Resources
Module Content
You can download a document that includes all content from the module, with the exception of videos. This resource can support your learning while completing the module or be saved for future reference.
Additional Documents
Chapter 1 - WATI Environmental Observation
WATI AT Decision-Making Guide - Math
WATI Environmental Observation Guide
Reflection Questions
The Reflection Questions document can be downloaded at any time and used in a variety of ways. You can view it before starting your work so that you know which questions will be asked in the videos and/or on the webpages. You can also access it at the end of your work so that you can see all your responses to the questions. This tool can be helpful for documenting your learning and referring to later or for sharing it with others in group discussions or as demonstration of your online progress.
Discussion Questions
The Discussion Questions provided below can supplement and extend your individual learning and be used by facilitators or coaches to prompt meaningful discussions.
-
How is AT considered in your school district for students who are struggling in math?
- It is required that every IEP team consider a student's need for AT. This means that every IEP meeting should include a brief discussion about AT and whether it is useful and needed.
- It is important that school district employees who work with students with disabilities (including general education teachers) have at least awareness-level knowledge about what AT is and what it does.
- In addition to considering what AT devices and tools may be beneficial for students, the discussion should also explore AT services.
-
Does your school district have a process for how AT assessments are completed? If not, how are decisions regarding AT devices and services made?
- Every school district should have a plan in place for providing AT assessments. The plan should include the identification of team members who can provide the expertise needed to make an informed decision regarding a student's need for AT.
- An AT assessment can occur any time during the provision of services for students with disabilities. The suggestion of the need for an AT assessment may be informal and may be brought up by any IEP team member.
- An AT assessment should include the following three areas: information gathering, decision-making, and trial use. The WATI AT assessment process incorporates the SETT framework developed by Joy Zabala (2005). The SETT framework provides an excellent tool for organizing AT decision-making. The acronym "SETT" stands for student, environment, tools, and tasks.
-
What tools does your school district use to gather information about a student with a math disability with regard to his/her abilities/difficulties, environmental considerations, and tasks that must be completed in order to be successful?
- Student Abilities/Difficulties: The WATI Student Information Guide for Mathematics is a great tool for gathering information about a student's difficulties in mathematics. The guide considers Reading Math, Organizing, and Writing and Presentation and also considers AT that has been tried and strategies that have been used.
- Environmental Considerations: The WATI Environmental Observation Guide is a document that allows teams to describe the environment, determine the amount of sensory stimulation in the environment and record it, identify persons present in the environment, and note the presence or absence of each type of AT in the specific environment.
- Tasks: The WATI Classroom Observation Guide is a tool teams can use to determine the tasks a student encounters within the classroom as well as the directions that were given and the time it took the student to complete the task. The document also identifies other students' responses, the target student's response, barriers to task completion for the target student, potential adaptations that the observer may have thought of, and questions that the observer may have for each task identified.
Activities on this page are provided at both the introductory and advanced level and can be copied and used within existing professional development or university coursework.
Introductory Activities
-
Math Is Fun Website
Math Is Fun is a free site with math explanations, illustrations, and interactive tools covering grade levels ranging from pre-kindergarten through 10th grade and up. Topics include money, numbers, data, measurement, algebra, and geometry. Visit the Math Is Fun website and find four explanations and four activities that would help a student learn math.
-
Mathematics for All Blog
The Mathematics for All blog is written by Mahesh Sharma, author, teacher, teacher trainer, and consultant to many public and private schools with a specific interest in students and adults who struggle in learning math. Go to the Mathematics for All blog and read the entry entitled Numeracy: Learning Difficulties. Define number sense and identify at least two things that can cause difficulties with numeracy.
Advanced Activities
-
Student Abilities/Difficulties
- Select a student with a math disability to assess for AT via the WATI Assessment Process.
- Complete the WATI Student Information Guide for Mathematics for the student.
- Provide the WATI Student Information Guide for Mathematics to other team members so they can complete the form.
- Collect the WATI Student Information Guide for Mathematics from team members and compare the data gathered.
-
Tasks
- Select a student with a math disability to observe in a math class.
- Observe the student and complete the WATI Classroom Observation Guide for the student.
- Review the information gathered to determine the tasks that the student struggles with.
- Meet with other members of the student's team to discuss your findings.