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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.

  1. What are the four discussion points teams need to address when using the AEM Navigator?    

    • Does the student understand the grade-level content in the curriculum used by the other students in the district but is unable to read the print materials or use them in a "standard way"?
    • Does the student need a specialized format of his/her educational materials in order to gain meaning from them? If so, what format does the student need (Braille, large text, audio, and/or digital text)?
    • Who will be responsible for the acquisition of the AEM so that the student can receive them in a "timely manner." There are a variety of sources, free and paid for AEM, but not every source comes in all formats. Someone from the student's support team needs to be assigned to order instructional materials in the correct format to support the student's classes.
    • Does the school have the necessary supports to enable the student to use the AEM? Is additional hardware, software, apps, training, instructional strategy implementation, or other supports needed?
  2. Discuss the importance of identifying contributing factors for the student, environment, and tasks BEFORE identifying AT tools for struggling readers.    

    Best practice shows that teams need to identify contributing factors/features for the student, environment, and tasks before identifying tools. When AT decisions are tool-driven (e.g., the student needs an iPad to read documents), schools try to make the student, environment, and tasks match the technology rather than the converse. Technology abandonment occurs when there is not a good match between the what the student needs, the environmental supports, and the tasks the student needs to complete with the features of the AT. The SETT process guides the team to consider all of those other features before "jumping" to technology solutions.

  3. Can you think of students in your building/district who are print disabled, yet are not receiving AEM? What steps will you take to address this?

    Possible steps:

    1. Survey staff to identify possible students.
    2. Prioritize the students with IEP reviews due in the near future or students with significant needs.
    3. Use the AIM Navigator for new or high-priority students.
    4. Register students who qualify with state/national AMPs.
    5. Identify district staff who can procure AEM (include tech coordinator in discussions).
    6. Be certain that technology supports are in place for accessible formats.
    7. Identify a district procedure for identifying students with print disabilities and procuring AEM for them.
  4. Discuss how the SETT process for identifying the needs of students with print disabilities is different from the process you usually employ to identify assistive technology supports. What changes do you want to implement?    

    Questions to consider:

    1. Does your district have a process/policy in place for identifying and procuring AT and AEM for students with print disabilities?
      • Is the policy/procedure informal or formal?
      • What needs to happen so that all students with print disabilities receive the supports they need?
    2. What parts of the SETT process are missing from the usual process your district employs?
    3. Do you have collegial and administrative support to implement changes?
    4. Do your colleagues need training in the SETT process, acquiring AEM, identifying students with print disabilities, other?
      • What can you do to promote the training that is needed?

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

  1. Addressing Student Needs

    What are the questions you would want the team to consider for one of your students who is struggling in reading? Either make note of some questions you would explore for one of your own students or for the following student.

    Justin is a third grader who is well below grade level in reading. He doesn't like reading; only picks non-fiction picture books when he self-selects books. He doesn't like to read orally in a group setting. His teacher thinks that he is starting to demonstrate inappropriate behaviors during reading time to avoid reading activities. However, he sits quietly and attentively when the teacher reads to the class and answers questions about what the teacher read. When he has to read himself, he gives up and frequently complains that reading is "too hard." His teacher reports that he can read about half of the first-grade Dolch word list, although he does not consistently recognize the words in connected text. 

  2. Environmental Considerations

    Consider the environments of one of your struggling readers. Have you noticed a difference in reading fluency, comfort level, comprehension, etc., in one or more environments? Are there environmental changes you can affect? Is AT used for other students or has AT been abandoned/forgotten that you may want to consider?

    Using Section 6 of the WATI Student Information Guide-Reading, complete the Environmental Considerations section of the WATI AT Decision-Making Guide for your student.

Advanced Activities

  1. AT Assessments in Reading

    Select a student who is struggling with reading. Consider who should participate on the AT assessment team for that student. What information can each team member contribute to help with the AT decision-making process?     

  2. Using the WATI AT Decision Making Guide

    Using the student you selected for Question 1, complete the Student's Abilities/Difficulties, Environmental Considerations, Tasks, and Narrowing the Focus sections of the WATI AT Decision-Making Guide.

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