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The Para-Educator in the Regular Education Classroom

The Para-Educator in the Regular Education Classroom. Pros, Cons and What to Do About Them. MYTHS ABOUT PARA-EDUCATORS. Para-educators will see that all the needs of the special ed students are met The Para is fully trained The Para receives all instruction from the special ed teacher

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The Para-Educator in the Regular Education Classroom

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  1. The Para-Educator in the Regular Education Classroom Pros, Cons and What to Do About Them

  2. MYTHS ABOUT PARA-EDUCATORS • Para-educators will see that all the needs of the special ed students are met • The Para is fully trained • The Para receives all instruction from the special ed teacher • Paras only work with special needs students • There are no restrictions on the use of paras as long as what they are being asked to do is in the interest of the student • Paras always know what to do

  3. ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES FOR THE TEACHER(BOTH REGULAR AND SPECIAL ED) AND THE PARA-EDUCATOR

  4. INSTRUCTION TEACHER PARA-EDUCATOR Work with small groups of students on specific tasks, including review or re-teaching of content Work with one student at a time to provide intensive instruction or remediation on a concept or skill • Plan all instruction including small group activities • Provide instruction in whole class settings

  5. CURRICULUM AND LESSON PLAN DEVELOPMENT TEACHER PARA-EDUCATOR Provide assistance in the development of classroom activities, retrieval of materials, and coordination of activities • Develop all lesson plans and instructional materials • Ensure alignment with standards, student needs and IEPs

  6. CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT TEACHER PARA-EDUCATOR Assist with the implementation of class-wide and individual behavior management plans Monitor hallways, study halls and other activities outside of normal class • Develop and guide class-wide management plans for behavior and classroom structures • Develop and monitor individual behavior management plans

  7. ACCOMMODATIONS AND MODIFICATIONS TEACHER PARA-EDUCATOR Guided by teacher and IEP, provide appropriate accommodations to material (enlarge print, taking notes, reading material aloud) • Determine (with IEP team) proper accommodations for students with disabilities • Incorporate accommodations into all lesson plans • Develop modified materials

  8. ASSESSMENT TEACHER PARA-EDUCATOR Assist in the administration of assessments Implement accommodations for assessment Collect anecdotal student information on a regular basis • Determine, create and administer appropriate formal and informal assessments • Determine modifications and accommodations to be used for formal assessments • Use assessment results to inform future planning and curriculum development

  9. DON’T LET THIS HAPPEN IN YOUR CLASSROOM!!!

  10. WAYS A PARA-EDUCATOR CAN HELP IN THE CLASSROOM!

  11. Creating individualized learning materials and modifying existing curriculum materials

  12. Providing remedial instruction and reinforcement of skills

  13. Administering tests individually

  14. Monitoring and providing assistance to students during seat work activities

  15. Reading aloud, reading with small groups of students or providing support during independent reading

  16. Assisting students with written activities

  17. Assisting students with organizational skills

  18. Checking for work completion, homework or the writing down of homework assignments

  19. Playing educational games

  20. Assisting with behavior modification strategies

  21. Assisting with physical needs of students: lifting, rotating, personal hygiene, feeding

  22. Documenting behaviors, keeping daily logs that can be shared with parents, case managers, or related service providers (OT, PT, Speech/Language)

  23. Inadvertent Detrimental Effects of Excessive or Unnecessary Paraprofessional ProximityCategory of Effect and Description

  24. Interference with Peer Interactions: • Paraprofessional can create physical or symbolic barriers that interfere with interactions between a student with disabilities and classmates.

  25. Unnecessary Dependence: • Student with a disability is hesitant to participate without paraprofessional direction,prompting, or cueing.

  26. Insular Relationships: • Student with a disability and paraprofessional do most everything together, to the exclusion of others (i.e., teachers and peers).

  27. Feeling Stigmatized: • Student with a disability expresses embarrassment/discomfort about having a paraprofessional; makes him or her stand out in negative ways.

  28. Limited Access to Competent Instruction: • Paraprofessionals are not necessarily skilled in providing competent instruction; some do the work for the students they support

  29. Separation from Classmates: • Student with a disability and paraprofessional are seated together in the back or side of the room, physically separated from the class.

  30. Interference with Teacher Engagement: • Teachers tend to be less involved when a student with a disability has a paraprofessional because individual attention is already available.

  31. Loss of Personal Control: • Paraprofessionals do so much for the students with disabilities that they do not exercise choices that are typical for other students.

  32. May Provoke Problem Behaviors: • Some students with disabilities express their dislike of paraprofessional support by displaying inappropriate behaviors.

  33. THE BOTTOM LINE The bottom line is that communication between the regular classroom teacher and the para-educator assigned to that classroom is key. Do not assume that the para knows what to do and how to do it. They are looking to you and to the special ed case manager to let them know what to do and how well they are doing it. A clear understanding of roles will help you, the para and the entire class.

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