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Creating a Successful Transition From Teenager in School to Young Adult in the Workplace

Creating a Successful Transition From Teenager in School to Young Adult in the Workplace
Cara Koscinski, MOT, OTR/L
January 19, 2016
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IDEA, IEPs and Civil Rights Laws

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act or IDEA was very critical to making sure that kids with special needs received services. It passed in 1990 to ensure people with disabilities received a free and appropriate education. There was also an amendment to it. A good place to review that is through Wrightslaw. Wrightslaw has really good resources and have lawyers on call to help families.

If you are going to be working on IEPs for school transition, it is important for you to know the background about this law and how is it implemented in different school districts. Transition services are going to depend on the amount of money that a school district has. For example, in my area in South Carolina, there is not a lot of money. North Charleston is one of the biggest cities in our state. However, their financial resources for these kids transitioning are extremely low.  In constrast, there are a lot of districts that have a lot of money. One school in which I work has resources for kids that want to do functional things like cooking. It has many classes, beyond "Home Ec" types of classes, that kids can enter so that they can work on skills to maintain gainful employment after transition. IDEA is going to require that kids with a disability obtain services.

This design has to be unique. Of course like an IEP must be unique to each individual, the transition plan must be unique. This can be hard as a lot of parents do not understand that an IEP must be unique. This law guarantees the equal access for these kids to resources that can help them overcome obstacles that interfere with their ability to gain employment.

A 504 plan is simply a civil rights law. Usually in an IEP, there are a list of accommodations. That list of accommodations is generally the 504 plan. If you are looking at a 504 plan alone, that is just a list of accommodations. However, when we put it in an IEP, we are adding goals that we can measure. This is part of a civil rights issue and it qualifies for everyone. Even after transition at age 22, the student will still qualify for a 504 plan. There is a website that I will talk about it later called JAN, or Job Accommodation Network. It will give a punch list of disabilities and tell you the accommodations in which you can qualify.

 

cara koscinski

Cara Koscinski, MOT, OTR/L

Pediatric occupational therapist, Cara Koscinski, MOT, OTR/L, author of The Pocket Occupational Therapist Book Series, is a veteran clinician specializing in Sensory Processing Disorder, reflex integration, and trauma informed care, and autism. She obtained her Master of Occupational Therapy degree in 1997 from Duquesne University. In addition to her longstanding work as a private practice OT, Cara is a successful entrepreneur, having started two companies. Her products can be found in special needs catalogues and websites across the US and UK. Cara’s latest venture is The Pocket Occupational Therapist Book Series. As an author, Cara brings her expertise as a pediatric occupational therapist and mother of two children with autism to parents, caregivers, families, and educators in an easy-to-read, easy-to-follow format.

Cara speaks regularly across the US and provides OT consultations, trainings, and seminars as The Pocket Occupational Therapist. She serves on the Advisory Board of Autism Asperger’s Digest Magazine. Articles authored by Cara are featured in many special needs publications such as Autism File, Autism Parenting Magazine, and NewsLine. Cara is also a children’s YOGA instructor and Certified Irlen screener. Her son has Mitochondrial Disease and lives with severe restrictions of the disorder. Cara and her son co-authored the book, My Mighty Mito:  A Book for Children with Mitochondrial Disease.



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