Early Childhood Special Education CurriculumThe preschool special education curriculum is a developmentally based program designed to develop thinking, language, social-emotional, and physical skills in preschool children. This program uses appropriate materials and experiences that challenge children to develop and use capacities that are emerging at their particular developmental stages. The Creative Curriculum for Early Childhood is used as the curricular guide. The program makes extensive use of speech and language, occupational, and physical therapists, adapted physical education teachers, nurses, and parent facilitators, as well as other specialists with expertise in specific types of disabilities. The instructional design, as designated on the student's IEP, balances a diagnostic/corrective intervention with an experiential interactive approach. Prerequisite skills necessary for success in kindergarten or other appropriate learning environments are emphasized: attentiveness, language and speech development, visual and auditory perception necessary for recognition and discrimination, fine and gross motor skills, socialization, and self-help. Progress is reported through systems of direct contact with parents: home visits, telephone calls, communication booklets, and the IEP process. Major OutcomesStudents will:
The preschool curriculum is available from the Early Childhood Special Education (ECSE) Program offices at:
Whittier Center, |