unique needs. They also believe
the capacity of the identification process and delivery of high
quality interventions is significantly strengthened as regular
and special educators bring their unique knowledge and skills
together in collaborative relationships. Participants noted that
building these relationships involves co-learning and co-sharing
and can result in a common effort to help all students.
Eligibility
Once a child has been identified as having a specific learning
disability, decisions need to be made regarding eligibility and appropriate
interventions and services. Roundtable participants believe ability-achievement
discrepancy formulas should not be used for determining eligibility, and support
using multiple sources of information to make strategic decisions on interventions
and services needed for each individual. Participants believe an interdisciplinary
team should make these decisions, and several participants strongly believe
parents must be an integral part of the decision making process. They further
stressed the need for these teams to make eligibility decisions in a timely
manner to ensure student needs are addressed. Finally, participants support
the concept that individual students may need varying levels and types of
services.
Consensus statements related to these issues are presented and briefly described
below.
• The ability-achievement discrepancy formula should not be used for
determining eligibility.
Roundtable participants agree there is no evidence that ability-achievement
discrepancy formulas can be applied in a consistent and educationally meaningful
(i.e., reliable and valid) manner. They believe SLD eligibility should not
be operationalized using ability-achievement discrepancy formulas. They also
believe alternative approaches to eligibility determination must be developed,
validated, and implemented as soon as possible.
• Decisions regarding eligibility for special education services must
draw from information collected from a comprehensive individual evaluation
using multiple methods and sources of relevant information.
This theme is consistent with the guiding principle of conducting a comprehensive
evaluation to identify individuals with SLD. Roundtable participants believe
that once identification has occurred, decisions regarding eligibility and
needed services should draw on several sources of information. Participants
believe this will strengthen the ability of the system to make optimal decisions
to meet the unique needs of each individual.
• Decisions on eligibility must be made through an interdisciplinary
team, using informed clinical judgments, directed by relevant data, and based
on student needs and strengths.
Participants believe capacity for making optimal eligibility
decisions can be enhanced through an interdisciplinary team where members
communicate freely across disciplines and have substantial knowledge regarding
testing and test results. In this manner, decisions are based on a team assessment
of the sources of information that represents an integrated synthesis of different
perspectives, rather than drawing on a single voice or loose collection of
different, disconnected voices. Participants believe the team should specifically
include at least one person qualified to conduct individual diagnostic examinations
of children, such as a school psychologist, speech-language pathologist, or
remedial reading teacher. Participants stressed the need to include an education
professional with identified competencies in SLD. It was pointed out that
80 percent of specific learning disabilities are language-based disorders,
and participants believe teams should include personnel with appropriate expertise.
Parent participation was also emphasized as critical.
• Decisions on eligibility must be made in a timely manner.
Participants believe decisions regarding student eligibility must be made
in a timely manner. Roundtable participants were sensitive to the timeliness
of these decision processes to ensure that student needs for services are
addressed.
• Based on an individualized evaluation and continuous progress monitoring,
a student who has been identified as having a specific learning disability
may need different levels of special education and related services under
IDEA at various times during the school experience.
Roundtable participants believe IDEA must continue to provide for the civil
rights that enable students with SLD to receive special education and related
services. Within this principle is the concept that individuals identified
with SLD may need different types and levels of services to meet their needs.
Additionally, student needs and services may change at different points in
the individual’s school experience. According to participants, “different
levels” refers to the need to provide a continuum of services and strategies,
and with varying intensity of supports. Such decisions should be student-centered
by focusing on meeting the needs of each individual.
Intervention
Delivery of effective interventions plays a central role
in the concerns discussed by the Roundtable participants. The prelude to any
intervention process must be effective instruction in the regular education
classroom. Running records, checklists, and other data gathering activities
can help teachers and others frame concerns about a student’s progress.
Participants noted that successful intervention depends on delivery of high
quality, scientifically-based interventions by regular and special educators
and related service providers, as provided for in the No Child Left Behind
Act. For this to occur, schools and service providers must have access to
information about these interventions. Participants also believe interventions
are most effective when they are implemented consistently and with fidelity,
with a sufficient level of intensity, and are relevant to student needs. Participants
support particular types of interventions for students with SLD, such as explicit
instruction, and support a continuum of intervention options. Finally, Roundtable
participants envision regular and special educators and related service providers
learning and working together as part of a coherent system that is accountable
for educational outcomes for students with SLD, a theme that cuts across all
areas. Given these considerations, some participants stressed the need for
regular education law and regulations to address the key measures regarding
regular education activities discussed in this report.
Consensus statements related to these issues are presented and briefly described
below.
• The field should continue to advocate for the use of scientifically-based
practices. However in areas where an adequate research base does not exist,
data should be gathered on the success of promising practices.
The NCLB law mandates use of “scientifically-based” practices
and interventions to help all individuals learn. Use of such practices is
a cornerstone of the problem-solving approach, which builds on the assumption
that teachers and other service providers are delivering high quality interventions.
