Lake Travis - Westlake Edition | August 2022

EDUCATION

2022 EDUCATION EDITION

Eanes ISD tackles stang, grows inclusivity for special education

BY GRACE DICKENS

positions, which are harder to ll due to the pay rate of $15-$20 per hour. To supplement this problem, the district has started a new program allowing teaching assistants with a bachelor’s degree to work at the school while simultaneously pursu- ing their teaching certication. This program will support these individ- uals nancially in these academic endeavors, as well, which district leaders hope will push more people to apply, Zemo said. “We were able to move and support some of those vacancies with some other professionals that we were able to bring in. That was our biggest pain point last year,” Zemo said. “Going into this school year, we’re sitting in a pretty good space.” Special education students can have visible disabilities, such as Down syndrome, or invisible disabilities, such as dyslexia or autism, school board President John Havenstrite said. There are about 780 students served by the special education department, including students with learning disabilities, mental conditions or other disabili- ties aecting them, Zemo said. To qualify as a special education student, the disability must signi- cantly impact at least one area of a student’s life, such as breathing, moving, speaking or learning, said Molly May, assistant superintendent of curriculum, instruction and assess- ment. Students may receive special education services without ocially being part of the program due to not meeting these qualications. “You could have a student with sig- nicant anxiety who needs instruc- tion around executive functioning and needs counseling as a related service, and that student would be served under [special education], versus a student who has anxiety and they need a little extra time on a test,” May said. Catering to the needs of students with stang shortages presented obstacles for the district in 2021-22, but with several positions now lled, Zemo said he is looking forward to the new school year.

In the wake of ongoing stang shortages nationwide, Eanes ISD has continued to expand its support for special education students through all-abilities elective initiatives and talent recruitment, EISD Director of Special Education Matthew Zemo said. “We’re no dierent than any other school districts in the country; however, I do think there is a point of pride for us, our team and the work we’ve done,” Zemo said. “We’re sit- ting in a very fortunate space where we only have a couple more teacher positions to ll.” EISD lost 100 teachers throughout the 2021-22 academic year, a 14% increase since 2018-19, according to a report from the district. Of these 100 teachers, 29 were special education teachers. There were also additional vacancies unaccounted for in these numbers for unlled positions. Following a stream of constant talent searching since January, the special education department had lled around 39 of its open positions as of Aug. 8, Zemo said. Openings still remain for teaching assistant

Eanes ISD held the rst Central Texas Best Buddies Friendship Walk in May, raising $36,000 for Best Buddies. (Courtesy Eanes ISD)

All-inclusive activities In an eort to be more inclusive, the district has also taken an active approach to make extra- and co-cur- ricular activities complimenting curriculum available to all students, Havenstrite said. “We are working to create more opportunities for our physically and intellectually disadvantaged students on the extra- and co-curricular side so that they can begin participating in all the things that are available to general [education] students in those domains as well,” Havenstrite said. Some activities have already seen this integration into unied spaces, such as the Westlake Spirit team and most recently the Westlake Unied Softball team. Additional extracur- ricular activities, such as choir and theater, do not carry the “unied” label, but have long since been places of inclusion for special education students, Zemo said. The district also participates in the Best Buddies program, which pairs a disabled student with a nondis- abled student to foster inclusivity. There has been talk of including this program at the elementary level as well, Zemo said. EISD is also a Unied Champion District, which is a title given to all districts that participate in the Spe- cial Olympics. These sporting events give intellectually and physically disabled students the opportunity to compete in several sports at the local, national and international levels. But to support all EISD students within the district, programs need to be expanded, Havenstrite said.

RECRUITING STAFF With around 780 special education students, Eanes ISD has a high demand for special education providers. EISD lost several special education teachers in 2021-22 but has since lled most of those positions.

9.9% of EISD students

in special education

special education positions lled since Jan. 1 special education teachers lost in 2021-21

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IDENTIFYING SPECIAL EDUCATION STUDENTS Child Find is a process established by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act to identify students with disabilities, regardless of severity. A parent, doctor, teacher, relative or friend can begin the Child Find process, which looks for the following: • Learning or intellectual disability • Orthopedic, auditory, visual, speech or other impairment • Emotional disturbance • Autism • Traumatic brain injury • Deafness/blindness SOURCE: EANES ISDCOMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER

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SOURCE: EANES ISDCOMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER

The full integration of all extra- and co-curricular activities at EISD is going to be a long process, Haven- strite said. However, getting the accommodations in place across the district’s catalog of activities is key to being inclusive, he said. “It’s an area that I’m very excited about,” Havenstrite said. “For a long time, our [special education] students haven’t really had access to the full experience of being a Westlake High School student. We’re now breaking down those barriers and opening up opportunities.”

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LAKE TRAVIS  WESTLAKE EDITION • AUGUST 2022

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