IEP Archives - Teach Special Education https://www.teachspecialeducation.com/tag/iep/ A Website Just for Special Education Teachers Sat, 10 Apr 2021 17:58:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.4 How to Write SMART IEP Goals https://www.teachspecialeducation.com/how-to-write-smart-iep-goals/ https://www.teachspecialeducation.com/how-to-write-smart-iep-goals/#respond Sat, 23 Jun 2018 09:51:51 +0000 http://www.teachspecialeducation.com/?p=322 One of the major tasks that we have as special educators is writing Individualized Education Programs, or IEPs.  A major component of the IEP is the statement of annual goals and objectives.  The goal statement is basically the  destination that you want the student to get to within the year and the services that you ...

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One of the major tasks that we have as special educators is writing Individualized Education Programs, or IEPs.  A major component of the IEP is the statement of annual goals and objectives.  The goal statement is basically the  destination that you want the student to get to within the year and the services that you put into place should support these annual goals. 

Creating a quality goal with correctly scaffolded objectives can take a lot of time and effort, so I want to show you one way in which you can break down this process into a series of manageable steps.   But before we dive into how exactly to go about writing goals and objectives, first let’s look at how IEP goals are defined by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act:

(II) a statement of measurable annual goals, including academic and functional goals, designed to–

(aa) meet the child’s needs that result from the child’s disability to enable the child to be involved in and make progress in the general education curriculum; and

(bb) meet each of the child’s other educational needs that result from the child’s disability

When creating academic goals for students, it is important to ground the goals in the grade level content standards. This provides students with access to grade level curriculum as stated above.  For many districts who are working with the Common Core State Standards, it is also important to base grade level goals on how students are functioning within relation to these grade level content standards.  

 

Step 1. Identify the Standards that Meet the Student’s Needs

The first step in this process involves identifying the standard(s) that should be addressed.  You can start by identifying the grade level standards for the student. These standards have already broken out by grade level and have been organized by domain within this document.

By reviewing the student’s Present Levels of Academic Achievement and Functional Performance, you can determine which standards the students may have the most difficulty with. Additional data sources can be utilized to assist with identifying standards that the student needs focus on.

Teachers should then prioritize the standards based on those that would have the greatest impact on the student’s progress towards grade level.   For math, one consideration could be around the mathematics content at the student’s current grade level. Major content in the area of mathematics is defined as the major work for the grade level, which means that these are the areas in which teachers will spend most of their time throughout the year.  

 

Special educators can choose to focus on these areas when creating IEP goals since we know that these are areas that will be focused on heavily during day-to-day instruction. To learn more about this please follow this link: https://achievethecore.org/content/upload/Focus_in_Math_06.12.2013.pdf

 

For English Language Arts, you want to really think about the standards that are going to support your student in being a successful, lifelong reader.  For each student that will be different based on individual need, but major standards that come to mind as being high leverage are those that focus on main idea and details, using evidence from a text, and writing an argument.  

 

Also, many times we need to think about how to leverage basic phonics and writing mechanics skills that many of our students may require support with.

 

Step 2. Set Performance Target

The next step would be to set the performance target. You can utilized the Present Levels of Academic Achievement and Functional Performance in order to determine the baseline performance, historical rate of growth/progress, accommodations, and necessary supports needed to make the grade level content accessible for the student.

 

By deconstructing the standard and determining which components will promote student success, a individualized performance target can then be set.  

 

For example, in math,  you may want to see a student demonstrate success through completion of a teacher generated worksheet with 80% accuracy over the course of 4 to 5 trials.

 

Step 3. Develop a SMART IEP Goal.

Special education teachers should ensure that they are keeping in mind what the acronym SMART stands for when developing goals:

 

S – Specific: The goal is focused by content (i.e. the standards) and the learner’s individual needs.

M – Measurable: Performance target is clearly stated and an appropriate measure is selected to assess the goal.

A – Attainable: Based on the student profile, it is determined that they have the ability to meet the performance target.

R – Relevant: Relevant to the individual student’s needs.

T – Time-bound: The goal is achievable within the time frame of the IEP.

Step 4. Develop SMART Objectives aligned to the selected IEP Goal.

There are three ways in which you can develop scaffolded objectives:

  1. Sequential benchmarks that demonstrate increasing fluency, independence, or accuracy

  2. Components of the goal

  3. Prerequisite skills

I prefer to develop objectives utilizing specific skills or components of the grade level, standards-based goal.  I find that by breaking down the content into workable chunks, I can develop lessons over a period of time that builds up to a grade level standard.  

 

When reviewing general education curriculum, one can see that teachers are rarely tasked with tackling an entire standard within one lesson. To expect a special education student to tackle an entire standard in one goal or objective is also pretty unrealistic.   

 

At times, it may be necessary to create scaffolded objectives to provide students with prerequisite skills from the current or previous grade levels that support the standard that the grade level goal was based on.  The data may indicate that many of your students need the standards deconstructed in this way, in order for them to be successful in meeting the grade level standards-based goal that has been developed.

 

When  following the steps listed above, I was able to create the following IEP goal for a third grade student:

 

By____ when given a teacher generated problem set, manipulatives, and a prompt, Student will interpret whole number quotients of whole numbers by drawing a picture and describing a context that indicates the partitioning of a total number objects into equal shares as measured by 80% accuracy on at least 4 out of 5 trials.

 

When really unpacking the standard and digging into the content, I decided that I would create four scaffolded objectives that would support the student in meeting their grade level goal:

 

By____ when given a teacher generated problem set, manipulatives, and a prompt, Student will interpret whole number quotients of whole numbers by drawing a picture and describing a context that indicates the partitioning of a total number objects into equal shares as measured by 80% accuracy on at least 4 out of 5 trials.

By____, when given a teacher generated problem set and a prompt, Student will interpret whole-number quotients as the number of objects in each group when partitioned into equal groups by drawing a picture and providing an explanation with 80% accuracy on at least 4 out of 5 trials.

By_____, when given a teacher generated problem set, manipulatives, and a prompt, Student will represent a situation with a division expression with 80% accuracy on at least 4 out of 5 trials.

By ____, when given a teacher generated problem set, manipulatives, and a prompt, Student will represent a division expression with a situation by drawing a picture and providing an explanation with 80% accuracy on at least 4 out of 5 trials.

 

When I really think about the deconstructed standard and review student weaknesses,  I may find that instead of breaking this standard out by the grade level content covered, I may need to include another goal that supports prerequisite skills that I will address prior to going into this standard. 

 

When considering the example above, we have to ask ourselves, is the student ready for division even with the supports included in the goals and objectives? Would it make more sense for me to attack addition, subtraction, and multiplication first?  

 

This is where the individualization comes into play and where you really have to be strategic in how you write the annual goal.   Every IEP goal should be specific to the individual, but it helps to have a process to follow to make creating these goals a bit easier.  

 

To save even more time, please visit my TPT store where you can find hundreds of prewritten IEP goals for Common Core English Language Arts and Math.

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