Consistent with these issues, Roundtable participants believe it is essential
to advocate for the use of scientifically-based practices that have been validated
through rigorous, well-designed, objective, and systematic studies, and have
been assessed with positive results through some type of peer review. Additionally,
in areas where an adequate research base does not exist, participants support
the use of promising practices that have been identified by small case studies
or other non-experimental designs with positive results. Opportunities should
be made available for conducting further research using rigorous methodology
to validate the effectiveness of such practices.
• Schools and educators must have access to information about scientifically-based
practices and promising practices that have been validated in the settings
where they are to be implemented.
Schools and educators must be made aware of scientifically-based practices
and interventions that work in settings similar to their own. Such practices
cannot be implemented unless schools and teachers are sufficiently aware of
them. This also requires that teachers and other education personnel have
the skills, knowledge, and attitudes to implement the interventions for all
individuals. To accomplish this, schools must have a context that supports
use of these interventions as a priority through high expectations, relevant
professional development, and encouragement from local leaders and colleagues
alike. This comes about through a culture of instruction and support involving
parents, educators, related service personnel, and administrators who all
have a common focus on improving student learning.
• Students with specific learning disabilities require intensive, iterative
(recursive), explicit scientifically-based instruction that is monitored on
an on-going basis to achieve academic success.
Roundtable participants support use of scientifically-based practices for
students with SLD such as intense remediation, and instruction that is direct,
explicit, cumulative, systematic, and strategic. For example, some students
with SLD may require one-on-one tutoring or tutoring in small learning groups
with other students. Some participants specifically promote intervention using
structured language emphasis for all individuals with language-based learning
disabilities. While types of instruction and support may differ depending
on individual student needs, on-going monitoring is needed at all levels to
achieve academic success.
• Students with specific learning disabilities require a continuum
of intervention options through regular and special education across all grades
and ages.
Participants support a continuum of intervention options through regular and
special education. Depending on the student’s abilities and needs, this
can occur through accommodations, modifications, intense instruction, and
remediation. Accommodations allow a student to complete the same assignment
or test as other students, but with a change in the timing, formatting, setting,
scheduling, response, and/or presentation. The accommodation does not alter
what the test or assignment measures, but serves as a support directly related
to the student’s disability. Modification is an adjustment to an assignment
or a test that alters what the assignment or test is designed to measure.
This occurs when the reading material assigned to a student is altered or
made easier than the material assigned to other students in a regular education
class.
Accommodations and modifications are primarily concerned
with helping students access the general education curriculum. In contrast,
remediation and the development of compensatory strategies are a priority
in special education. For example, intense, structured language interventions
are employed to remediate severe reading disabilities. Participants believe
that for students with severe learning disabilities who need remediation or
compensatory strategies, accommodations and modifications are never a substitute
for these services.
• Interventions must be timely and matched to the specific learning
and behavioral needs of the student.
Interventions implemented by schools and teachers must be timely and address
the needs of their students. Students have unique learning needs and it is
imperative that interventions are relevant and responsive to these needs.
If responsive and relevant interventions are not provided in a timely fashion,
the student’s problems are likely to intensify and become more complex.
• An intervention is most effective when it is implemented consistently,
with fidelity to its design, and at a sufficient level of intensity and duration.
Roundtable participants believe interventions are most effective in helping
individual students when they are implemented consistently and at the level
of intensity and fidelity appropriate to the intervention design. Interventions
and practices will often be adapted to fit local circumstances and needs,
and this can increase ownership and responsiveness, but the integrity of the
core defining elements of an intervention must be maintained while it is put
into practice.
• Regular and special education must be coordinated as part of a coherent
system which is held accountable for the educational outcomes of students
with specific learning disabilities.
Roundtable participants recognize and value the need for regular and special
educators and related service providers to work collaboratively as part of
a coherent system in planning and delivering interventions. Coherence occurs
when there is alignment of principles defining all aspects of the system,
including instructional goals, delivery of instruction and services, assessments,
pre-service training, and professional development. All levers are pulling
together in the same direction, and reinforcing each other. Participants envision
a future where regular and special education and related service providers
know and respect each other, and depend on each other in collaborative relationships
to best serve their students within a well-aligned system. In this system,
regular and special educators and related service personnel share basic assumptions
and espouse common beliefs about teaching and learning. In turn, these shared
assumptions and beliefs are manifested in activities that can be seen, such
as a shared professional community that includes planning, team teaching and
projects, and professional development. With regular and special educators
and related service providers bringing distinct knowledge and skills into
this relationship, the strengths of each player are appreciated and used to
make the whole school or system greater than the sum of its parts.
Participants believe that holding regular and
special education entities accountable for the educational outcomes
of all students with SLD will encourage coherence, collaboration,
and joint responsibility for all individual students with SLD.
Participants believe the goals of the regular education accountability
system must reflect these priorities.
Professional Development
Roundtable participants recognize that all the best intentions
and new designs for improving the identification process and delivery of scientifically-based
interventions will fall short if the professional educators, administrators,
and related and support personnel responsible for implementing these designs
do not have the knowledge, skill, or will to implement and sustain them. The
Roundtable participants recommend changes in professional development that
will reinforce the knowledge, skills, and attitudes needed to implement critical
structures and processes, such as comprehensive evaluation, interdisciplinary
team problem-solving, quality delivery of scientifically-based interventions,
and collaboration among regular and special educators and related service
personnel. To achieve this, participants believe professional development
practices must meet recognized standards for professional development articulated
by the standards for beginning and experienced teachers and related service
providers through relevant professional groups. Standards relate to important
issues of content, process, and context. Additionally, participants raised
concerns about the need for greater coherence and alignment in the systems
that provide pre and in service training for professional educators based
on effective principles for teaching and learning.
