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Meliah Bell

Strength Based Coaching Workshop - Multiple Locations - Multiple Dates - 0 views

  •  
    Click here to register for this workshop What:
    Strengths-Based Coaching®: 12 hour training for coaches and leaders in the fields of early childhood, school-age, and youth. Strengths-Based Coaching®: A Journey into Coaching is a practical approach for working with adults that will fundamentally change the way coaches and leaders support and sustain quality improvements in their programs, agencies, and school districts. This training enhances the coaching role of leaders,  building on their strengths, knowledge, and skills. Strengths-Based Coaching® is based on five foundations: adult learning theory, core beliefs, how to approach others, relationship building, and communication. These five foundations lead to positive feedback that creates partnerships and builds on the strengths of staff. Participants will: Identify conditions that lead to change IDentify the fundamental beliefs, knowledge and skills for effectively coaching others Distinguish the six stages of coaching State the goals, benefits and use of strength based coaching Identify methods to promote positive relationships and supportive interactions Demonstration learning questions as a strategy for Strength Based Coaching® Analyze issues and situations and identify strengths- based coaching strategies which will be effective at these times When/Where:
    January 14-15 ~ Holiday Inn, Bozeman (Course #2815) OR
    January 17-18 ~Joe McDonald Health & Fitness Center, Salish Kootenai College, Pablo (Course #2724)
    8:30 AM to 4:00 PM each day Contact:
     Assistance with Registration, please contact Leabeth Daviau at mailto:
Sierra Boehm

Strengths-Based Coaching - Great Falls - Sep. 16-17 - 0 views

  •  
    Register for this event
    Download the flyer for this event

    What:
    Strengths-Based Coaching is a 12 hour training that will fundamentally change the way coaches and leaders support and sustain quality improvements in their programs, agencies, and school districts. This practical approach for working with adults enhances the coaching role of leaders, building on their strengths, knowledge, and skills. Strengths-Based Coaching is based on five foundations: adult learning theory, core beliefs, how to approach others, relationship building, and communication. These five foundations lead to positive feedback that creates partnerships and builds on the strengths of staff.

    When:
    September 16-17 2013
    8:00 am - 4:00 pm Mountain

    Where:
    University of Great Falls
    1301 20th Street S.
    Great Falls, MT 59405

    Cost:
    Participation by individuals from outside of Region II is welcome; how-ever, a $25.00 per person fee is required for the workshop. Region II consists of the counties of Cascade, Teton, Pondera, Toole, Glacier, Liberty, Hill, Blaine, and Chouteau.
Sierra Boehm

Family Coaching: Bringing the Pyramid Model Home - Billings - June 13, 14, 2013 - 0 views

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    Register for this event
    Download Brochure

    What:
    The Pyramid Model for Supporting Social Emotional Competence in Infants and Young Children is a conceptual framework of evidence-based practices developed by two national, federally-funded research and training centers: The Center for the Social and Emotional Foundations for Early Learning (CSEFEL) and The Technical Assistance Center for Social Emotional Intervention (TACSEI). Most recently, TACSEI developed a family coaching approach for implementing the Pyramid Model with caregivers in homes. This approach was developed to support home visitors who are working with caregivers of infants and toddlers with or at-risk for disabilities. The approach focuses on supporting home visitors in the use of evidence-based family coaching strategies to enhance caregivers' capacity to promote their infant or toddlers' social emotional competence. This presentation will describe the family coaching approach to implementing the pyramid model. When:
    June 13 & 14, 2013
    9:00 am - 4:00 pm Mountain both days
    Registration 8:30 am Where:
    MSU Billings
    College of Education Building, Room 122
    1500 University Dr.
    Billings, MT 59101 Cost:
    Free of charge
Sierra Boehm

Kids Connect: Social Skills Coaching for Kids - Missoula - Apr. 17 - Jun. 5, 2013 - 0 views

  •  
    Click here to download the flyer for this event

    What:
    Easter Seals-Goodwill is offering a series of classes using Michelle Garcia Winner's "Think Social!" curriculum to help kids ages 9-14 who need extra support in learning and practicing social skills. Group leaders include people with backgrounds in P.L.A.Y. (Play and Language for Autistic Youngsters), social work, special education, and one-on-one work with kids of ranging abilities. Participants will:

    * Increase confidence and positive self-esteem
    * Improve communication & listening skills
    * Practice everyday etiquette & social skills
    * Learn to work with others
    * Enhance coping skills
    * Learn to manage conflict When:
    April 17 - June 5, 2013
    Each Wednesday at 4:45 pm - 6:15 pm Mountain Where:
    Easter Seals-Goodwill Children's Services
    800 Kensington, Suite 100
    Missoula, MT 59801 Cost:
    $200.00
Meliah Bell

CADRE Webinar ~ Conflict Coaching: Its Value in Special Education Dispute Resolution - ... - 0 views

