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Inclusive Service Learning Partnership
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Overview
The University of Kentucky Interdisciplinary Human Development
Institute - University Center for Excellence, in collaboration with its
state DD Partners and the KY Department of Education, proposes a Project
of National Significance to enhance the inclusion, self-determination,
and community contributions of youth with developmental disabilities through
a statewide service learning program. This project will build upon Kentucky’s
current statewide high school peer tutoring program to provide opportunities
for students without disabilities to: (a) learn about the aspirations
and needs of students with developmental disabilities; (b) gain information
about the range of careers in working with persons with developmental
disabilities and their families; and (c) engage in service learning opportunities
in partnership with students with developmental disabilities.
For students with developmental disabilities, this project will provide:
(a) increased access within general education classes and other school
extra-curricular activities; and (b) opportunities to contribute to their
own communities by engaging in service learning projects along side their
high school peers. An additional component of this program will be the
use of high school peer tutors to assist students with developmental disabilities
in academic, personal, and career goal setting. While strategies for enabling
students with disabilities to set, monitor, and evaluate goals have been
successfully implemented (Wehmeyer, Agran, & Hughes, 1998), to date
there is no published work on the use of typical peers to support students
with developmental disabilities in the process of self-determination.
This project will develop specific materials for high school peer tutors
to assist students with developmental disabilities in setting, monitoring,
and evaluating the achievement of the goals they perceive as most significant
in their own lives.
The academic curriculum for this program will be entirely web-based, with
peer tutors engaging in a series of interactive modules addressing critical
issues in the lives of persons with developmental disabilities and providing
a range of supports in general education classes, extracurricular clubs
and activities, and school-sponsored service learning projects. In addition,
we will work with both the University of Kentucky and Morehead State University
to develop “advanced placement credit” for high school peer
tutors who successfully complete this course and who are interested in
pursuing a degree in education or related careers in supporting persons
with developmental disabilities.
This project will use a multi-component evaluation design. Five high school
sites, selected to reflect the geographic and cultural diversity of the
state, will serve as the pilot sites for the development of the self-determination
materials and the protocols for the integrated service learning projects.
Across these site, we will evaluate the extent to which this project results
in increased access to the general curriculum and to school extracurricular
activities for students with developmental disabilities; the extent to
which students with developmental disabilities demonstrate increased self-determination
skills and improved educational results (e.g., alternate assessments);
the benefit of integrated service learning projects for both students
with developmental disabilities and their peers, as evaluated by themselves,
their teachers, and families; and the extent to which participating peers
choose to pursue career goals in developmental disabilities.
This site is hosted by the Interdisciplinary
Human Development Institute – University Center for Excellence,
University of Kentucky and was developed
in collaboration with the KY Council on Developmental
Disabilities, and Morehead State University
Department of Elementary, Reading, and Special Education.
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