60Arizona
Arizona has identified 12 percent of its student population as having special needs, which is one percentage point lower than the national average. The state also has more restrictive certification requirements than the neighbouring state of California. These two factors make finding a special education career in Arizona slightly more challenging for would-be and new teachers.260
Early Childhood Special Education261
Early Childhood Special education and related services is a state and federally mandated program for children (ages 3-5) who meet state eligibility criteria because they are experiencing developmental delays. Eligibility for children is determined by criteria that have been established by federal and state rules and regulations.
School districts and other public agencies are responsible for locating, identifying, and evaluating eligible children and offering a free and appropriate public education (FAPE). Special education and related services for preschool age is referred to as early childhood special education (ECSE). It is important to remember that special education is not a place but a system of services and supports for children with disabilities.
ECSE services are provided through federal funding under the IDEA and state general revenue funds.
Special Education Advisory Panel (SEAP)262
The Special Education Advisory Panel (SEAP) was established in accordance with IDEA 97 and updated in IDEA 2004.
State advisory panel:
In General – The State has established and maintains an advisory panel for providing policy guidance with respect to special education and related services for children with disabilities in the state.
Membership – Such advisory panel shall consist of members appointed by the Governor, or any other official authorized under State law to make such appointments, be representative of the State population, and be composed of individuals involved in, or concerned with, the education of children with disabilities, including:
Parents of children with disabilities (ages birth through 26);
Individuals with disabilities;
Teachers;
Representatives of institutions of higher education that prepare special education and related services personnel;
State and local education officials, including officials who carry out activities under subtitle B of title VII of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act;
Administrators of programs for children with disabilities;
Representatives of other State agencies involved in the financing or delivery of related services to children with disabilities;
Representatives of private schools and public charter schools;
Not less than one representative of a vocational, community, or business organization concerned with the provision of transition services to children with disabilities; and
A representative from the State child welfare agency responsible for foster care; and
Representatives from the State juvenile and adult corrections agencies.
Duties – The advisory panel shall:
Advise the State educational agency of unmet needs within the State in the education of children with disabilities;
Comment publicly on any rules or regulations proposed by the State regarding the education of children with disabilities;
Advise the State educational agency in developing evaluations and reporting on data to the Secretary under section 618;
Advise the State educational agency in developing corrective action plans to address findings identified in Federal monitoring reports under this part; and
Advise the State educational agency in developing and implementing policies relating to the coordination of services for children with disabilities.
Parent Training and Information (PTI) Center.
Raising Special Kids is Arizona's Parent Training and Information (PTI) Center. PTI Centers are established under Part D of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) under a grant from the US Department of Education; each state has at least one PTI Centre.263
Raising Special Kids provides information, training, resources, and support to families of children with disabilities and special health care needs in Arizona. Experienced staff lend an understanding ear and assist families in identifying and locating appropriate resources. Workshops offer training in a variety of skills including advocacy, effective communication and collaboration techniques.264
On October 1, 2012, the Arizona Department of Education (ADE) and Raising Special Kids began forging a partnership to strengthen and improve the delivery of parent training and assistance in special education. This partnership is committed to providing a coordinated network to help parents of children with the full range of disabilities understand their roles and responsibilities in special education.
On July 1, 2013, Raising Special Kids and the ADE Parent Information Network (PIN) merged their parent training activities to create a “one-stop shop” for parents to increase their knowledge and skills for participation and decision-making in special education. The resources formerly provided by the PIN, including documents, trainings, and the lending library, are now available through Raising Special Kids.
The July 1 merger features the following for parents, school districts and other professionals:
Statewide parent information and training on various topics to assist parents in:
Understanding the special education process
Working with professionals to understand and support their child
Learning advocacy skills to appropriately participate in meetings
Special Education resource documents on a variety of topics
A local, regional, and national disability resource directory
Access to a DVD lending library featuring special education and disability topics
Regional support teams in Northern Arizona, Central Arizona, Southern Arizona
A toll-free help line (1-888-877-5910) for parents staffed by trained and knowledgeable specialists
All information, training and support provided in English and in Spanish
Arizona Department of Education at Short Term Loan Library265
Exceptional Student Services at the Arizona Department of Education in partnership with NAU’s Arizona Technology Access Program provides a wide variety of assistive technology devices, equipment, software and professional development materials to school personnel at no cost in order to improve access to assistive technology.
