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Students Get Involved! 
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A young black woman gives you a cheeky grin and looks you straight in the eye. 

There's a very simple and common sense reason why IDEA 2004 requires that students with disabilities be invited to attend every IEP meeting where postsecondary transition goals will be considered: It's their lives.

And those lives are changing. Adulthood is approaching, and with it will come a world of responsibilities and choices. Who's the primary stakeholder in that life ahead? The student. Who better to choose the path ahead, the job or the next schooling, than the student? Who better to ponder what career, what leisure pasttimes, what community participation?  Student involvement in planning ahead makes all the sense in the world.

This resource page will connect you and yours with resources you can use to involve students with disabilities in planning their own transitions into adulthood.

The Basics of Student Involvement

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Person-Centered Planning

According to the Person-Centered Planning Education Site, person-centered planning "involves the development of a 'toolbox' of methods and resources that enable people with disability labels to choose their own pathways to success; the planners simply help them to figure out where they want to go and how best to get there." As such, person-centered planning is a marvelous tool for IEP teams to use during transition planning. Explore the resources below to learn more.

 

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Materials for Students

A variety of resources speak directly to students themselves, to explain the transition planning process and the importance of participating in it. Because the resources are written for students rather than about students, their language is clear, positive, concrete, practical (often going step by step), and motivating. Turn your student loose on these!

  • Youthhood.org.
    "Childhood meets adulthood at Youthhood.org." This is a very interactive site for youth to use to start thinking about what they want to do with the rest of their lives, designed to help youth plan for the future. (Psst! Good for adults, too.)
    http://www.youthhood.org/

  • My Future My Plan. 
    This curriculum is designed to motivate and guide students with disabilities and their families as they begin early transition planning for life after high school. The curriculum package includes a videotape and discussion guide, a workbook for students, and a guide for family members and teachers. All materials are available in English and Spanish.
    http://www.ncset.org/publications/mfmp.asp
  • A student's guide to the IEP.
    From NICHCY, the student workbook comes with an audio program of students with disabilities talking about participating in developing their own IEPs, sometimes even leading the IEP meeting. (There's a separate guide and audio program for families and professionals that focuses on how to support youth with disabilities in planning and participation.)
    www.nichcy.org/InformationResources/Documents/NICHCY PUBS/st1.pdf
  • Relish is for more than hot dogs.
    That's the name of another NICHCY Student Guide, complete with audio program about young people with disabilities who followed their dreams and found their own sweet success. Their advice? Relish your dreams, delight in your talents, work to achieve who you are and who you will become.
    http://www.nichcy.org/InformationResources/Documents/NICHCY PUBS/st3.pdf  
  • More on the value of your dreams.
    Each month Open Futures introduces three people with disabilities who believed in themselves and followed their dreams. Open Futures will also lead students to resources that will help them open up their own future.
    http://www.infouse.com/openfutures/index.php  

    Youth fact sheets.
    Youth Fact Sheets are a series of six fact sheets developed and edited by youth with special health care needs. Topics include planning for technical or 4-year college, how to get supports in the workplace, how to be involved in the IEP process, and others. http://www.waisman.wisc.edu/hrtw/YFS.pdf
  • Be your own advocate.
    Visit KASA (Kids as Self Advocates), a national, grassroots network of youth with disabilities and needs (and friends), speaking out. As KASA youth say, "We are teens and young adults with disabilities speaking out. KASA knows youth can make choices and advocate for themselves if they have the information and support they need."
    http://www.fvkasa.org/index.php
  • Looking for a job? First, look inside yourself.
    "Starting with Me: A Guide to Person-Centered Planning for Job Seekers" is a career development guide to help young people with disabilities make satisfying job choices. http://www.communityinclusion.org/article.php?article_id=54&type=topic&id=11

 

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Which Transition Page Would You Like to Visit Now?


 



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NICHCY thanks our Project Officer, Dr. Judy L. Shanley, at the Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP), U.S. Department of Education.

Publication of this Web resource page is made possible through Cooperative Agreement #H326N030003 between the Academy for Educational Development and the Office of Special Education Programs of the U.S. Department of Education. The contents of this document do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Department of Education, nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.

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