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+ English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes Vitaliy Shyyan, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes
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+ English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities

Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational OutcomesVitaliy Shyyan, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes

Page 2: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+What does NCEO do?

Mission: To support the development of inclusive assessment in a rapidly changing state (and

consortium) assessment system environment in order to promote improved educational results for students

with disabilities.

www.nceo.info

Page 3: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+Today’s Essential Questions Who are students with significant cognitive

disabilities?

Who are ELLs with significant cognitive disabilities?

What do we believe about students with significant cognitive disabilities related to their receptive and expressive language development?

How do we separate English language development from language development of for students with significant cognitive disabilities?

What is the difference between language and communication?

How does what we know about language systems affect the socio-cultural implications of including these learners in ESL programming?

Page 4: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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Who Are Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities?

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Page 5: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities

Represent ~1% or fewer of the total assessed population

3 primary disabilities categories are usually listed: Mental Retardation Multiple Disabilities Autism

Highly varied levels of expressive/receptive language use

Most students in the population use symbolic communication

Level of symbolic language distribution is similar across grade-bands

Most of the population read basic sight words and solve simple math problems with a calculator.

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Page 6: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities

69% likely use symbolic language (verbal or written words, signs, braille, or language-based augmentative systems) to communicate

Approximately 20% use intentional communication, e.g., consistent patterns of gestures or sounds

Approximately 10% communicate primarily through cries, facial expressions, change in muscle tone

Page 7: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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Who Are ELLs With Significant Cognitive Disabilities?

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Page 8: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+IEP Team Determined

The student is classified as ELL.

Student records indicate a disability or multiple disabilities that significantly affect the student’s intellectual functioning and adaptive behavior.

The student is or will be participating in his or her statewide alternate assessment based on alternate achievement standards.

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Page 9: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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The student has a significant cognitive disability.

A disability category or label

An IQ score

Native language, social/cultural, or economic differences

Anticipated poor performance or disruptive behavior

The student’s need for extensive, direct individualized instruction

The student’s need for substantial supports to achieve measureable gains

The student’s use of substantially adapted materials and individualized methods of accessing information

Not Determined by: Determined by:

Page 10: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+Participation of ELLs with Significant Cognitive Disabilities in ELP Assessments

Page 11: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+Federal Guidance on ELLs With Significant Cognitive Disabilities

IEP team membership

Participation in alternate ELP assessments

Provision of accommodations on a case-by-case basis

Meaningful involvement of parents

Page 12: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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How do we separate English language development from language development of students with significant cognitive disabilities?

Axel Cortes, is a twelve year old elementary bi-lingual student with autism at Idelhurst Elementary in New Hampshire.

• Axel Video http://www.ncscpartners.org/multimedia

Page 13: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+Language Language is a specific form of communication

where letters, figures, numbers, characters, gestures, or combination thereof (spoken, visual, or both) is universally accepted by a culture or sub culture to facilitate common ideas, expressions, and thoughts.

Students do not move lockstep in language development.

Language is learned by using language in all four domains: listening, speaking, reading, and writing.

Page 14: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+Communication Communication is a social event which requires sending or

receiving messages with an agreed upon sets of symbols, gestures, objects, pictures, words, sounds, movements.

Communication can be words-based, but often is not for students with cognitive delays who may not use words or more words due to the nature of their disabilities.

Because of their cognitive, social, and communicative delays, these children may have a different form of language to fulfill the function of language (to communicate) based on the individual student needs and abilities.

If the student has a language system (any type of AAC), then the student has access to the language needed to access contents and more because he/she can communicate with set of symbols, gestures, objects, pictures, words, etc., which the student uses as language. 

Page 15: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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What do we believe about students with significant cognitive disabilities related to their receptive and expressive language development?

Click icon to add picture

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Page 16: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

16+Communication Beliefs

All individuals and all behaviors (including gestures, cries, noises) communicate.

Communication is possible and identifiable for all students.

Every step toward improved communication, attention, and interaction leads to increased independence

No more fundamental outcome of education exists than the right and the ability to communicate.

Page 17: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+A Student Can Have

Symbolic Understanding and

Receptive Communication,

but not Use Symbolic Communication

EXPRESSIVELY.

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Page 18: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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What if the student does not have a dedicated communication system?

The “absence of evidence is not evidence of absence” (Donnellan, 2000).

Page 19: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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Intent + Mode (form or language system) + Listener Comprehension =

Successful Communication

Page 20: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+All Students CommunicationTeachers observe to identify

communication intent and mode/form

Communications targets (intents) are selected

Student strengths are used to establish the best form or mode of communication

Family members describe what the students like and dislike the most

The team records observations of student preferences (likes/dislikes)

Page 21: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+Expressive Levels of Communication

Symbolic level or true language use

Emerging symbolic communication: students use pictures, objects, signs to communicate a variety of intents

Pre-symbolic communication

Page 22: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+Receptive Levels of Communication

Understand simple directions without supportive cues

Understand simple directions with cues

Alerts and attends to others

Does not alert to others

Page 23: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+Non-Verbal Communication

Tone

Touch

Personal distance

Facial expressions

Gestures

Eye contact

Page 24: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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Can you guess what this gesture means in Japan?

This Japanese gesture means “angry.”

Non-Verbal Communication

Page 25: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

+ Non-Verbal CommunicationCan you guess what this gesture means in France?

This French gesture means “I do not believe you.”

Page 26: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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Can you guess what this gesture means in Iran?

This Iranian gesture is extremely obscene.

Non-Verbal Communication

Page 27: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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Can you guess what this gesture means in Nigeria and other parts of West Africa?

Rumsfeld’s gesture in Nigerian culture is also extremely obscene. It means what the extended middle finger means in America times five.

Non-Verbal Communication

Page 28: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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Acting on the presumption of competence provides students with the opportunity to learn, achieve, and ultimately become more independent.

The Least Dangerous Assumption

IS to Presume Competence!

Page 29: + English Language Development for Students With Significant Cognitive Disabilities Laurene Christensen, Ph.D., National Center on Educational Outcomes.

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[email protected]@umn.edu

Thank you!