The program is designed to provide short-term (4 weeks) loans of assistive technology for learning products to be used for the following purposes:
Consideration/Assessment as part of the IEP development process or IEP recommendations
Classroom implementation on a time limited basis
Serve as temporary loaner during device repair or while waiting for funding
Provide an accommodation for a student on a short-term basis
Professional development (teacher training, skill development, etc.)
This program is not intended to provide long-term use of equipment either for student specific or classroom use.
Public Education Agencies
Public education agencies (PEAs) are required by state and federal statute to provide accessible instructional materials in a timely manner to students with print disabilities. In 2006, a National Instructional Materials Accessibility Standard (NIMAS) was finalized to provide consistency in the electronic source files used to produce these accessible materials. Later that year, the National Instructional Materials Accessibility Center (NIMAC) began operations. The NIMAC is designed to aid schools in the provision of accessible materials by acting as a central repository for NIMAS files. Files are placed in the NIMAC by textbook publishers as a condition of purchase contracts for materials adopted by the PEAs. PEAs must decide to opt-in or opt-out of utilizing the NIMAC. However, choosing to opt-out does not relieve the PEA of its obligation to provide accessible instructional materials in a timely manner.
Files placed in the NIMAC may only be used to produce accessible instructional materials for students with individualized education programs (IEPs) who meet the criteria of a person with a visual impairment or print disability as defined in a 1931 federal law (2 USC. 135a; 46 Stat. 1487) commonly known as the Chaffee Amendment.
While anyone may search the NIMAC, only authorized users may request or download files. In Arizona, the Arizona Department of Education, Exceptional Student Services (ADE/ESS) is the only authorized user. Schools wishing to access a NIMAC file submit a request to ADE/ESS that then authorizes a download and assigns the file to an Accessible Media Producer for the creation of the accessible instructional material in whatever format is required.266
Web Accessibility267
The Arizona Department of Administration – Arizona Strategic Enterprise Technology Office shall develop, implement and maintain a coordinated statewide plan for information technology, including, adopting statewide technical, coordination, and IT policy and standards.
The policy focuses on providing an accessibility model in which web content authors, format designers, and software developers within State agencies understand their roles in providing persons with disabilities, access to existing and developing State web sites. The following web page designs and features for completing the accessibility model are to be addressed for all State web sites.
Graphics: Simple images; linked images; content images; graphical text; ASCII Art; list bullets; spacer images; animated graphics-text equivalent; animated graphics-frame rate.
Information in Color: Information in color and colour contrast
Moving Content: Static background color and moving text
Downloadable Files: Graphics in downloadable files and PDF files
Repetitive Content: Skipping navigation links
Data Tables: Identifying row and column headers and using SCOPE to group table cells
Multimedia: Sounds 10, speech-short clips (up to 60 seconds), speech-long clips, video-short clips (up to 10 seconds), and video-long clips
Image Maps: Image map graphics-text equivalent, client-side image map regions; and server-side image map regions.
Style Sheets: Style sheets.
Forms: Forms-label placement, forms-associating labels and controls, and forms-time responses
Scripts: Scripts-text equivalents and scripts-keyboard accessibility
Applets and Plug-Ins: Applets and plug-ins-links, applets and plug-ins-text equivalent information or functionality
Frames: Frames-labeling and frames-NOFRAMES elements
Keyboard Control: Keyboard control
Text-Only Pages: Text-only versions
Biometric Identification: Alternative identification
Equivalent Facilitation: Equivalent access
Grants and Loans Mission
To promote the development and implementation of special education through the proper allocation and distribution of federal funds. Proper funding processes ensure students with disabilities reach the highest level of achievement possible in school, the work place, and the community.
Program Description
The ESS Funding Unit distributes IDEA formula-driven, non-competitive, and discretionary, competitive grants to eligible schools throughout Arizona. The grant process is fully automated through the ADE Grants Management Enterprise system. Grants are approved, amended, and financially monitored through the automated system. There are approximately twenty grant categories and the unit processes approximately 1000 applications per year.
In addition to grants, the ESS Funding Unit manages all contracts, procurement, data collection, and budgeting for Exceptional Student Services.
