SPOT on life skills: a model life skills curriculum for middle school students with disabilities

School-based occupational therapy practitioners (OTPs) have distinct expertise in providing occupation-based interventions. OTPs are called to employ these skills to improve postsecondary outcomes (employment, independent living, postsecondary education) of students with disabilities, as a result of...

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Main Author: Curtin, Christine
Other Authors: Patel, Neeha
Language:en_US
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/38174
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-381742019-12-07T03:03:11Z SPOT on life skills: a model life skills curriculum for middle school students with disabilities Curtin, Christine Patel, Neeha Jacobs, Karen Occupational therapy School-based occupational therapy practitioners (OTPs) have distinct expertise in providing occupation-based interventions. OTPs are called to employ these skills to improve postsecondary outcomes (employment, independent living, postsecondary education) of students with disabilities, as a result of the rising rate of students with disabilities served under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA 2004) surmounting 14% of all public school students in the United States in 2017-2018, and only marginal increases in otherwise poor postschool outcomes of students with disabilities, (U.S. Department of Education, 2019; Test, et al., 2009). The domains of practice in which OTs support clients include activities of daily living, instrumental activities of daily living, rest/sleep, education, work, play, leisure, and social participation (American Occupational Therapy Association, 2014). These are all domains that are relevant to transition planning for adolescents with disabilities, however, current evidence suggests that OTs do not play a significant role in providing transition-based services to school aged youth across the United States (Mankey, 2011). Utilizing Kolb’s experiential learning theory and current research evidence, it is evident that the lack of a widely recognized life skills curriculum, lack of training on the use of occupation-based interventions, and limited use of occupation-based interventions by OTs in middle schools, are negatively impacting the life skills development of students with disabilities. In response, the author created SPOT on Life Skills, an evidence-based theory-driven model for a middle school life skills curriculum. The curriculum will be delivered by an interdisciplinary team including an occupational therapist, a special education teacher, and a speech and language pathologist, who will collaborate together and with the students and their families. The curriculum model will consist of a multifaceted intervention approach including self-care and independent living skills training, social skills training, work readiness, and a work-based experience to increase student independence and improve long-term transition outcomes (Test et al., 2009). The intention of the program, beyond exposing students to a variety of life skills, is to increase OT’s involvement in transition planning and use of occupation-based interventions in the middle school setting. It is anticipated that SPOT on Life Skills, will influence stakeholders to advocate for life skills/transition programming utilizing collaborative occupation-based practices. 2019-10-02T14:56:02Z 2019-10-02T14:56:02Z 2019 2019-09-29T01:01:28Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/38174 0000-0001-9009-8440 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Occupational therapy
spellingShingle Occupational therapy
Curtin, Christine
SPOT on life skills: a model life skills curriculum for middle school students with disabilities
description School-based occupational therapy practitioners (OTPs) have distinct expertise in providing occupation-based interventions. OTPs are called to employ these skills to improve postsecondary outcomes (employment, independent living, postsecondary education) of students with disabilities, as a result of the rising rate of students with disabilities served under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA 2004) surmounting 14% of all public school students in the United States in 2017-2018, and only marginal increases in otherwise poor postschool outcomes of students with disabilities, (U.S. Department of Education, 2019; Test, et al., 2009). The domains of practice in which OTs support clients include activities of daily living, instrumental activities of daily living, rest/sleep, education, work, play, leisure, and social participation (American Occupational Therapy Association, 2014). These are all domains that are relevant to transition planning for adolescents with disabilities, however, current evidence suggests that OTs do not play a significant role in providing transition-based services to school aged youth across the United States (Mankey, 2011). Utilizing Kolb’s experiential learning theory and current research evidence, it is evident that the lack of a widely recognized life skills curriculum, lack of training on the use of occupation-based interventions, and limited use of occupation-based interventions by OTs in middle schools, are negatively impacting the life skills development of students with disabilities. In response, the author created SPOT on Life Skills, an evidence-based theory-driven model for a middle school life skills curriculum. The curriculum will be delivered by an interdisciplinary team including an occupational therapist, a special education teacher, and a speech and language pathologist, who will collaborate together and with the students and their families. The curriculum model will consist of a multifaceted intervention approach including self-care and independent living skills training, social skills training, work readiness, and a work-based experience to increase student independence and improve long-term transition outcomes (Test et al., 2009). The intention of the program, beyond exposing students to a variety of life skills, is to increase OT’s involvement in transition planning and use of occupation-based interventions in the middle school setting. It is anticipated that SPOT on Life Skills, will influence stakeholders to advocate for life skills/transition programming utilizing collaborative occupation-based practices.
author2 Patel, Neeha
author_facet Patel, Neeha
Curtin, Christine
author Curtin, Christine
author_sort Curtin, Christine
title SPOT on life skills: a model life skills curriculum for middle school students with disabilities
title_short SPOT on life skills: a model life skills curriculum for middle school students with disabilities
title_full SPOT on life skills: a model life skills curriculum for middle school students with disabilities
title_fullStr SPOT on life skills: a model life skills curriculum for middle school students with disabilities
title_full_unstemmed SPOT on life skills: a model life skills curriculum for middle school students with disabilities
title_sort spot on life skills: a model life skills curriculum for middle school students with disabilities
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/38174
work_keys_str_mv AT curtinchristine spotonlifeskillsamodellifeskillscurriculumformiddleschoolstudentswithdisabilities
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