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Program Objectives for Educating Young Children with Special Needs (page 3)

By S.A Raver
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall
Updated on Jul 20, 2010

Intervention with Primary-Aged Students

Intervention with children with special needs in kindergarten through third grade (ages 5 through 8) is called early childhood intervention. With the parents’ permission, the child is given a multidisciplinary team evaluation to determine if he or she needs special education supports to be successful in school. The child who is deemed eligible for special education services may be served in a general education classroom, a resource room, a self-contained special education classroom, or a combination of these. Most programs for primary-aged students with disabilities in general education classrooms and resource rooms have these two broad program objectives:

  • to offer appropriate curricular and instructional modifications (e.g., less material, different expectations) and accommodations (e.g., alternative acquisition modes, such as having material read to child) so the child is able to participate in the general education curriculum (Jitendra, Edwards, Choutka, & Treadway, 2002)
  • to offer team support to the child, the child’s family, the general education teacher, and other professionals serving the child.

Programs for primary-aged children with special needs in self-contained classrooms have these three broad program objectives:

  • to foster the child’s potential in the cognitive, fine and gross motor, adaptive, social/ emotional, and communication areas.
  • to promote the child’s independence, self-determination, and self-advocacy skills.
  • to develop the child’s social and academic skills, which encourage his or her inclusion in school and community.

Programs for infants, toddlers, preschoolers, and primary-aged students may have slightly different service models depending on the state, the staffing resources, the child’s age, and the school system.

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