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         Pennsylvania Disabled & Special Needs Schools:     more detail
  1. Charter Schools and Students with Special Needs: How Well Do They Mix?: An article from: Education & Treatment of Children by Mary Bailey Estes, 2000-08-01

1. KinderStart - Child Development : Special Needs Child
SUSPENSION, EXCLUSION, EXPULSION OF special needs STUDENTS Watson v. City of Cambridge (1893) The court decided that a student could be expelled for disorderly conduct or imbecility. special needs children were thus restricted from attending the public schools. The state of pennsylvania was enjoined from excluding
http://www.kinderstart.com/childdevelopment/specialneedschild
KinderStart Alta Vista Ask Jeeves Excite Google HotBot GO LookSmart Lycos Webcrawler Adoption Animal Friends Bringing Home Baby Child Development ... Child Development : Special Needs Child
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Web Pages
The following links are in English
  • A.D.D. Consults
    A.D.D. Consults offers psychoeducational services to individuals, families and professionals via private e-mail. For those who live in areas where information on Attention Deficit Disorder may be scarce.
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  • "The Misunderstood, Misdiagnosed and Unseen Disability"
    Sensory Integration Dysfunction-This paper will explain sensory integration dysfunction to the point of understanding the nature of this unseen (and often misdiagnosed) disability, as well as its psychological, emotional, learning and social effects on the individual.
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  • Abilitations Abilitations is the industries leading children's therapy and special needs catalog with product mix including movement, special education, sensory integration, adapted play and more. Add/View Comments
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  • Ability OnLine Ability OnLine is a friendly and safe computer friendship network where children and youth with disabilities or chronic illnesses connect to each other as well as to their friends, family members, caregivers and supporters.

2. Edvisors Network: K Through 12/Private Schools/Boarding Schools/Special Needs
disabled. Although most of the BSA's efforts have been directed at keeping such boys in the mainstream of Scouting, it has also recognized the special needs special schools or
http://www.edvisors.com/K_through_12/Private_Schools/Boarding_Schools/Special_Ne

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3. Voucher Programs Discriminate Against Disabled Children -- 6-9-99
Rep. Phyllis Mundy Voucher programs discriminate against disabled children Wednesday, June 9, 1999 "The disabled kids stay where they are." Anyway you cut it special needs students lose under Governor Ridges voucher proposals. disabled children. Parochial schools across the state have admitted that they do not currently accept children with special needs But in pennsylvania under Governor Ridge we will
http://www.pahouse.net/mundy/testimony/Voucher%20Remarks.htm
Rep. Phyllis Mundy Voucher programs discriminate against disabled children Wednesday, June 9, 1999 "The disabled kids stay where they are." Philadelphia Inquirer article which quotes
    "Nevertheless," Reeves said, "the Governor has no intention of meddling in the administration procedures of private schools." Reeves said that if private schools "cherry pick" the best students, leaving others unable to use their vouchers, "the disabled kids stay where they are. That doesn’t harm them."
Nonpublic schools will not be required to accept a student with a "super voucher." They can select from all the students who apply, under any criteria they choose. The Philadelphia Archdiocese acknowledged in the same article that most of their schools are not equipped to accept disabled children. Parochial schools across the state have admitted that they do not currently accept children with special needs and have no intention of doing so under a tuition voucher program. In other words, children with disabilities can be discriminated against under these voucher proposals. And according to the article the Ridge administration believes that "doesn’t harm them."

