[AERNet] 19 ways to step back & paraproprofessionals
Frances Mary D'Andrea
literacy2 at mindspring.com
Sat Mar 17 11:10:31 EDT 2007
Hi, Carol, and everyone,
I'm glad you mentioned the "19 Ways" poster, which is available free
from AFB. But I also want to put in a plug for the original source of
the steps! They were originally from the book "Classroom
Collaboration" by Laurel Hudson--they are outlined on the inside
front cover of the book, and were so well written that we worked with
Laurie to put them on a poster! The book is still available from
Perkins--go www.perkins.org, and then click on the publications link
to find it. It's a nice book with suggestions for working as a team
with public school classrooms in mainstreaming children who are blind
or visually impaired, including ideas for in-services. The book is
$20 and a nice resource.
I hope the poster helps, Carol. AFB also sells a book in their "When
you Have . . . " series that is especially for classroom aides: "When
You Have a Visually Impaired Student in Your Classroom: A Guide for
Paraeducators" by Joanne Russotti and Rona Shaw. That might have some
suggestions as well. This can be a frustrating situation--especially
when someone thinks he/she is being helpful.
Off the subject a bit, but related: I'm curious to know if any of
you have seen any changes in the way paraprofessionals are used,
trained, and assessed because of NCLB. I know the provisions apply
specifically to Title I, but has there been a general "spill over"
effect to all parapros? Are school districts generally more concerned
about the training and assessing of paraprofessionals now? Or have
you not seen much difference in general?
Thanks,
--FM
On Mar 16, 2007, at 9:31 PM, Carol Evans wrote:
> This is such a wonderful list!
>
> Thanks to all who responded, on list and off, with the
> text and or websites from where it could be obtained.
>
> I called AFB and ordered the posters. My urgent need
> is for training for classroom assistants for students
> with a variety of disabilities. There are some of them
> who just do not get it, and continue to foster
> dependency. The principles in this list apply to all
> kinds of students with disabilities. I'm working as
> the school psych on a team for a child whose morning
> aide is so enmeshed that she does not see that she is
> harming his development. She is under the delusion
> that he's on grade level because he does EVERYTHING
> correctly when she is with him, and "what's wrong with
> the rest of you if he can't do it with you?" She does
> not get that she is giving him the answers.
>
> Aarrgghh! Pardon me for venting!
> Carol
>
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