Discuss the contents and podcast in Catholic Schools in your dioceses.
In the Diocese of Ft. Worth there are no special education programs offered separately from the public school system. Each school meets their own needs as far as cultural and diversity programs and many of the school offices have assistants who are fluent in English and Spanish. At my school we have several parents who speak mainly Vietnamese and the school and parish staff has a resource list of doctors and trades people who they call on to help the Vietnamese families. In school, the children are fairly fluent in English but some do have difficulty. These children are eligible for help from a Title One tutor if they qualify with low test scores.
Children with learning disabilities are identified using standardized tests as well as previous observation from their earlier teachers. Strategies that the former teacher used are documented and kept in a private folder located in the principal’s office. The Title One tutor works with some of the children once or twice a week in the areas of math and reading. Other subjects are not part of the program, however the tutor will work on social studies or religion if there is a major project that needs to be done. Most after school tutoring is done as requested by a parent and a fee is charged by the teacher. It is school policy that a teacher cannot charge a fee when tutoring their own student.
I watched the podcast entitled, “Accommodations vs. Modifications: What’s the Difference?” Schools throughout the Ft. Worth Diocese provide many accommodations for students. The classroom teacher knows which students need extra time for tests and plans accordingly. It can become difficult to find space and time to give these students the quiet areas they need in order to finish the test. At my school we have no quiet area other than the office of the vice-principal. When her office is not available we then have the child wait until recess and they finish in the classroom while others go to recess outdoors.
I do not know of many modifications (as defined by Lindy Crawford as those things that change a target skill or the construct of interest) made at our school. We generally do not accept students who would need modifications to the curriculum. Most of what we teachers think of modification would be considered” accommodated presentation of material” as defined by Crawford.