Occupational Therapist (OT):
June Porter
Occupational therapy looks at the strengths,
limitations,
and potential of each child, and then helps the child reach that
potential
through therapeutic application of activity and adaptation of the
environment
to function in the community. At Chaplin Elementary school,
we
employ a COTA. She works with identified students in conjunction with
their
classroom teacher, in small groups, and/or in a one-on-one
setting. She also works with all identified and non
identified students in preschool
and kindergarten, in a large group setting, once a week, to work
on
development of fine and gross motor skills.
Physical Therapist (PT): Edie Jones
School physical therapy focuses on a child's ability
to
move as independently as possible in the school environment. The school
physical
therapist evaluates the child's ability to move throughout the school
and
to participate in classroom activities. Physical therapy
interventions
are designed to enable the student to travel throughout the school
environment;
participate in classroom activities; maintain and change positions in
the
classroom; as well as manage stairs, restrooms, and the cafeteria.
Physical
Therapists work with individual children with disabilities to improve
function,
such as gross motor skills, coordination and balance. They work
with children with disabilities as well as children with developmental
delays. Physical therapists also work with groups of children
either alone or in conjunction
with physical education teachers to improve general gross motor
skills. School systems utilize physical therapists to provide educational
programs
to student's parents and teachers in areas such as backpack choice/use
and
back health, dietary issues affecting bone health, stretching and
warm-up
for physical activity.
School Social Worker: Stephanie Partyka
Mrs. Partyka provides social work service to students
and
parents. The overall goal of social work service focuses on
increasing
student strengths, preventing problems, and decreasing problem
areas. Direct social work service is provided to students through
individual, small
group, and classroom instruction. In doing so, students will have
the
opportunity to demonstrate positive behavior change, increase
educational
achievement, develop an improved self-image, and improve
relationships. Direct social work service is provided to parents
by assisting parents in
the development of strategies for increasing positive changes in their
child.
Special Educators:
Deirdre Cilley , Donna Ecsedy
Mrs. Cilley works in classrooms as well as in
a
shared resource room with students in preschool through third
grade. Mrs. Cilley's primary teaching responsibilities include providing
specialized instruction
to children who are identified with a variety of disabilities.
She also
works with these students, as well as those who are not identified, in
the
general education setting. Additionally, Mrs. Cilley co-teaches
with
related service personnel in small groups to meet a variety of
academic, social,
behavioral, and speech/language related needs.
Mrs. Ecsedy works with students in grades four
through
six. She co-teaches reading and writing with several
teachers
as well as serving as a support teacher in other classrooms. This
inclusive
model provides students who are identified with disabilities
opportunities
to access the general education curriculum with the necessary
accommodations
and/or modifications needed to be successful. Students who are
not identified
with disabilities also benefit from this teaching approach.
Pullout
services are also provided for students requiring specialized programs
in
spelling.
Both Mrs. Ecsedy and Mrs. Cilley administer a
variety
of standardized and criterion referenced assessments as well as
curriculum-based
assessments to assist in developing goals and objectives. They
work
with the general education teachers and related service personnel in
developing
Individual Education Programs so that students with special education
identifications
can be successful with the general education curriculum.
They have sought professional development
opportunities
in the areas of inclusive schooling, mentoring new teachers, changes
with
Connecticut Mastery Testing, reading and comprehension strategies,
writing
development, and assessment. They have also provided inservice
training
for the teachers at Chaplin Elementary School with the other special
education
team members pertaining to the procedures and processes for special
education including speech and language, 504, and the Child Study Team.
Speech & Language Pathologist
(SLP): Stacey Poole
In the public school setting, a
Speech-Language
Pathologist (SLP) assesses, diagnoses and treats students with various
speech
and language disorders. Additionally, the SLP services students
with
Auditory Processing Disorders and may monitor students with hearing
issues. Speech is comprised of articulation, voice and fluency,
while language is
comprised of the expression & understanding of content
(vocabulary),
form (syntax/morphology/grammar) and social use of language.
Nowadays,
SLP's "push in" to classrooms to service students in most language
areas. Within the pre-kindergarten and kindergarten population, you may
see SLP's servicing
students during classroom center times or providing phonemic awareness
training,
along with the regular education teacher and/or reading specialist.
Also,
it is more common to see a SLP co-teaching a lesson with a regular
education
teacher or independently teaching a language-arts lesson in a regular
education
classroom containing students on his/her caseload.