Consensus statements related to these issues are presented and briefly described
below.
• The content of professional development must address the knowledge,
skills, and attitudes needed to increase staff and school capacity to implement
effective interventions for diverse learners.
Roundtable participants believe the content of professional development must
be driven by the knowledge and skills needed to implement high quality instruction,
and a comprehensive, coherent system that provides for accurate identification
of individuals with SLD, effective eligibility decisions, and delivery of
high quality instruction. Participants believe information from databases
on performance aligned with these needs can appropriately focus the content
of professional development on expected competencies and areas that need to
be addressed. They recommend collection and analysis of data on student learning
in a timely fashion and in a manner that maximizes use by school administrators,
teachers, and related service providers.
• Professional development must address the organizational and cultural
context needed to ensure on-going professional learning and development for
all service providers.
Participants support the concept that professional development must address
contextual issues needed to ensure that professional learning occurs and is
sustained. There is a need for an administrative commitment to developing
a positive school climate that results in increased collaboration among regular
and special educators, related service providers, administrators, staff, family,
and community; and the allocation of adequate resources necessary to ensure
continuous professional growth.
• Professional development must be structured to fit the way adults
acquire knowledge, skills, and attitudes.
Participants believe the processes used in professional development must be
structured in a way that respects the adult learner. All educators need to
be directly taught the knowledge and skills needed to implement the activities
called for in this report, including high quality instruction in regular and
special education. They also need on-going opportunities for practice, critical
feedback and sharing, observation of effective practice, and learning through
application under the guidance of a mentor and supportive professional community.
Educators need to engage in sustained study of what they teach, how they teach
it, and student results. Participants believe professional development is
not a single event, but a continuum of integrated, on-going learning opportunities.
• An on-going, coherent, integrated system of pre-service and in-service
education must be provided.
Participants expressed concern about the lack of alignment between pre- and
in- service education for professional educators, and the degree to which
these structures have not been responsive to the critical needs of students,
teachers, and other related service providers. Roundtable participants support
the concept of an integrated and coherent system of professional learning
that consistently reinforces and enhances the skills, knowledge, and attitudes
for regular and special educators, administrators, as well as related and
services personnel. Roundtable participants specifically noted that such a
system should include school-based professional development combined with
on-site induction and mentoring.
• Alignment is needed across the agencies and structures that shape
professional development and communicate what is valued and expected in schools.
Consistent with the last recommendation, Roundtable participants
recommend alignment and coherence across the entire system of
agencies and processes responsible for communicating what is valued
for professional learning. This includes, among others, accreditation
agencies, textbook publishers, certification authorities, school
districts, teacher unions, professional organizations, institutions
of higher education, standards and accountability systems, and
state and Federal law. Each of these structures and processes
sends powerful signals on what is valued for teaching and learning,
and the knowledge, skills and processes needed to accomplish this.
As part of a coherent system, participants believe articulation
of consistent goals and priorities across all relevant agencies
and entities is very important.
CONCLUSION
The consensus statements summarized in this report reflect
the critical issues and major priorities of the Learning Disabilities Roundtable.
This report will be used as a tool for working through the many issues and
activities involved in the reauthorization of IDEA and other policy initiatives
of interest to OSEP decision-makers. It should also assist the OSEP Division
of Research to Practice (RTP) in their mission to bring scientifically-based
practices and high quality instruction to individuals with SLD across the
nation. Issues such as problem-solving models, interdisciplinary problem-solving,
collaborative relationships, policy coherence, and effective professional
development represent exciting opportunities for rethinking educational processes
affecting all individual students, including individuals with SLD. The Learning
Disabilities Roundtable participants look forward to an exciting future where
new, high quality practices and approaches are responsive to the most critical
needs of individuals with SLD disabilities and their families, are used by
practitioners, and result in improved student learning and outcomes.
EXHIBIT A
Achieving Better Outcomes - Maintaining Rights:
An Approach to Identifying and Serving Students
with Specific Learning Disabilities
BACKGROUND
Following the August 2002 Learning Disabilities Summit: Building
a Foundation for the Future, The Office of Special Education Programs, U.S.
Department of Education, provided funding to the National Center for Learning
Disabilities to conduct an LD Roundtable gathering of groups that comprise
the National Joint Committee on Learning Disabilities. The goal of the Finding
Common Ground Roundtable was for key organizations in the learning disabilities
community to find a common voice on issues of greatest importance, and to
articulate recommendations for policy and systemic changes that reflect the
latest science in teaching and learning, are responsive to the realities of
personnel preparation, and can bridge the gap between research and practice
in schools and individual classrooms across the country. This background paper
was prepared for Roundtable members for information purposes and to generate
discussion.
