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TeXeS Special Ed 161 Practice Questions | 100% Correct | Verified | 2024 Version $15.49   Add to cart

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TeXeS Special Ed 161 Practice Questions | 100% Correct | Verified | 2024 Version

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  • TeXeS Special Ed 161

A new high school student is being assessed. He reads a 500 word text. He misreads 35 words. At what level is he reading? a. Instructional level. b. Independent level. c. Unsatisfactory level. d. Merit level. - A: Instructional level. In one minute, a student who reads with 95-100% accuracy is...

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  • February 20, 2024
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  • 2023/2024
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  • TeXeS Special Ed 161
  • TeXeS Special Ed 161
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TeXeS Special Ed 161 Practice Question s | 100% Correct | Verified | 2024 Version A new high school student is being assessed. He reads a 500 word text. He misreads 35 words. At what level is he reading? a. Instructional level. b. Independent level. c. Unsatisfactory level. d. Merit level. - ✔✔A: Instructional level. In one minute, a student who reads with 95 -100% accuracy is at an independent reading level. A student who reads with 90 -95% accuracy is at an Instructional level. A student who reads with less than 90%accuracy is at a frustration l evel. According to the Assistive Technology Act, assistive devices are: a. Electronic devices that support learning such as computers, calculators, student responders, electronic self-teaching books and electronic reading devices. b. Any mechanical, electrical or electronic device that helps teachers streamline efficiency. c. Any device that could help a disabled student in school or life functions. d. Experimental, high -tech teaching tools that teachers can obtain by participating in one of 67 government funded research projects. - ✔✔C: Any device that could help a disabled student in education or life functioning. The Assistive Technology Act of 1998 is the primary legislation regarding assistive technology for disabled students and adults. The act funds 56 state programs concerned wi th the assistive technology needs of individuals with disabilities. Assistive devices include wheelchairs, hearing aids, glare -reduction screens, Braille devices, voice -recognition software, screen magnifiers and a wealth of other tools. In the first week of school, a resource teacher asks her high school students to make lists of things they know how to do well. How is this activity most useful to the teacher? a. It establishes a feeling of success in her students from the start. b. It is an informal assessment of their writing skills and gives the teacher an idea of each student's interests and abilities. c. It is a formal assessment of prior knowledge. d. It invites further discussion of each student's unique contributions and will help the class bond with mutual respect. - ✔✔B: It is an informal assessment of their writing and also gives the teacher an idea of each student's interests, abilities and skills. This assignment gives the teacher an idea of her students' writing abilities at the beginning of the year. She can return to this piece of writing during the school year to assess progress. In the above example, how could the teacher use the students' lists in her lesson planning? a. On the last day of school, she can return the lists and ask the students to add the new skills they've learned, so they can see how far they've come. b. She can have the students exchange lists so they can find other students who share the same interests. c. She can use the lists when planning independent reading and research projects for each student. d. All of the above. - ✔✔D: All of the above. The writing prompt is multipurpose. The teacher can use it in a number of ways, including planning independent reading and research projects for each student, inviting students to share their writing to find others with the same intere sts and as a way of demonstrating to each student their academic growth at the end of the school year. A seventh grader with mild intellectual disabilities is having considerable trouble with algebra. His stepfather is trying to help, but the more he drills the boy, the less he seems to understand. The teacher suggests: a. He continues drilling and enhances with pop quizzes. It may take the student longer to understand algebraic terms, expressions and equations, but with hard work he will eventually learn them. b. He calls a moratorium on at -home algebra work. The student is becoming less willing to work at school and the teacher is concerned he is losing confidence due to failure at home. c. He continues drilling but breaks the study sessions into no more than 3 five -minute periods per day. d. He substitutes fun activities for math drills. Incorporating algebra blocks, math games, and applications of algebra to real -life situations will make math more fun and more relevant. - ✔✔D: He substitutes more enjoyable algebra activities for math drills. Incorporating manipulatives such as algebra blocks, math games and applications of algebra to real -life situations, will make math both more fun and more relevant. When both parent and ch ild are enjoying the work, they will accomplish morein a shorter period of time and the child will feel happy and successful, which encourages her to embrace further learning opportunities. Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) devices, forearm crutches and a head pointer are assistive devices that might be used by a student with: a. Severe intellectual disabilities. b. Cerebral palsy. c. Tourette syndrome. d. Minor skeletal birth defects. - ✔✔B: Cerebral palsy. Cerebral palsy is an umbrella term that groups neurological childhood disorders that affect muscular control. It does not worsen over time and the cause is located in damaged areas of the brain that control muscle movement. Depending upo n the severity of the disorder, a child with cerebral palsy might benefit from an AAC device to help in speaking, forearm crutches to assist in walking or a head pointer for a child whose best motor control is his head. A four year old child has difficulty sorting plastic cubes, circles and triangles by color and shape, doesn't recognize patterns or groups and doesn't understand the relationship between little/big, tall/short, many/few. The child enjoys counting, but does not say the numbers in proper order nor recognize the meaning of different numbers. This child most likely: a. Is exhibiting signs of intellectual disabilities. b. Is developing within an acceptable range. c. Has dysgraphia. d. Has dyscalculia. - ✔✔D: Dyscalculia. Dyscalculia defines a range of difficulties in math, such as the inability to understand numbers' meanings, measurements, patterns, mathematical terms and the application of mathematic principals. Early clues include a young child's inabili ty to group items by size or color, recognize patterns or understand the meaning or order of numbers. Response to Intervention (RTI) is: a. Parents, classroom teacher, special education teacher and other caring persons stage an intervention to express how a student's socially unacceptable behavior upsets them. b. An opportunity for a student to openly and freely respond to specific interventions without fear of reprimand. c. A strategy for diagnosing learning disabilities in which a student receives research -supported interventions to correct an academic delay. If the interventions do not result in considerable improvement, the failure to respond suggests causal learning di sabilities. d. A formal complaint lodged by a parent or guardian in response to what they consider an intrusion by a teacher into private matters. - ✔✔C: A strategy for diagnosing learning disabilities in which a student with an academic delay receives research -supported interventions to correct the delay. If the interventions do not result in considerable academic improvement, the failure to respond sug gests causal learning disabilities. Sixth graders Alfie and Honesty ride the same bus. Honesty constantly teases Alfie. Alfie is embarrassed because he believes she is berating him. The bus driver told their teacher it was possible that Honesty is actually interested in Alfie, but doesn't express it well. The best form of conflict resolution would be for the teacher to: a. Take Honesty aside and explain boys don't like overly aggressive girls. b. Take Honesty aside and teach her less embarrassing methods of getting a boy's attention. c. Explain to Alfie that Honesty probably teases him because she likes him and he should take it as a compliment. d. Suggest to Alfie that if he is disturbed by Honesty's teasing, he have a calm, assertive conversation with her and tell her he doesn't like it and insist she stop. - ✔✔D: Suggest to Alfie that if he is disturbed by Honesty's teasing, he might have a calm, assertive conversation with her in which he tells her he doesn't like it and insist she stop. By encouraging Alfie to act on his own, it shows him he has primary respon sibility for taking care of himself. By offering social strategies, he learns a set of skills that will serve him throughout life. If Honesty continues to tease him, he can ask a teacher to step in, but doing so without his invitation is inappropriate. A special education teacher is creating a developmental history for a high school student. She wants to know when the teen reached certain behavioral, academic and developmental milestones. She should consult: a. The student's previous teachers. This information should be in the file. b. The student. Involving him in the process will make him more interested in his progress. c. The student's doctor and therapist. These professionals know how to elicit and document this information. d. The parent or guardian because he or she has known the student from the beginning. - ✔✔D: The student's parent or guardian, who has known the student throughout his life, is the correct answer. When compiling a developmental history it's best to consult people who have had a close personal relationship with the student over his lifetime. The y are the most likely to possess the greatest amount of information regarding the student's development over time. When transitioning from one subject to another and when she becomes anxious, a student always taps her front tooth 5 times then opens and closes her eyes 11 times before leaving her desk. The child most likely has: a. Repetitive Disorder b. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder c. Anxiety Disorder

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