Special Education Assistance to Schools269
The Section distributes formula-driven grants, focused-issue grants and state-appropriated funds. Grants are monitored through amendments, cash management reports, audits and other reporting requirements as identified in specific awards. The initiatives that support this mission are Fund Management, Guidance and Support, School-to-Adult-Life Transition, and Residential and Institutional Vouchers. Federal Entitlement Funds are formula-driven funds under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) for general special education and preschool special education to support excess costs of educating students with disabilities. Special Education Placement and Residential Education Voucher Fund: Education costs of students placed in private institutions by the Department of Economic Security, Department of Corrections, Department of Juvenile Corrections, Department of Health Services and Juvenile Courts, as provided by A.R.S. 15-1182, Laws 1990, Chapter 164. Special Education Institutional Voucher Fund: Education costs of students attending the Arizona School for the Deaf and the Blind (ASDB), children hospitalized in the Arizona State Hospital (ASH) and children in developmentally disabled programs operated by the Department of Health Services, in accordance with A.R.S., 15-1202. Extended School Year: Additional funds to schools to provide extended school-year programs for disabled students as provided by A.R.S. 15-881. Residential Placement Training and Residential Emergency Fund for use when the Department of Economic Security of Department of Health Services lacks funds to place students as per Laws 1991, Ch. 173. Supplemental Additional IDEA: Funds to schools that are experiencing rapid growth in the population of preschools children with disabilities, or that are initiating or expanding services in order to comply with state and federal statues relating to preschool special education.
Empowerment Assistance Program
The Empowerment Scholarship Account (ESA) program was originally created by Arizona State Legislature to expand educational opportunities for special needs students. The program has subsequently been expanded to include students of an active duty military parent, students who are in foster care or who have been adopted, and for students attending “D or F” schools. Since the program was created by the legislative process, state law governs and houses its rules and regulations.270
Minimum Qualifications for the 2015-2016 School Year271
Reside in the state of Arizona and
Meet one of the following (not applicable for military applicants):
Enrolled in an Arizona public school full time for the first 100 days of the 2014-2015 school year OR
Public school includes online public schools and charter schools
Received a School Tuition Organization (STO) scholarship for Displaced and Disabled students for the 2014-2015 school year OR
Eligible for Kindergarten
Student will be 5 but not 6 years old on or before September 1, 2015
and be identified in one of the approved student populations:
A child with a disability
A child who is a ward of the juvenile court and is residing in prospective permanent placement foster care
A child who is a ward of the juvenile court and who achieved permanency through adoption
A child who is the sibling of a current ESA recipient
A child who attended a public school assigned a letter grade of “D” or “F” for the first 100 days of the 2014-2015 school year
Children eligible for Kindergarten must reside within the boundary of a failing school
A child with an active duty military parent
A student that is eligible for preschool AND is identified as a child with special needs by the public school; must have a current IEP or MET
Post-Secondary Education Case Studies University of Arizona272
The requirements for admission to the University of Arizona are the same for all students. Two campus resources for students with disabilities are the Disability Resource Center and the Strategic Alternative Learning Techniques (S.A.L.T.) Centre.
Disability Resource Centre
The University is committed to equal working and learning opportunities for disabled students, faculty, and staff and recognizes that accommodations or modifications may be necessary to ensure access. The mission of the Disability Resource Centre is to equalize the educational opportunities for students and provide support services for students, faculty, and staff with disabilities. The program is designed to promote full inclusion and participation in the educational experience and campus life. The Disability Resource Centre is the designated office that reviews disability documentation, certifies eligibility for services, determines reasonable accommodations, and provides or arranges for reasonable accommodations.
Other services and programs provided by the center include information/referral, problem-solving/support, Sign Language interpreters, test accommodations, alternate print formats, adaptive technology, adaptive athletics/recreation, and wheelchair/equipment repair. Training and technical assistance are also provided to the campus community.
Strategic Alternative Learning Techniques (S.A.L.T.) Centre
The S.A.L.T. Centre provides services designed to maximize the educational experience of students with specific learning disabilities and attention deficit disorders. This department provides educational support services using specially trained professional staff to guide students, teach learning and compensatory strategies, and monitor academic progress. Admission to the S.A.L.T. Centre is by application only. A fee is charged for all S.A.L.T. services.
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