Students with IEP's

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Imagine you are young teenage girl in the high school setting. You look the same as everyone else. Nothing on the outside appears to be abnormal. You want to be included and do everything else the other students are doing. However, you have this learning disability no one knows about except for you, your parents, the exceptional educator, and now your general education teachers. It’s not easy being different wanting to do everything the other students are doing. Well, this is why mainstreaming and inclusion are important for these students. They want to be successful like everyone else. They want to fit in. They want to go to the general education classes with everyone else. Leading up to this is why Individual Education Plans are important for these students to have a chance at normality. I chose to do my paper on students with Individualized Education Program’s for this fact alone. The majority of these students do not look any different from the other students. They want to be a part of the general education classroom setting. They may have mainstreaming and inclusion with IEP’s which makes the lives for these students more thriving. The main goal I have discovered in my reading of Individualized Education Program is placing the student at the center. The student is the main priority and their IEP focuses on meeting their educational needs. In reading, Inclusion and Mainstreaming I learned in the past, physically and mentally disabled children were often stricken form society and placed in separate institutions. This ended on November 29, 1975 when the Education for all Handicapped Children Act was signed. The Act required the government to provide ample funding for all handicapped children from ages 3-... ... middle of paper ... ... read aloud, dictation to scribe, assistive devices, marks in book, braille/braille writer, magnification device, computer/word processor, testing in separate room, and large print. Works Cited Curtis, S. E. (2005). Parents and litigation: Insights from a special education law clinic. 86(7), 510-514. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com.ezproxy.apollolibrary.com/docview/218517755? accountid=35812 Mastropieri, M. A., & Scruggs, T. E. (2004). The inclusive classroom strategies for effective instruction. (2nd ed., p. 4). Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Merrill. Sailor, W., & Blair, R. (2005). Rethinking inclusion: Schoolwide applications. Children And Youth - For, Education, College And Alumni, 86(7), 6. U.s. department of education. (2007, July 19). Retrieved from http://www2.ed.gov/policy/speced/leg/idea/history.html

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