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         Iowa Disabled & Special Needs Schools:     more detail

81. Traumatic Brain Injury Continuing Education - Parentpals.com Special Education G
Department of Education and the iowa University Affiliated to recognize and meet thespecial educational needs brain injury will be seriously disabled., Lesson;
http://www.parentpals.com/7.0continuinged/7.7tbi/tbiceu0007.html
Special Education
Continuing Education
Educating Students With Brain Injury Authors: Marilyn Lash, M.S.W., Gary Wolcott, M.Ed., and Sue Pearson, M.A. REGISTER OR RE-ENTER COURSE NOW!
COURSE DESCRIPTION
This program is offered for .1 CEUs or 1 hour of continuing professional development (Introductory Level: Professional area). Price: $29.00 This course describes and corrects common misunderstandings or "myths" about the impact and sequelae of brain injuries among children and adolescents. These inaccurate beliefs commonly present barriers to recognizing their special educational needs. An overview of changes in learning, behavior and emotions is presented with checklists of warning signs, changes to consider in the classroom and illustrative case examples. Strategies for talking with parents are given to facilitate collaborataive rather than adversarial relationships in the IEP process. This course is intended for speech and language pathologists who are involved with students with brain injuries. It is also for educators who are inexperienced in brain injury. See course outline below.

82. Section 504
Education John S. Allen University of iowa College of a). A school must ensure thata disabled child participates or are believed to need, special education or
http://www.uiowa.edu/infotech/Section504.htm

Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 In Preschool, Elementary, Secondary, and Post-Secondary Education John S. Allen University of Iowa College of Law AT Legal Project
What is Section 504? Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 was the first significant federal legislation to prohibit discrimination against individuals with disabilities. It applies to programs and entities that receive federal financial assistance. No otherwise qualified individual with a disability in the United States,..., shall, solely by reason of her or his disability, be excluded from the participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance... 29 U.S.C. § 794(a)) Who is covered by Section 504? Section 504 generally covers "qualified" persons with disabilities. The coverage of Section 504 is broader than the coverage under IDEA. Any child eligible for special education under IDEA should be covered under 504. The converse, however, is not true not all children protected by 504 are in need of or entitled to special education. Any school age child with a "disability", as defined in the law, is covered. What does Section 504 do?

83. The Interdisciplinary Council On Developmental And Learning
of Education University of Northern iowa Cedar Falls The Child with special NeedsEncouraging Intellectual and No Easy Answers The Learning disabled Child at
http://icdl.com/forparentsbyparents/law/lawcontent.htm
The Interdisciplinary Council on Developmental and Learning Disorders
Homepage Publications Membership Training ...
Council on Human Development
Law and Advocacy Organizations The Council for Disability Rights
205 W. Randolph, Suite 1650
Chicago, IL 60606
312.444.1977 (fax) The Council for Exceptional Children
See the link to the ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities and Gifted Education.
www.cec.sped.org/
Federation for Children with Special Needs
95 Berkeley Street, Suite 104
Boston, MA 02116
National Information Center for Children and Youth with Disabilities (NICHCY)
www.nichy.org
National Parent Network on Disabilities 1600 Prince St., Suite 115 Alexandria, VA 22314 703.836.1232 (fax) National Protection and Advocacy Organization www.protectionandadvocacy.com Parent Advocacy Coalition for Educational Rights (PACER Center) 4826 Chicago Ave., South Minneapolis, MN 55417 The Unicorn Children’s Foundation/ICDL 5401 NW Broken Sound Blvd Boca Raton, FL 33487

84. Therapy/Respite Camps: Kids With Autism And Other Special Needs
A page with information about summer camps for kids with special needs focus on therapy for kids with special needs and/or respite for the kids and Atlantic Coast special Educational Services provides full time, summer respite residential services
http://www.wmoore.net/therapy.html
Therapy/Respite Camps for Kids
This page evolves as people tell me about new camps, so if you know of camps that are not listed here, please email me so I can get the information posted here. If you direct a camp that would like a simple WWW page that describes your camp, I'll be pleased to put one up just email a description of the camp to me. Also, please let me know about any other WWW resources to which I should have a link. Thanks!
What's Here?
Information about summer camps that focus on therapy for kids with special needs and/or respite for the kids and their families. I have broken it into national categories and regional categories in the USA:
  • United States Apologies in advance if my sense of these regions differs from yours! I also have some links to other potentially useful pages
    Camps in the Northeast (USA)
      Connecticut
    • Camp Horizons provides winter weekend get-a-ways, a week long holiday event, and 8 weeks of residential summer camp for children and adults who are mild to moderately mentally handicapped. In South Windham, CT.
    • Camp Hemlocks , in Hebron, is a rustic, barrier-free, year-round camping facility which provides recreational, educational and social programs for children and adults with disabilities and their families.