4. Group Homes, Housing, Residential Schools & Other Links
included are Alaska, Illinois, pennsylvania, and Missouri. special needs Trusts EmailList Milton Blackstone, Listowner Info on Homeownership for the disabled.
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Woods/2869/links.html
Links
The following links aren't just for autism, but rather provide information on the topics of housing, independent living for all disabled persons, special needs trusts, etc. Most of these links lead to pages outside of this website, so please bookmark this page before leaving. You can also return here by clicking on your browser's back button. Listing of a residential site or school does not constitute endorsement
    C A N A D A
  • Vancouver Island Autistic Homes Society
  • L'Arche is an international federation of communities in which people with an intellectual disability and those who chose to join them live, work and share their lives together in an atmosphere of trust, friendship, belonging and forgiveness. (Canada, Australia, Belgium and other countries worldwide) U N I T E D K I N G D O M
  • have come together to pioneer an exciting new service for people with autism. Adult Placement Services will provide caring homes for autistic people with experienced, trained and skilled Carers and families in the community.
  • Devon Cornwall Autistic Community Trust - The DCACT is a Registered Charity and a non-profit making Limited Company formed in 1982. Since that time the organisation has grown to establish itself as one of the country's (UK) leading service providers for people with Autistic Spectrum Disorders (ASD). Now with a reputation for delivering an extensive range of very high quality services to people of all ages the DCACT continues to work towards the day when all people with ASD have their individual needs met with appropriate services.

5. Allegheny County Health Department
inspected and evaluated under the State of pennsylvania School Code special educationfacilities serving disabled students have special health needs
http://trfn.clpgh.org/achd/schools.html
    Allegheny County Health Department Topic: Schools Scope:
    This category includes general safety and sanitary standards relating to schools and day-care centers; specific hazards associated with asbestos, lead, indoor air, pesticide use, playground safety, and poor building maintenance practices; and building and transportation design to promote better security and reduction of school violence. Background
    The environmental health considerations for a school are similar to institutional environments and involves: plan review; water supply and plumbing; sewage disposal; food services; toilet facilities; locker rooms; floors; walls and ceilings; vector control; lighting; safety; heating and ventilation; garbage and refuse storage; collection and disposal; and bathing places. In addition playground equipment and playing fields surroundings are areas of concern for health and safety. Children spend a high percent of their time in school and play areas. To reduce the spread of disease and provide a safe environment standards have been set. Enforcement of rules and regulations are carried out by various levels of government. Local Situation:
    Public and private schools in Allegheny County meet two needs of the residents of Allegheny County. They are the places of education where 282,183 children in kindergarten through 12th grade spend 12% (over 1,000 hours) of their time each year. These schools are inspected and evaluated under the State of Pennsylvania School Code, 25 PA Code, Chapter 171.

6. Alden Carter: Writer
it also shows a disabled child in school. Whitehall Public Library, Pittsburgh,pennsylvania. schools can offer special needs students. Kansas State
http://www.tznet.com/busn/acarterwriter/BigSchool.htm
From the creators of Big Brother Dustin Dustin'sBig School Day Join your friend Dustin on a new adventure
Home Page
Books Page Information
Page
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Can you guess who's coming? Today is the day Dave and Skippy are coming to Dustin's schooland that makes it the the biggest day ever! Join Dustin and his friends in Grant School's regular and special-education classes as they get ready to welcome their unusual guests. Dustin's Big School Day is another collaboration by writer Alden R. Carter and photographers Dan Young and Carol Carter for and about children with special needs. Big Brother Dustin , their 1997 book featuring Dustin, won wide acclaim, including an Oppenheim Toy Portfolio Gold Seal, a Sesame Street Parents Reviewer's Choice, a Children's Cooperative Book Center Choice, and a Wisconsin Library Association Outstanding Achievement Award. Recommended in Parenting Magazine Recommended in L.A. Parent Magazine Recommended by
the National Association for Down Syndrome Recommended by
The Journal of Bibliotherapy and Reading Recommended by the Southwest Wisconsin Library System Special Needs Department

"In Dustin we found what is best in all of us: kindness, generosity, gentleness, humor, enthusiasm, and joy. For us, he is proof that including 'special' children in the regular classroom benefits the education of all children."

