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School-Age Program Area

The School-Age Program Area emphasizes activities that enhance the full inclusion and support of children with disabilities in our educational systems, social environments, and communities. Activities include training for professionals and paraprofessionals in the education and health care arenas, applied research and technical assistance on policy and practice, and creation of information resources for school personnel, policymakers, other community professionals serving children, youth, and families. Particular areas of focus include standards-based reform in education in relation to students with disabilities, dropout prevention, and cross-cultural educational services and programs. 


Affiliated Centers

NCEO logoNational Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO) provides national leadership in the participation of students with disabilities in district, state, and national assessments; standards-setting efforts; and graduation requirements. It conducts research, provides technical assistance, networks funded assessment research projects, and publishes over 250 reports and other publications on a range of topics related to educational outcomes of students with disabilities. Funded by the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services and the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Martha Thurlow, 612-624-4826, thurl001@umn.edu.

logoNorth Central Regional Resource Center (NCRRC) provides technical assistance and dissemination support to state and local education agencies in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin as they seek to sustain systems change efforts that improve educational results and accountability for children and youth with disabilities and their families. Funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Maureen Hawes, 612-624-1144, hawes001@umn.edu

logoPartnership for Accessible Reading Assessment (PARA) engages in research on and development of accessible reading assessments that provide a valid demonstration of reading proficiency for increasingly diverse populations of students in our public schools, and particularly for those students who have disabilities that affect reading. Operated by a consortium consisting of the Institute's National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO); the National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing (CRESST); and Westat. Funded by the National Center for Special Education Research. Contact: Martha Thurlow, 612-624-4826, thurl001@umn.edu.

logoResearch Institute on Progress Monitoring (RIPM) engages in development of a seamless and flexible system of student progress monitoring to be used in K-12 schools across ages, abilities, and curricula. The system that results from RIPM's research will be used to evaluate the effects of individualized instruction on access to and progress in the general education curriculum for students with disabilities, resulting in improved instructional decision-making and more successful instructional programs in general education for students with disabilities. Funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Teri Wallace, 612-626-7220, ripm@umn.edu.


Current Projects

Bubel/Aiken K-12 Inclusive Service Learning Program develops a sustainable, long-term inclusive service learning program that brings together K-12 students with a wide range of abilities to participate in service learning and bridge the gap between young people with and without disabilities and the world around them. Funded by the Bubel/Aiken Foundation, and the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Brian Abery, 612-625-5592, abery001@umn.edu.

CCSSO Accommodations Monitoring Project develops materials, based on current best practices in states, for states to use to improve the monitoring of accommodations for instruction and assessment. A project of the Institute's National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO) in collaboration with the Assessing Special Education Students (ASES) State Collaborative on Assessments and Student Standards (SCASS), a 31-state group that includes state department personnel from assessment and special education. Funded by the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO). Contact: Martha Thurlow, 612-624-4826, thurl001@umn.edu.

Check & Connect: Promoting Students' Engagement with School provides training in use of the Check & Connect dropout prevention model to promote students' engagement with school, reduce dropout, and increase school completion. The Check & Connect model originated from a partnership of researchers, practitioners, parents, and students led by the Institute on Community Integration, University of Minnesota. Contact: Sandra L. Christenson (Department of Educational Psychology, University of Minnesota), 612-624-0037, chris002@umn.edu.

Cost Analysis of Designing, Validating and Implementing an Alternate Assessment Based on Modified Achievement Standards (AA-MAS) identifies and quantifies costs for various AA-MAS options. A project of the Institute’s National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO). Funded by a Faculty and Staff Research Award from the College of Education and Human Development, University of Minnesota. Contact: Sheryl Lazarus, 612-625-6032, laza0019@umn.edu.

Demonstrating Progress Monitoring for Early Identification, Accountability and Success develops, implements, and evaluates a response to intervention model to measure children’s progress toward school-readiness and academic goals in a seamless manner from preschool through elementary years for students in both special and regular education. A collaborative effort with the Minneapolis Public Schools. Funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Teri Wallace, 612-626-7220, walla001@umn.edu.

Development Techniques for Universally Designed Assessments conducts research on elements of universally-designed assessments. A project of the Institute’s National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO). Funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Martha Thurlow, 612-624-4826, thurl001@umn.edu.

Developmental Disabilities Rotation for Pediatricians coordinates several components of the developmental disabilities rotation required of all pediatric residents in the University of Minnesota Medical School, acquainting them with the design and implementation of community services for persons with disabilities. A collaboration with the University of Minnesota's KDWB/Variety Family Center. Funded by the Administration on Developmental Disabilities, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Contacts: Marijo McBride, 612-624-6830, mcbri001@umn.edu; Amy Hewitt, 612-625-1098, hewit005@umn.edu.

Georgia Enhanced Assessment Initiative explores and documents - in a consortium of states (Georgia, Hawaii, and Kentucky) - effects of multiple methods of assessments that meet identified student needs, to ensure all children are able to show what they know in the grade-level standards-based curriculum based on appropriate and high achievement standards. A project of the Institute's National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO). Funded by a subcontract from the Georgia Department of Education. Contact: Rachel Quenemoen, 612-624-9340, quene003@umn.edu

Global Resource Center for Inclusive Education assists national education agencies and non-governmental organizations around the world in the systemic improvement of education programs, practices, and policies that impact children, youth, and adults with disabilities and their families in all economic development circumstances. Contact: Christopher Johnstone, 612-626-1936, john4810@umn.edu.