85. Accessible Summer Recreation
Camp Courageous of iowa. Giving Luxury Auto Donations Through your donations toSpecial Kids Fund's care, camp and research for developmentally disabled and at
http://specialchildren.about.com/library/weekly/aa060599.htm
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Accessible Summer Recreation
Summer is upon us! Our children are lamenting, "They're borrrrrrrrred, they have nothing to do." The structure that many of our special children need has been replaced with the lazy days of summer. Planning family activities around the special needs of your child can at times; become mind boggling. Have you ever arrived at your destination only to find out that special accommodations are limited? One year, I took my three kids in wheelchairs to an out of state zoo. Much to our dismay, the guard rails were level with their eye gaze. What a disappointment. It doesn't have to be though, we just need to take care in planning and calling ahead
Parents and children, lament no more! Take a cruise through the list of activities, camps, and travel sites designed to accommodate our very special families. From camping to horseback riding, you'll find something to tickle your fancy.

86. Education And Research About The Disabled
concerning the education of the disabled and/or exchange programs (with a specialemphasis on of Developmental Disabilities from the iowa University Affiliated
http://www.cio.noaa.gov/hpcc/access/educate.htm
The following is a list of sites concerning the education of the disabled and/or research into disabilities. The content of this page was gleaned primarily from a couple of excellent resources elsewhere on the Internet.

87. Community Colleges
to twelve counties; all of iowa's 99 counties Community colleges also offer specialprograms for programs; supplementary services to disabled and disadvantaged
http://www.state.ia.us/educate/ccwp/cc/
Search Org Chart
Contact Info

Services
... Overview Calendar Programs Directory Documents Reports, Data ...
Education
Community Colleges Overview
Iowa has a statewide system of 15 community colleges. These public, postsecondary, two-year institutions are organized as comprehensive community colleges. Each college serves a multi-county merged area which may vary in size from four to twelve counties; all of Iowa's 99 counties are included in one of these merged areas.
Community colleges are governed by locally elected boards of directors that consist of from five to nine members who are elected for terms of three years. Each community college offers a comprehensive educational program. All Iowans of postsecondary school age are eligible to attend any of the community colleges. Community colleges also offer special programs for students who attend local secondary schools.
Community colleges have an "open-door" admission policy which guarantees Iowans an opportunity for educational assistance and career development regardless of previous educational attainment. To implement this policy, community colleges offer: assistance in developing skills necessary for success in preparatory career and college parallel programs; supplementary services to disabled and disadvantaged students; and a variety of other support services designed to help students succeed.
The community colleges offer programs in three major areas of instruction:

88. Inclusion - Legal Requirements And What They Mean To Educators
at UNI and one of five iowa administrative law to make greater efforts to mainstreamdisabled student s or so great that even a halftime special education and
http://www.uni.edu/coe/inclusion/legal/
Legal Requirements/Court Cases The most current language of the federal mandate concerning inclusive education comes from the 1997 Amendments to the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). These federal regulations include rulings that guide the regulation. The IDEA r equires that children with disabilities be educated in regular education classrooms unless "the nature and severity of the disability is such that education in the regular classes with the use of supplementary aids and services cannot be achieved satisfac torily." This means that schools have a duty to try to include students with disabilities in the regular general education classes. http://www.ed.gov/offices/OSERS/IDEA/q_and_a.html. The IDEA states:
"Each State must establish procedures to assure that, to the maximum extent appropriate, children with disabilities ... are educated with children who are not disabled, and that special education, separate schooling, or other removal of children with disa bilities from the regular educational environment occurs only when the nature or severity of the disability is such that education in regular classes with the use of supplementary aids and services cannot be achieved satisfactorily." 20 U.S.C. 1412(5)(B). Dr. Susan Etscheidt, professor of special education at UNI and one of five Iowa administrative law judges, notes that in one of the first court cases to question the legal interpretation of the 1990 IDEA the Supreme Court said no one is excluded from t his requirements; everyone is entitled to a free and appropriate public education (FAPE).

89. Senate Health, Education, Labor And Pensions Committee Reports - FCPS Government
Valerie Findley Parent, Des Moines, iowa Ms. Findley agencies providing services fordisabled children Runkel Montana State Director of special Education, Helena
http://www.fcps.k12.va.us/legupdate/help2002.htm
Last Update:07-11-02
Curator: Michael A. Molloy
Meeting Summaries
Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions
July 9, 2002
Hearing discussing the recommendations of the President's Commission on Excellence in Special Education
Testimony was heard from the Commission's Chair (Terry Branstad, former Governor of Iowa), Douglas Gill (Chair, Finance Task Force and Washington State Director of Special Education), and Douglas Huntt (Chair, Transition Task Force). The three guiding themes of the President's Commission on Excellence in Special Education final report are: 1. Focusing on results, not on process
2. Embracing a model of prevention, not a model of failure
3. Considering children with disabilities as general education children first (The full Report is available at http://www.ed.gov/inits/commissionsboards/whspecialeducation/reports/pcesefinalreport.pdf Senators were critical of the omission of mandatory full funding as a Report recommendation. The Commissioners emphasized that their recommendations were aimed at shifting the perception of special education funding away from "underfunded mandates to reimbursement for results." Commissioner Gill stated that "reimbursement of past expenses will continue past performance," and that past performance was not acceptable (based on overidentification, misidentification and graduation rates). Reform and funding are intimately linked in the Report (just as with No Child Left Behind).