INTRODUCTION
As the 107th Congress begins its deliberations about the
renewal and revision of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA),
the special education community is faced with a unique set of challenges and
opportunities. The unprecedented growth of the specific learning disabilities
(SLD) category, the manner in which children are identified as being eligible
for classification under the category of SLD, the types of educational services
that are provided once eligibility has been established, and the expertise
needed by educators and support personnel to ensure student learning will
all be subject to scrutiny during this period of public debate.
Through the Roundtable process, consensus was achieved regarding
the lack of scientific evidence to support an IQ-achievement discrepancy formula
as the basis for identification, classification and providing special education
and related services to students with specific learning disabilities. There
was also agreement that, the concept of discrepancy or intra-individual differences
remains a hallmark of SLD, and that new approaches are needed to capture relevant
instructional data and afford students targeted, meaningful and early instruction
to circumvent and prevent learning failure. A multi-tiered, collaborative
problem-solving approach, which incorporates early intervention, trial teaching,
progress monitoring, and a inter-disciplinary evaluation, was named as a promising
alternative.
Collaboration among regular and special education teachers
and related service providers was highlighted as an essential aspect of the
problem-solving approach recommended for consideration. Features of this approach
include:
• All students receive high quality general education using on-going
screening, progress monitoring, and assessments to design differentiated instruction
and inform decision-making. This includes identifying those children at greatest
risk for learning difficulties (e.g., children with spoken and written language
impairments).
• Targeted services are provided to specific students who fail to make
adequate progress within general education. This would involve collaborative
efforts of regular and special educators and related services personnel, especially
those already providing services to these children (e.g., speech-language
pathologists).
• Special individualized services are provided to students with intensive
needs who are not adequately responding to high quality interventions in the
first two phases of this approach.
• Students determined to be at risk for academic failure are afforded
scientifically-based general education interventions for a fixed period of
time. During the course of this intervention, their progress is evaluated
on a frequent basis using a variety of curriculum-based measures (CBM). Students
who do not display meaningful gains and who appear to be unresponsive to intervention
during this period, as measured by level of performance and rate of learning,
are candidates for referral for special education evaluation.
Participants in the Roundtable process cited evidence that
problem-solving approaches currently in use show promise as ways to improve
high quality instruction for all students. There was, however, general consensus
for the need to expand and replicate these pilots, and to explore a variety
of alternative identification approaches, as well as to propose ways to accomplish
large-scale implementation. Participants also indicated the need for studies
to determine whether this model will result in fewer students inappropriately
identified as SLD, fewer students of color inappropriately identified as SLD,
and timely identification of students who have learning disabilities.
The Issue
Despite decades of research, there remains considerable controversy
about the nature of learning disabilities. The current model for identifying,
determining eligibility, and providing services to students with SLD has served
as a good faith attempt to functionally define and operationalize programs
and services for this group of students who, by federal definition, demonstrate
unexpected underachievement in school. It has also resulted in an unshaken
commitment to guarantee and protect the rights of all students to a free and
appropriate public education. It has not, however, fully realized the promise
to reach and teach students with SLD in ways that anticipate and prevent student
failure, promote sustained student progress once intervention services are
provided, and make efficient use of fiscal and personnel resources.
The upcoming reauthorization process is an opportunity
to rethink the current “wait-to-fail” models of identification,
eligibility and service delivery, and to recommend alternative
approaches, or enhancements to current models, that address the
needs of all students who are failing to thrive academically and
socially, including those with learning disabilities.
The Challenge
While current IDEA statute allows states flexibility in how
to implement services and programs for students with SLD, it provides limited
incentives to improve upon current models of identification, determining eligibility
and service delivery, and no guidance about how more student outcome-driven
models might be structured. Core issues that need to be addressed by regular
and special education in order to better serve students include:
• over referral (and often inappropriate referral) for special education
evaluation
• limited emphasis on identification and early intervention for students
at risk for learning failure
• delay in the onset of specialized instruction and/or intervention
services
• unintentional alienation of regular and special education personnel
• inefficient use of support and pupil services personnel and related
service providers
Compounding these challenges is the troubling reality that
all too often, educators are ill- prepared to address the needs of students
with SLD. Through a combination of pre-service and in-service training, certification,
and portfolios of ongoing professional development, teachers and administrators
must embrace the need for change and work with diligence and optimism to:
• ensure that teachers and other school personnel are prepared to deliver
high quality instruction to address the needs of students with SLD, and that
they have the kinds of assistance, support and resources they need to address
the learning and emotional needs of all students
• provide systematic and systemic administrative support for interdisciplinary
collaboration at the school building and district level, and
• facilitate educators’ access to research-based strategies (and
strategies for which there is limited but convincing clinical evidence) that
are essential for building and sustaining learning environments that result
in improved student learning across the grades
A Proposed Solution
The preamble to the 1997 amendments of IDEA encourages
the use of targeted intervention as part of a comprehensive problem-solving
process to assure that students with disabilities are provided
special education services. Such an approach could simplify the
path from concern to action, calling upon parents and school personnel
to act quickly and with purpose and precision in order to address
students’ learning difficulties.