7. PSLA, The Pennsylvania School Librarians Association
From School Profiles, 19981999, pennsylvania Department of in urban schools arelabeled special needs—learning disabled, emotionally disturbed
http://www.psla.org/misc/urbanlibrariansforum.php3

8. The Education Of Children And Youth With Special Needs: What Do The Laws Say? (N
This News Digest gives an overview of disabilityrelated laws including the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act; Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973; and the Carl D. Perkins Vocational Education Act. that guides how schools deliver special education and related services services to sick and disabled seamen. By 1912, this
http://www.nichcy.org/pubs/newsdig/nd15txt.htm
Publications Text-only Publications
The Education of Children and Youth with Special Needs: What do the Laws Say?
A publication of the National Information Center for Children and Youth with Disabilities
News Digest 15 (ND15)
Interim Update
October 1996
[Note: This publication is approximately 23 pages long when printed.]
Table of Contents

9. Education Resources For People With Disabilities, Carnegie Library Of Pittsburgh
task of working with Western pennsylvania Intermediate Units in the education ofstudents with special needs. the OCR has towards the disabled The Americans
http://www.carnegielibrary.org/subject/disabled/edu.html
Select Library Area: Article Search Ask a Librarian Branches Careers at CLP Computer Classes Directions Employment Genealogy/History Homework Help Hours Kids' Site Library Subject Guide Renew a Book Request a Book Search Subject Departments Support the Library Teens' Site Web Resource Guide
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Resource Guide:
... Disabilities
Education These are traditional, structured special education resources.
Pittsburgh Region Pennsylvania United States International See also Children with Disabilities
Pittsburgh Region
Allegheny Valley School
At multiple facilities throughout Pennsylvania they provide residential, therapeutic, educational, vocational, and social programs for individuals with mental retardation from childhood through adulthood.
Center for Creative Play
Station Square East, Pittsburgh. "A toy and technology lending library with over 1000 toys, a fully equipped computer lab, a child-friendly play area, and a parent resource center."
DePaul Institute
Where Deaf Children Learn to Speak. Located in the South Hills

10. Philadelphia Inquirer | 03/23/2002 | Funding Freeze Threatens Special Ed
the budget pinch are many parents of pennsylvania's disabled students. The disabledcommunity is economy and rising costs already had specialeducation schools
http://www.philly.com/mld/inquirer/news/front/2920101.htm
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Front Page
Montgomery County Chester County ... Philadelphia Inquirer Thursday, Apr 10, 2003
Front Page
Posted on Sat, Mar. 23, 2002 Funding freeze threatens special ed
Gov. Schweiker's budget has no increase next year for the costly schools. Some say a crisis looms for the disabled.
By Connie Langland
Inquirer Staff Writer

At the Pathway School near Norristown, sweet, diminutive Susan Kelly has found a place to flourish. She has her studies and therapy, and guidance on how to live independently with her multiple disabilities. At the HMS School in West Philadelphia, Sarah Rich has learned to navigate the hallways in her spiffy motorized wheelchair despite the limitations of cerebral palsy. Rich and Kelly are among an estimated 4,200 students - nearly one-fourth of them from Philadelphia - who attend 29 private special-education schools in Pennsylvania. Such schools are caught up in a state-funding squeeze that school leaders say has brought them to the brink of crisis. Gov. Schweiker has offered them no extra money in his 2002-03 budget plan - just $63.5 million, the same as this year. Public school districts would get only an extra 1 percent. Nineteen of the nonprofit schools - serving students with disabilities such as autism, Down syndrome, cerebral palsy, retardation, blindness, neurological disorders and severe emotional problems - are in the Philadelphia area. Costs range from at least $25,000 a year for day students to about $125,000 for residential treatment.

11. Pittsburgh Resources For People With Disabilities Or Special Needs
disabled/Handicapped/special needs Guide picks. and southwestern PA with disabilities/specialneeds. or reading disabilities throughout Western pennsylvania.
http://pittsburgh.about.com/cs/specialneeds/
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Disabled/Handicapped/Special Needs
Guide picks Jobs, transportation, education, organizations and other resources for Pittsburgh area residents with special needs.
Education for People with Special Needs

Traditional, structured special education resources for people in Pittsburgh and southwestern PA with disabilities/special needs. Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Provides access to braille, large print and audio materials, plus the equipment to play them, for eligible persons with visual, physical or reading disabilities throughout Western Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania Transportation Alliance This organization works to ensure that accessible, affordable transportation is available to all PA citizens with disabilities. Pittsburgh Office of Vocational Rehabilitation A state agency that helps people with disabilities prepare for, obtain and keep competitive employment.