90. President’s Commission On Excellence In Special Education
He is a native of Leland, iowa, and he and his that most of these children were notdisabled but merely The district’s special education rate decreased to 9
http://www.tash.org/govaffairs/spedcommission.htm
Equity, Opportunity and Inclusion for People with Disabilities since 1975. Governor Terry Branstad of Iowa - Chair Governor Branstad served four consecutive four-year terms as the chief executive of the state of Iowa. He completed his term of office in January of 1999. While in office, Governor Branstad made education a top priority of his administration. His leadership capabilities have been recognized through his chairmanship of the National Governors Association (NGA) (1989), and of the Republican Governors Association (1997), and his leadership in education is exemplified by his chairmanship of the Education Commission of the States (1998). As NGA chairman, he led the historic 1989 education summit in Charlottesville, Va. With the support of President Bush, the summit called for the development of performance-based National Education Goals. Those goals were subsequently adopted by the NGA in 1990. Governor Branstad has had careers as a farmer and an attorney and served his country with the U.S. Army from 1969-1971. He is a native of Leland, Iowa, and he and his wife, Chris, have three grown children. Adela Acosta of Maryland Steve Bartlett of Texas Steve Bartlett currently serves as president of the Financial Services Roundtable. He reorganized the membership base to include select member companies from all sectors of the financial services industry. Prior to that he was mayor of Dallas, Texas, from 1991-1995 and was a member of the United States Congress. A native Texan, Bartlett learned the value of hard work growing up on a small farm near Lockhart in south central Texas before moving to Dallas.

91. The Resource Exchange Is A Member Of The CACCB (Colorado) Providing Community Se
Parents Oodles of ADA Stuff From iowa State Keyboard and Industry For Parents ofSpecial Kids Aids to Career Info Handitel Resources for disabled and Elderly
http://www.caccb.org/resource/links.html
The Resource Exchange Links
Developmental Disabilities Services (State of Colorado) Colorado Association of Community Centered Boards Websites
Community Options Incorporated

Denver Options, Inc.

Developmental Disabilities Center

Developmental Disabilities Resource Center
...
The Opportunities for the disabled Foundation
Helps Provide Special Needs
Closing The Gap, Inc.
Applications of Microcomputer Technology for the Disabled
Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Associations

College For Living
Continuing Education for People with Mental Disabilities
The Hayden E. Smith Foundation,Inc.

National Academy for Child Development
Easter Seal Society of Washington One A.D.D. Place Attention Deficit Disorder Paulsen and Co Services for the Disabled and the Elderly A Vast Amount of ADA Legal Resources FTP Site Table of Cases Disability Laws and Regulations (ADA...) Berkeley Systems Access Software for Visually Impaired People Association for Special Kids (ASK) Index of Non-Profits Bethphage Mission for Persons with Developmental Disabilities Metroplitan Society for Crippled Children and Adults Mt. Clemens Michigan

92. Iowa State University Courses And Programs 1997-1999
iowa State University Courses and Programs 19971999. (Same as Sp Ed 457.) SeeSpecial Education. strategies for moderately and severely disabled readers.
http://www.public.iastate.edu/~catalog/9799/eled.html
Courses and Programs
97-99 Catalog Home Index of Departments Schedule of Classes General Course Info ... Graduate Courses
Elementary Education (El Ed)
El Ed 115. First Year Orientation. Cr. R. F.S. Overview of elementary education, curricular opportunities, transitions to college and community life, and university procedures. Required of all freshmen majoring in elementary education. Offered on a satisfactory-fail grading basis only. El Ed 201. Introduction to Instructional Technology. (Same as SecEd 201.) (2-2) Cr. 3. Overview of instructional technology, with an emphasis on uses in education. Instructional applications of computers for computer-based learning including tool software, interactive multimedia, use of digital video and sound, graphics, compact discs, and laser discs. Pedagogical considerations in the use of technology. Preparation of teaching materials. Laboratory work with hardware and software that facilitate teaching and learning. Materials fee. El Ed 204. Social Foundations of American Education. (Same as SecEd 204.) See

93. Professional Books
plan for gifted children from special populations, including minorities, the learningdisabled, preschoolers, the iowa Acceleration Scale Manual; A Guide for
http://www.hoagiesgifted.org/professional_books.htm
Hoagies WWW
Books for Professionals on Gifted Topics
Amazon.com, earth's biggest (discount!) bookstore. Most of the books listed are Amazon.com links; click to go to a specific title, and make your purchase immediately from the first Amazon screen to give a small percentage of your purchase proceeds to Hoagies' Gifted Education Page through Amazon's Associates program Thanks!
Abebooks, the world's largest online marketplace for used, rare, and out-of-print books. Abebooks connects those who buy books with those who sell them, providing abundant selection at affordable prices. Out of print books are often available through Abebooks; Hoagies' Gifted Education Page is also an Abebooks Associate Thanks!
Academic Acceleration of Gifted Children edited by Southern and Jones
A comprehensive textbook on acceleration, with chapters on early acceptance to kindergarten or to college, affective development of acceleration of gifted students, identification of good candidates
Applying Multiple Intelligences To Gifted Education: I'm Not Just an IQ Score!

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