One solution being proposed is not based on a
single model, but rather reflects a service delivery approach
that guides educators to anticipate, recognize, and document students’
learning needs and to provide timely and well-targeted, effective
instruction. It is designed to encourage flexibility and collaboration
among regular and special education and related services personnel,
and reduce the lengthy cycles of school failure many students
experience before getting the help they need. This approach is
based on a multi-tiered process that improves upon current models
of special education service delivery, emphasizing effective instruction
and response to treatment rather than test scores and discrepancy
formulae as the gateway to better learning outcomes.
Incorporated into this approach are the protections and procedural
safeguards provided under IDEA, leaving open the option for parents and educators
to initiate referral for special education evaluation in instances where,
for example, intervention services are not provided in a timely manner, school
personnel lack sufficient knowledge and resources to provide research-based
intervention, or insufficient information is available to determine how best
to address a student’s particular instructional needs. It is particularly
sensitive to meeting the needs of young school-age children, and should result
in the added benefit of careful documentation and shared responsibility for
student learning, both in general and special education settings. It is expected
that these benefits will extend across the grades and throughout a student’s
K-12 academic career. This flexible, collaborative problem-solving approach
seeks to minimize the risk of students being overlooked or caught in a system
where delay in classification allows students to continue to fail to learn.
In addition, it could ensure that students identified for special education
and related services are those truly in need of specialized instruction, and
not those whose instructional needs could be adequately addressed by re-focused
regular education efforts or remedial and supplementary educational programs.
An intervention-oriented approach is compatible with features
of the current IQ-achievement discrepancy model, and seeks to improve upon
it in ways that are closely aligned with good teaching practice. Since it
is based upon the student’s response to intervention, the approach continues
to recognize unexpected underachievement at the core of the eligibility process.
Such an approach is also consistent with existing exclusionary factors, and
allows for clinical judgement to be part of the identification process.
The process of determining student eligibility for special
education services can be enhanced by the use of effective response-to-intervention
procedures. IQ test scores alone, popularly reported as part of the IQ-achievement
discrepancy formula used by most school systems, are of little value to parents
and teachers, because they lack the treatment validity necessary to inform
the teaching process. While IQ tests do not measure or predict a student’s
response to instruction, measures of neuropsychological functioning and information
processing could be included in evaluation protocols in ways that document
the areas of strength and vulnerability needed to make informed decisions
about eligibility for services. An essential characteristic of SLD is failure
to achieve at a level of expected performance based upon the student’s
other abilities. IQ testing would still be used at the discretion of interdisciplinary
evaluation teams, and may be particularly useful when questions of cognitive
level arise. In fact, when there is a question about the possibility of mental
retardation being the primary reason for lack of response to intervention,
such screening and assessment devices would need to be used to rule out this
condition.
Proponents of this approach suggest the following positive aspects:
• Decisions about students’ specific instructional needs are based
primarily on a student’s lack of responsiveness to effective instruction.
This means that a first step toward identifying students who might need special
education services is to determine whether the instructional environment is
adequately individualized, structured and supportive to facilitate learning
for all capable students.
• Targeted interventions are implemented with fidelity, and data are
collected on student performance. The effects of interventions are monitored
and decisions about types (and intensity) of ongoing instruction and support
are made for individual students at the classroom level.
• Student progress is carefully documented within clear timelines, and
response to instruction provides additional validation of students’
specific instructional needs, as well as informs decisions about how each
student could best be served by special and regular education and related
services personnel.
• Instructional interventions are formulated and implemented to ensure
that students have access to general education curricula, and to provide support
needed for mastery of literacy, learning strategies and social skills critical
for school success.
• Students in need of special education services are provided relevant
instruction and support, with ongoing collaboration among regular and special
education and related services personnel.
• Students exit special education services as soon as objective data
indicate that they have made sufficient progress to achieve independently
in the general education classroom without special education services. The
decision to end special education services does not mean that the student
no longer has a disability or that a decision to re-enter the system could
not be made at a later date. The option to retain, exit or re-enter students
would be made on an individual basis and be reflected in an IEP or transitional
IEP process.