12. Pittsburgh A-Z Directory - About Pittsburgh Pennsylvania And Western PA
disabled/special needs Driving Around Pittsburgh Downtown Hotels pennsylvania Lotterypennsylvania Tax Guide Suburbs Restaurants special needs/Handicapped
http://pittsburgh.about.com/library/blatoz.htm?PM=ss11_pittsburgh

13. KinderStart - Child Development : Special Needs Child : Schools/Organizations
Disabilities Programs The schools on our list are schools for Learning training, assistance,and support to parents of disabled and special needs children.
http://www.kinderstart.com/childdevelopment/specialneedschild/schoolsorganizatio
KinderStart Alta Vista Ask Jeeves Excite Google HotBot GO LookSmart Lycos Webcrawler Adoption Animal Friends Bringing Home Baby Child Development ... Special Needs Child : Schools/Organizations
Categories

Web Pages
The following links are in English

14. KidPower Links Page
Office of special Education pennsylvania special Education South and Support Christianand disabled Christian Parents of special needs Kids Circle of
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Village/9021/links.html

15. Ask Jeeves: Search Results For "Schools For Learning Disabled"
schools, day schools, Christian schools and special needs schools. http//www.petersons.com/special/5. Eagle Hill 7. Gifted But Learning disabled Gifted But
http://webster.directhit.com/webster/search.aspx?qry=Schools For Learning Disabl

16. Early Childhood Focus - News Topic: Special Needs
special needs Joan Esling's (pennsylvania) advocacy work of the history of the parents'movement to ensure rights for developmentally disabled children
http://www.earlychildhoodfocus.org/modules.php?name=News&new_topic=16

17. Pennsylvania
School districts in pennsylvania, either directly or through various to meet the needof the physically disabled student. Preschool Children with special needs.
http://www.pfcec.org/pf9301.htm
Pennsylvania's Special Education Programs for
Children with Special Needs.
Pennsylvania has long been at the forefront of educating children with special needs. State regulations guarding the educational rights of children with exceptionalities have long exceeded the minimums set by the federal government. As far back as the early 1960's Pennsylvania's State System of Higher Learning Colleges had departments specifically tailored to training special education teachers. Following this tradition, in 1991 the state made a radical departure from the types of programs offered to children and youth with exceptionalities. Gone were Learning Disabled, Mentally Retarded, and Behavior Disordered classrooms. Instead the system changed to one in which the exceptionality was de-emphasized and the supports needed were stressed. We now have support classes in which a child gets the support he or she needs to learn, regardless of his or her label
Support Classes
School districts in Pennsylvania, either directly or through various other education agencies including the state's 29 Intermediate Units, provide special education services which may be required by children with special needs. Types of programs and services are:
  • Academic Support
    Gifted Support for exceptional students identified as mentally gifted. The focus is to provide instruction beyond the regular curriculum.
  • 18. Western Pennsylvania School For Blind Children - Blue Ribbon School Press Releas
    the siblings of children with special needs and introduced lack knowledge to helptheir disabled children The Western pennsylvania School for Blind Children is
    http://www.wpsbc.org/g_news/g5_release_01.htm
    W. Pa. School for Blind Children Becomes A Blue Ribbon School FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
    The Western Pennsylvania School for Blind Children has been selected as a 2001 Blue ribbon School by the U.S. Department of Education. The Blue Ribbon designation recognizes the School for Blind Children for its excellence in leadership, teaching, curriculum, student achievement, parent involvement and community support. It is the most prestigious education award in the nation
    The School for Blind Children is the only school in the city of Pittsburgh and the only school for blind children in the nation to receive the Blue Ribbon Award this year. As a recipient, the School is unusual in that it does not fit neatly into the usual Blue Ribbon categories. For example, students at the School are not tested in traditional ways. They do not receive grades, nor pass and fail as they move from year to year. The School's curriculum was developed by its teachers and is uniquely suited to its particular group of students.
    "We are pleased that the Blue Ribbon panel saw the merits of our School," said Executive Director Janet Simon. "We feel honored by this recognition of our hard work." Approximately 40 individuals worked on a nomination package submitted to Blue Ribbon last fall. The nomination, in essence a lengthy self-assessment, focusing on every aspect of the school as it related to students. In evaluating the nomination package, the Department of Education looked for overall school quality, challenging standards, ongoing professional development by teachers and staff members, a safe and supportive school environment, and family and community partnerships.

