<p> CRITICAL SKILLS REFERENCE SHEET A skill is critical when the loss of that skill results in any of the following actions during the first 8 weeks of school:</p><p>ACTION WHAT DOES IT MEAN? 1. Placement in a more restrictive instructional 1. The student will need more time in the special education arrangement setting: more resource, more speech, more OT, etc. The loss must impact the student in such a way that an IEP meeting will be required to increase special education time.</p><p>2. A significant loss of a mastered skill necessary 2. Example: In May, the student had mastered certain for the student to progress in the general critical skills. It is now 6-8 weeks into the new school year curriculum and the student is still performing significantly below the level of mastery demonstrated in May. You have spent over 2 months going over TEKS the child appeared to have mastered in May.</p><p>3. A significant loss of self-sufficiency in self-help 3. Additional therapy or assistance is now required for the skill area student to perform self-help skills mastered at the end of the last school year. Ex: Where the students did not need as much 1:1 assistance, he needs it now.</p><p>4. A loss of access to community-based 4. Due to a regression in skills, the student no longer independent living skills instruction demonstrates skills needed to access community, no longer qualifies for the group home or independent living conditions.</p><p>5. A loss of access to on-the-job training or 5. Regression is so severe that it results in loss of on-the- productive employment job training or employment.</p><p>Aug. 2010 Critical Skills Reference Sheet – Page 2 I. Critical skills to be considered for students in PPCD, LIFE Skills or others with significant deficits: (This list is not all inclusive. Please use Page 1 of the Critical Skills Reference Sheet to assist in determining other applicable skills.) 1. Behavior: Maintaining impulse control Interacting appropriately with peers and/or adults Transitioning which may be manifested by: Ex: begin task, follow routine, stay on task 2. Communication: Communicating wants and needs on a daily basis Expressive language Receptive language 3. Self-Help: Toileting Feeding 4. Mobility: Adaptive equipment to maintain muscular control Adaptive equipment necessary to maintain mobility</p><p>II. Critical skills to be considered for students in resource or less restrictive programs: (This list is not all inclusive. Please use Page 1 of the Critical Skills Reference Sheet to assist in determining other applicable skills.) 1. Reading: Decoding – loss of more than 1 year reading level Comprehension – no longer able to obtain meaning from text 2. Writing: No longer able to communicate through written text 3. Math: Loss of basic skills needed addition, subtraction, multiplication, division Loss of one-to-one correspondence No longer able to count to complete mathematical operations No longer able to recognize and comprehend number value</p>
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