Potential Administrative Benefits of this Approach
Models for early identification and intervention prior to
special education referral have been in operation for over 20 years. Terms
used to describe this approach have included: Teacher Assistance Team Model,
Pre-Referral Intervention Model, Mainstreaming Assistance Team Model, School-Based
Consultation Team Model, and Problem-Solving Model. Successful demonstration
projects have been implemented at individual school, school district, inter-district,
and statewide levels in various parts of the country. Anecdotal and program
evaluation data, while limited and largely unpublished, have demonstrated
the benefits of empirically-proven instructional practices in general education
classrooms , curriculum-based assessment linked to instruction , preventative
and remedial supports and consultation services in general education , data-based
problem solving implemented by intervention assistance teams and other collaborative
mechanisms , and multi-tiered systems for using response to intervention to
determine eligibility . Data from these projects and reform initiatives have
indicated such benefits as:
• increased accountability for student learning in general and special
education
• decreased numbers of students placed in high incidence special education
categories
• potential for reduction in disproportionate referrals of minority
students for special education evaluation
• reduction in the number of evaluations conducted that do not result
in either special education classification or improved learning outcomes for
students who are experiencing school failure
• improved problem solving efforts by regular education personnel
• positive reactions of participants and stakeholders
These efforts have also provided data to suggest that intervention-based
models can result in improved accountability and allocation of personnel resources
as exemplified by:
• increased time for collaboration among regular and special education
teachers, administrators and related service providers
• increased opportunities for related service providers (e.g. psychologists,
speech-language pathologists) to engage in activities that relate directly
to students’ lack of success and that support efforts to provide targeted
instruction and monitor ongoing progress
Personnel Requirements for Implementation
Questions remain about the conditions under which this service
delivery approach can be successfully implemented, and efforts need to be
made to identify the specific resources necessary to take such a model to
scale. It is clear, however, that a number of conditions will need to be met
and challenges overcome, particularly with regard to bolstering building-level
leadership and providing adequate support, resources and expertise through
expanded roles and responsibilities for all personnel involved in the educational
process. Examples include:
Building principals will need to:
• develop and oversee school-based instructional support team efforts
• provide supportive school environment that encourages collaboration
• provide ongoing, high-quality professional development to all instructional
and support personnel
• ensure adherence to timelines and cost controls
• provide caseloads and schedules that facilitate individualized instruction,
documentation of response to instruction, and collaboration among regular
and special educators, related services, and support personnel
Regular education teachers will need to:
• gain access, training, and support in the use of research-based instructional
interventions that address students’ deficits in areas such as reading,
math and written language, throughout the grades
• become proficient in the administration and scoring of progress-monitoring
procedures such as pre- and post- tests on appropriate assessments, curriculum-based
assessment measures (CBM), and other means for documenting rates of learning
and overall progress
• design and implement classroom environments that promote optimal use
of instructional time and responsive instructional techniques, collaboration
among professionals, and ongoing data collection to determine student’s
response to treatment
Special educators and related service providers (including
school psychologists and speech-language pathologists) will need to:
• access training and gain proficiency needed to assist regular educators
with activities such as selecting appropriate materials, conducting assessments,
and evaluating progress
• provide consultation regarding behavioral and instructional problems,
with decreased demand for traditional routine and repeated comprehensive assessments
• provide expertise and guidance to parents, educators and administrative
faculty as members of the school-based support team
Parents will need to:
• be apprised of information regarding specific expectations concerning
academic progress and research-based interventions (as well as strategies
that have limited convincing clinical evidence) that are most likely to contribute
to their child’s educational success
• continue to refer their children for screening or evaluation when
learning difficulties are suspected or observed
• continue to function as essential members of the school-based team
• give their signed permission prior to formal evaluation for special
education assessment or services
• continue to have participatory and approval roles in developing and
reviewing IEPs
Specific roles and responsibilities will need to be identified for other stakeholders
as well, including university faculty and state and local education agencies.
Questions, Concerns and Resources Needed to Support
this Approach
Successful projects have provided promising evidence that
response-to-treatment (or intervention-oriented) approaches to identifying
and serving students with specific learning disabilities are viable alternatives
to the current system of serving children with SLD. For this approach to be
embraced and operationalized by the education community on a large scale,
a number of questions and concerns must be addressed, resources be made available,
and activities put in place, including:
1. While data indicate that this approach results in fewer
numbers of students being referred for special education evaluation, insufficient
data are available regarding the effects of this approach upon student outcomes.
Large scale evaluations need to be conducted to determine in what ways this
approach improves system-wide change (i.e. prevalence rates), how these approaches
effect student learning, and whether student gains are sustained over time.
2. Before moving toward widespread adoption of alternative
approaches to identifying students as eligible for the specific learning disability
classification, further study is needed to clearly describe students, professional
competencies, settings, services, and interventions so the most effective
features of the alternatives can be replicated and moved into large scale
settings. Efforts should be made to identify required or optional components,
their sequence and timelines for implementation, as well as to detail the
staffing and the roles and responsibilities of different personnel. Evaluation
is also needed to address whether this approach will result in more timely
service delivery and will safeguard against it becoming another wait-to-fail
model.
3. A multi-tiered approach to serving students is sufficiently
flexible that it can be personalized to classrooms and school communities.
However, the implication of a student’s status and movement to and from
different tiers is not well understood. Clarification is needed to explain
and demonstrate how students qualify for and are provided services in each
tier of a response-to-treatment approach.
4. There needs to be a well-coordinated and sustained effort
to begin systematically implementing this approach in the early grades, and
concurrently, to studying the applicability of this approach for students
at later grade levels and in different types of school settings, in preparation
for more wide spread implementation over the next few years. Information is
also needed about specific criteria for classification and transition to and
from different levels and types of programs and supports.
5. The infrastructure needed to deliver services to students
using this approach will vary greatly, as will the effort and resources needed
to implement the necessary staff training. Considerable thought and planning
needs to be invested in understanding how such an approach can be brought
to scale in different geographic locations and in communities with unique
demographic, socioeconomic and cultural-linguistic characteristics and needs.
6. Further specificity is needed with regard to the eligibility
criteria for inclusion in the SLD category, including external factors that
might be the primary reason for underachievement.