    19. Western Pennsylvania School For Blind Children - Blue Ribbon School Press Releas
    the siblings of children with special needs and introduced lack knowledge to helptheir disabled children. The Western pennsylvania School for Blind Children
    http://www.wpsbc.org/g_news/g5_release_03.htm
    W. Pa. School for Blind Children
    To Hoist the Blue Ribbon Flag
    For More Information contact:
    Barbara Paull
    or 412/621-0100
    The Western Pennsylvania School for Blind Children will mark its status as a Blue Ribbon School with an outdoor, all-school ceremony on Friday, Nov.9. at 10:00 a.m. The School's Blue Ribbon banner will be hoisted to music from Schenley High School Jazz Quintet. Students from the School for Blind Children will be wearing their new Blue Ribbon t-shirts. The Blue Ribbon awards were presented in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 25.
    The Western Pennsylvania School for Blind Children is a private, non-profit school chartered by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Its students come from the 33 counties that comprise the western half of the state. In the 2000-01 school year, 189 students were enrolled, all of whom were visually impaired and had other serious disabilities. The School is located in the Oakland section of Pittsburgh. Although its original building was constructed in 1894, the physical plant has been modernized and expanded over the last 15 years to fully suit the needs of a disabled population of students. Following is a brief sampling from the nomination form submitted to Blue Ribbon:
    The Student Population
    The School for Blind Children is a student-centered school. Each child is viewed as a unique being with special needs for education and training. Despite the child's medical difficulties, the role of the teacher. . . is to discover the hard work and knowledge-seeking student within. The curriculum is designed to teach the skills each child will need for an active life. Class size is small-no more than eight students working with a classroom teacher and two para-educators. Instruction is on a one-to-one or small group basis.

    20. Serving The Schools Of Lackawanna, Pike, Susquehanna, Wayne, And Wyoming Countie
    s commitment to extend districtÂ’s special education capabilities that are availablefor all disabled youngsters in Northeastern pennsylvania.
    http://ns.neiu.k12.pa.us/WWW/NEIU/specialed.html
    Special Education Clarence Lamanna, Ed.D., Director
    Theresa M. Belinski, Assistant Director The Special Education Department provides services and programs to meet the needs of its twenty member school districts. These may be directly operated by the Intermediate Unit or may supplement existing district-operated special education programs. Programs directly operated by the Intermediate Unit on a fee-for-service basis include: Multi-Handicapped, Life Skills and, Learning Support, Physical Support, Autistic Support, Speech/Language, Vision, and Hearing Support, and Special Vocational Support. Supplementary services are provided to constituent school districts to enhance the delivery of special education programs. These include: Child Accounting, Physical and Occupational Therapy, Psychological Services, Supervision , Technical Assistance, CSPD Support Orientation/Mobility, Case Management, Social Work Services and Nursing Services. Programs Autistic Support Direct instructional programs that have been designed to meet the needs of students with impairment in two or more of the following areas: reciprocal social interaction, communication and imagination activity, markedly restricted repertoire of activities and interests, and abnormal or inconsistent responses to sensory stimuli.

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