Intended and Unintended Consequences of the No Child Left Behind Act for Students with Disabilities examines five areas of consequences: assessment and accountability, supplemental educational services, alternate learning environments, graduation policies and diploma options, and evidence-based practices. Funded by the U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Jim Ysseldyke (University of Minnesota Department of Educational Psychology), 612-624-4014, jim@umn.edu.

Intersecting Cultures: Where Anishinaabe Arts Overlap with Standards-Based Curriculum develops a model for embedding American Indian culture and art into K-8 standards-based arts education, language arts, math, and science curricula in two Minnesota school districts. The goal is to improve American Indian student academic performance and create a learning environment in which American Indian and non-Indian students gain basic skills within two cultures. A collaborative project with Independent School District 94 in Cloquet, Minnesota; Fond du Lac Ojibwe School on the Fond du Lac Reservation in Minnesota; and the University's Department of Curriculum and Instruction Art Education program. Funded by the Office of Innovation and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Jean Ness, 612-625-5322, nessx008@umn.edu. See more about Project Intersect on the Expanding the Circle Web site.

Limited English Proficiency IEP Strategies Project provides research-based knowledge to educators on the topic of instructional strategies that help middle school English language learners with disabilities achieve in standards-based content classrooms. A project of the Institute's National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO). Funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Kristi Liu, 612-626-9061, kline010@umn.edu

Minnesota Accommodations Project develops training and resource materials for the State of Minnesota to use to assist educational stakeholders in making decisions about accommodations for students who may need them for both instructional and assessment purposes. A project of the Institute's National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO) in collaboration with the Minnesota Department of Education. Funded by the Minnesota Department of Education. Contact: Martha Thurlow, 612-624-4826, thurl001@umn.edu.

Minnesota Paraprofessional Training Project coordinates statewide training and technical assistance for the Minnesota Paraprofessional Consortium of state agency representatives, educators, paraprofessionals, parents, and others. The goal is to build a system that prepares the paraprofessional workforce to better contribute as team members in education. Funded by the Minnesota Department of Education. Contact: Teri Wallace, 612-626-7220, walla001@umn.edu.

Multi-State GSEG Consortium Towards a Defensible Alternate Assessment Based on Modified Achievement Standards (AA-MAS) explores (a) how student data gathered by states can be used to improve student assessment and instruction for students with disabilities, (b) the intended and unintended consequences of various assessment options for students with disabilities, and (c) how the instruction and assessments of students who may qualify for an AA-MAS may need to be changed to ensure that there are high expectations for learning and that the students will have the opportunity to demonstrate what they know. A project of the Institute’s National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO) in collaboration with the Departments of Education in five states (Alabama, Hawaii, South Dakota, Tennessee, and Wisconsin). Funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Sheryl Lazarus, 612-625-6032, laza0019@umn.edu.

National Alternate Assessment Center brings together and builds on the current research base on high quality, technically sound alternate assessments based on alternate achievement standards and alternate assessments based on grade-level achievement standards. Additionally, it provides technical assistance to states as they endeavor to design or redesign their alternate assessments, and demonstrates through the center's partnerships with states high quality design and administration of alternate assessments. Based at the University of Kentucky, it operates in collaboration with the Institute on Community Integration's National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO); the University of North Carolina, Charlotte; CAST; and state partners Connecticut, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Martha Thurlow, 612-624-4826, thurl001@umn.edu.

National Study of Alternate Assessments describes the status of the development and implementation of alternate assessments that are based on alternative achievement standards for students with the most significant cognitive disabilities in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. A project of the Institute’s National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO) in partnership with SRI and with Policy Studies Associates. Funded by the National Center for Special Education Research in the Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Rachel Quenemoen, 612-624-9340, quene003@umn.edu

National Technical Assistance Center on Assessment for Children with Disabilities conducts information gathering and needs assessments, provides technical assistance, and engages in dissemination to improve results for students with disabilities by increasing their participation rates in high-quality assessment and accountability systems, improving the quality of assessments in which they participate, improving the capacity of states to meet data collection requirements, and strengthening accountability for results. Funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contacts: Martha Thurlow, 612-624-4826, thurl001@umn.edu; Rachel Quenemoen, 612-624-9340, quene003@umn.edu.

A State Consortium to Examine the Consequential Validity of Alternate Assessments Based on Alternate Achievement Standards (AA-AAS), conducts a nine-year longitudinal study to ascertain the consequential evidence of the AA-AAS used within the states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. The goal of this project is to collect and analyze data to investigate, ascertain, and inform States of the consequential evidence characteristics of their AA-AAS. Consortium members are the Institute's North Central Regional Resource Center (NCRRC) and the States of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contacts: Brian Abery, 612-625-5592, abery001@umn.edu; Erin Faasuamalie, 612-624-1145, jannx004@umn.edu.

Technology Assisted Reading Assessment (TARA) focuses on a program of research and development to improve reading assessments for students with visual impairments or blindness, examining the properties of existing assessments for these students and developing an assessment of reading with a particular focus on independent technology assisted reading. A project of the Institute's National Center on Educational Outcomes (NCEO) and the Educational Testing Service, with support from the Center for Applied Special Technology. Funded by the Office of Special Education Programs, U.S. Department of Education. Contact: Martha Thurlow, 612-624-4826, thurl001@umn.edu.

 

Project Archive

The projects in the archive have ended, but their Web sites continue to provide access to data, resources, and other information from their work.


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