7. Concerns have been expressed regarding the potential for
exacerbating the already difficult process of identifying students who are
both gifted and have specific learning disabilities using this approach. Further
research is needed to understand how the unique challenges presented by this
sub-set of students with special needs can be met via problem-solving models.
8. Teachers and parents continue to express concerns about
students who are functioning at lower academic levels but who do not qualify
for an SLD classification. Efforts must be made to both understand how the
needs of these students will be addressed by this approach, and how assistance
will be provided to classroom teachers so that the needs of these students
can be met.
9. Concerns have been expressed that this approach risks
diminishing specially-designed, individualized instruction for students with
SLD. The scope and purpose of special education services needs to be explicitly
defined and exemplified as part of any alternative approach for identification,
eligibility and intervention.
10. Successful implementation of this approach means that
classroom teachers will need to administer repeated measures of student progress
and interpret progress monitoring data to identify students who are not performing
commensurate with their typically-achieving peers. It also means that special
educators and related service providers will need to engage in a range of
targeted activities that assist regular educators to select and effectively
implement instructional materials and strategies that result in improved student
performance. Formal training and ongoing technical assistance and support
will be necessary for classroom teachers and related service providers to
perform these tasks with fidelity and to use performance data in ways that
inform classroom instruction.
11. States would need to be given additional incentives to
pilot or more fully implement such approaches, to document effectiveness for
students with SLD, and to identify funding sources (such as IDEA and No Child
Left Behind) and new paradigms that utilize federal, state and local dollars
for large scale implementation with integrity.
12. Success of this approach is predicated upon effective
instruction in general education classrooms and a commitment by regular educators
to a tier delivery system of instruction and support. Regular and special
education teachers and support personnel will need to be encouraged and supported
in collaborative problem-solving efforts, ongoing progress monitoring, and
in activities that provide targeted instruction for all students who experience
learning failure.
13. Pre-service education and ongoing professional development
programs need to have access to and readily promote the use of research-based
effective practices, especially in the area of early reading instruction and
behavior.
14. Concerns have been expressed that such an approach depends upon developing
and maintaining a cadre of well-qualified teachers, administrators and support
personnel. Decisions will need to be made about specific standards and competencies
for teaching and support personnel who work with students with SLD. Sufficient
funding and time will need to be allocated for ongoing professional development
and collaborative opportunities among teachers and support personnel in all
content areas and grades, as well as for administrators who shape service
delivery systems and school communities as a whole.
15. Schools will need to clarify the types of services available
to students through compensatory education and IDEA, as well as those accessed
through Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. Avenues of information must
be created so parents and educators can understand and access unique and sometimes
overlapping systems of instruction and support.
16. Procedural safeguards and parent participation must continue
to be seen as crucial to the successful implementation of an alternative approach.
Parents must continue to be recognized as full partners with schools, especially
as these approaches involve instructional and support personnel in different
ways. Parents and professionals must continue to be bound by specific requirements
that ensure mutual awareness of educational goals and outcomes, changes in
settings or support services, and adjustments in instruction and interventions.
17. Further clarification is needed to understand
how this approach will better differentiate between students across
disability categories (i.e. specific learning disabilities, mental
retardation, emotional disturbance, speech/language impaired,
other health impaired) and improve decision making about appropriate
instructional and behavioral needs and supports.
Moving Forward
The current IDEA reauthorization process has provided a unique
opportunity for members of the advocacy, teaching, research and parent communities
to come together and articulate specific thoughts about ways to improve outcomes
for students with SLD. Lawmakers and policy officials are listening for a
common voice that calls for action to be taken in several areas to more effectively
address the needs of students with SLD through the IDEA. Adequate instruction
and documentation of progress should be the cornerstone of effective education
for students with SLD, and the practical application of this approach is worthy
of careful attention as it holds great promise for overcoming some of the
barriers to success faced by the general and educational communities during
the past 25 years.
There is little doubt that IDEA reauthorization will take
place, and that the provision of special education services will be protected
under the law. What is less clear are the ways in which the benefits of our
vastly improved knowledge about teaching and research-based instruction will
be reflected in the law, regulations and practice. Our hope is that we can
contribute to a reauthorization process in ways that:
• empower educational personnel to work as co-equals, tapping their
different and complementary sets of skills for the benefit of students with
SLD
• enhance the efficiency of general and special education systems of
instruction and support
• ensure improved educational outcomes through more effective approaches
to identification, eligibility and intervention, and through more effective
professional development
In keeping with the first federal special education legislation
in 1975, the tenets of this approach are not grounded solely in research.
They also emanate from the ideals of the society in which policy change are
advocated. Progress toward better education practice begins with acknowledgement
that the current system of service delivery is not serving all students with
SLD effectively, and that current models requiring reliance on a discrepancy
between IQ and achievement can prevent students from receiving assistance
in a timely and efficient manner. There also needs to be agreement, in concept,
that better models must be created for serving the educational and behavioral
needs of students with SLD. One such approach, based on a student’s
response to effective instruction, should be considered as it is highly regarded
by researchers and policy officials as a promising alternative to current
practice.
