Easter Seals North Georgia, a Head Start grantee,
is succeeding in implementing positive behavior management
strategies for enrolled children, including children with special
needs. Approximately ten percent of the enrolled children have
special needs, ranging from mental health and behavior management
issues to speech delays and physical impairments.
Donna
Davidson, President of Easter Seals, and Diana Makombe, Head Start
Disability Specialist, have provided one-on-one training for the
classroom teachers who are serving children with special needs. This
training has enabled the staff to appropriately meet the needs of
all the children. Staff has noted that the children without
disabilities provide invaluable assistance to the children with
special needs. The stories below demonstrate the benefits and value
of inclusion.
Greg, a three-year-old who attends the Easter
Seals program, was diagnosed with autism shortly after enrollment.
Greg did not have any expressive language and had a great deal of
difficulty with his receptive language skills. He was not toilet
trained and engaged in many repetitive behaviors. Easter Seals
worked with the local education agency to develop an Individualized
Education Program (IEP) as required by the Head Start Program
Performance Standards. Greg's IEP focused on increasing his
language, self-help, and socialization skills and decreasing his
inappropriate behaviors. Staff worked closely with the school
district in planning individualized lessons for Greg and in
assessing his progress.
Like many other children at Easter
Seals, Greg now attends a special needs preschool program operated
by the public schools for two and a half hours per day. The
remainder of the day, he is in the Easter Seals Head Start Program.
Greg has made wonderful progress as a result of this
cooperative partnership. He is using single words to greet and
request. Easter Seals Head Start provides an inclusive setting that
has helped him increase his socialization skills with his peers. He
is beginning to play with the other children. He actively
participates in group activities and his repetitive behaviors have
decreased. He has also been successful in improving his self-help
skills, particularly toileting.
Eros is another success
story. Eros, who has Down Syndrome, is a bilingual, three-year-old
child attending Easter Seals and the public schools. In addition to
his developmental disabilities, Eros displayed aggressive behaviors
such as hitting, scratching, and pulling the other children in the
classroom. He often tried to leave the classroom.
Easter
Seals worked closely with the local school district to develop goals
and objectives to manage these behaviors. Eros responded to a fixed
schedule with set routines and clear expectations. Redirection to
deal with his aggressive behaviors has proven successful.
The teachers also educated the other children about Eros'
disability and taught them ways to deal with his inappropriate
behaviors, such as using redirection. His peers are important to him
and he responds to their comments. Eros is learning English and has
mastered his daily routine. He is playing very well with the other
children in the classroom and the negative behaviors have
significantly decreased.
Easter Seals, North Georgia is
thrilled to be a Head Start grantee and is leveraging its expertise
in early childhood disabilities services to benefit all children and
families enrolled in our program.
Katy Beh Neas is
Assistant Vice President at Easter Seals Head Start Program. T:
202-347-3066, E: kneas@easter-sealsdc.org.