Recommending changes to a system that provides a lifeline
of services and supports to millions of children nationwide demands extraordinary
precision and care. The willingness to challenge the status quo in the face
of this daunting reality demands not only cooperation and trust among stakeholders
but also a commitment to using both clinical judgment and data in decision
making about models for identification, eligibility, and intervention. It
further demands that we fine tune and configure policy and practice so that
our models for service delivery reflect our best knowledge about effective
instruction and how to bring these models to scale.
Selected Resources
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Center, Middletown, CT.
Chalfant, J.C., & Pysh, M.V. (1989). Teacher assistance teams: Five descriptive
studies on 96 teams. Remedial and Special Education, 10(6), 49–58.
Chalfant, J.C., Pysh, M.V.D., & Moultrie, R. (1997). Teacher assistance
teams: a model for within-building problem solving. Learning Disabilities
Quarterly, 2, 85–96.
Conway, S.J., & Kovaleski, J.F. (1998). A model for state-wide special
education reform: Pennsylvania’s Instructional Support Teams. International
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Appendix A:
CONSENSUS STATEMENTS
Nature of Specific Learning Disabilities
• The concept of Specific Learning Disabilities (SLD)
is valid, supported by strong converging evidence.
• Specific learning disabilities are neurologically
based and intrinsic to the individual.
• Individuals with SLD show intra-individual differences
in skills and abilities.
• Specific learning disabilities persist across the
life span, though manifestations and intensity may vary as a function of developmental
stage and environmental demands.
• Specific learning disabilities may occur in combination
with other disabling conditions, but they are not due to other conditions,
such as mental retardation, behavioral disturbance, lack of opportunities
to learn, primary sensory deficits, or multilingualism.
• Specific learning disabilities are evident across
ethnic, cultural, language and economic groups.
Identification
• Identification should include a student-centered,
comprehensive evaluation and problem solving approach that ensures students
who have a specific learning disability are efficiently identified.
• Regular education must assume active responsibility
for delivery of high quality instruction, research-based interventions, and
prompt identification of individuals at risk while collaborating with special
education and related services personnel.
Eligibility
• The ability-achievement discrepancy formula should
not be used for determining eligibility.
• Decisions regarding eligibility for special education
services must draw from information collected from a comprehensive individual
evaluation using multiple methods and sources of relevant information.
• Decisions on eligibility must be made through an
interdisciplinary team, using informed clinical judgment, directed by relevant
data, and based on student needs and strengths.
• Decisions on eligibility must be made in a timely
manner.
• Based on an individualized evaluation and continuous
progress monitoring, a student who has been identified as having a specific
learning disability may need different levels of special education and related
services under IDEA at various times during the school experience.
Intervention
• The field should continue to advocate for the use
of scientifically-based practices. However, in areas where an adequate research
base does not exist, data should be gathered on the success of promising practices.
• Schools and educators must have access to information
about scientifically-based practices and promising practices that have been
validated in the settings where they are to be implemented.
• Students with SLD require intensive, iterative (recursive),
explicit scientifically-based instruction that is monitored on an on-going
basis to achieve academic success.
• Students with SLD require a continuum of intervention
options through regular and special education across all grades and ages.
• Interventions must be timely and matched to the specific
learning and behavioral needs of the student.
• An intervention is most effective when it is implemented
consistently, with fidelity to its design, and at a sufficient level of intensity
and duration.
• Regular and special education must be coordinated
as part of a coherent system which is held accountable for the educational
outcomes of students with SLD.
Professional Development
• The content of professional development must address
the knowledge, skills, and attitudes needed to increase staff and school capacity
to implement effective interventions for diverse learners.
• Professional development must address the organizational
and cultural context needed to ensure on-going professional learning and development
for all service providers.
• Professional development must be structured to fit
the way adults acquire knowledge, skills, and attitudes.
• An on-going, coherent, integrated system of pre-service
and in-service education must be provided.
• Alignment is needed across the agencies and structures
that shape professional development and communicate what is valued and expected
in schools.
APPENDIX B:
PARTICIPANT LIST
Learning Disabilities Finding Common Ground
Roundtable Meeting Participants
Department of Education, Office of Special Education Programs, OSEP
Renee Bradley
Association for Higher Education and Disability, AHEAD
Christy Lendman
American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, ASHA
Stan Dublinske
Council for Learning Disabilities, CLD
Linda Elksnin
Roberta Strosnider
Council for Exceptional Children’s Division for Communicative
Disabilities and Deafness (DCDD)
Diane Paul-Brown
Council for Exceptional Children’s Division for Learning Disabilities,
DLD
Dan Hallahan
Margo Mastropieri
Hal McGrady
International Dyslexia Association, IDA
Emerson Dickman
Nancy Hennessy
Thomas Viall
International Reading Association, IRA
Cathy Roller
Learning Disabilities Association of America, LDA
Jean Lokerson
Larry Silver
Marianne Toombs
National Association of School Psychologists, NASP
Bob Lichtenstein
Mary Beth Klotz
National Center for Learning Disabilities, NCLD
Sheldon Horowitz
Laura Kaloi
Stevan Kukic
James Wendorf
See also: Learning Disability Policy Roundtable Recommendations
for the Reauthorization of the Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act (IDEA)