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    Click here to register for the Webinar

    What:
    Conflict coaching is a one-on-one process that helps someone in conflict gain a better understanding of the conflict and how s/he may manage conflict constructively. Increasingly used in workplace and community conflicts, this session explores how it may help parents, educators and special education dispute resolution professionals work through their conflicts. The discussion will focus on how elements of conflict coaching can be brought into conferences and mediation to help build better relationships and de-escalate conflicts. When:
    January 9, 2013, 12:30am - 1:45pm MST Contact:
    Philip Moses
    Assistant Director
    The National Center for Appropriate Dispute Resolution in Special Education (CADRE)
    P.O. Box 51360
    Eugene, OR 97405-0906
    (541-686-5060)
    www.directionservice.org/cadre/ For more information about the webinar and guest presenter Trica Jones, please visit the CADRE website: http://www.directionservice.org/cadre/joneswebinar.cfm
danny hagfeldt

Consultation, Collaboration and Coaching: Tools for Providing Meaningful AT Support - W... - 0 views

  • Click here for complete information or here to register!What:Effective assistive technology (AT) service providers use a variety of strategies, including direct service to students, consultation to teachers, and collaboration with team members in their work to integrate AT into the everyday routines and activities of students with disabilities. This webinar will address each of these strategies and provide an introduction to the exciting potential of coaching to improve AT services. Training in specific coaching strategies will be provided as well as practice opportunities. Participants will receive forms to help organize and document their practice as well as resources to help develop new consultation, collaboration and coaching skills.When:Thursday, February 23, 20121:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Mountain TimeContact:Assistive Technology Industry Association (ATIA)Toll-Free: 877-OUR-ATIA (687-2842) Phone: 312-321-5172 Fax: 312-673-6659 E-mail: info@ATIA.org
Terry Booth

Life Transitions from Pre-School to Adulthood - Billings - Aug. 2-3, 2012 - 0 views

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    What:
    Families and educators need continued assistance with resources that teach life skills to assist individuals with autism as they negotiate important transitions in their lives. This two day conference will provide information and hands-on experience that will help you assist children and young adults on the spectrum to discover their unique interests and abilities. Fostering self-identity that will prepare individuals with autism for lifelong inclusion in the community that will maximize their independence, productivity, and enjoyment. Successful early transitions will help pave the way for future transitions. Some individuals on the spectrum will pursue higher education and competitive employment opportunities while others are more limited. Beyond their varied abilities and interests, limited social skills for nearly all individuals with autism make it difficult for them to adjust to new school environments, different living arrangements, college and the workplace. With proper support and services from teachers, mentors, co-workers and job coaches who understand these special needs, we believe all individuals can be supported to lead happier, more productive and independent lives. In addition to information about transitions, educators and family members attending this year's conference will be able to participate in activities often used in therapy and successful educational environments. This will give you a unique opportunity to experience life from the perspective of a person on the spectrum and give you skills to help calm, teach, and care. Where:
    MSU-B Main Campus
    1500 University Drive
    Billings, MT When:
    August 2 & 3, 2012 Register:
    Call 406-896-5890 to register for this event.
Sierra Boehm

Session 3: Overview of Coaching Skills to Support AT Use - Webinar - July 30, 2013 - 0 views

  •  
    Register for this webinar

    What:
    This three-part series will explore the ways that educators can offer support to others who help students use AT. We'll address questions like; How can a supportive AT relationship be established and maintained?; What approaches to the provision of AT supports can be used?; How do I decide which strategy is best for each situation? How can coaching concepts be used to help students and adults integrate the use of AT into everyday routines and activities?

    When:
    Tuesday, July 30, 2013
    10:30 pm - 11:30 pm Mountain

    Cost:
    Free of charge
Sierra Boehm

Kids Connect Social Skills Coaching for Kids - Billings - July 17, Aug. 14, 2013 - 0 views

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    To register contact Tanna at (406) 657-9724 What: A series of social thinking classes for kids with social challenges or autism that focus on improving communication and listening skills, managing conflict and building self esteem in a safe and nurturing environment. When: Wednesdays, July 17 - August 14, 2013 9:00 am - 11:00 am Mountain Where: Easter Seals - Goodwill Pediatric Therapy Services 1537 Ave. D, Suite 111 Billings, MT 59101 Cost: $175.00, includes supplies
Terry Booth

Salish Kootenai College: Demonstration Grants for Indian Children Program - 0 views

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    Salish Kootenai College (Montana) S299A 120078 The Transitions Project will provide interventions at two points in a child's life - prekindergarten and high school. The Transitions Project will be implemented on the Flathead Reservation in Montana. The preschool component will implement a three and four year old, culturally appropriate active learning High/Scope curriculum program to prepare them for successful entry into kindergarten. This project collaborates with a Bureau funded tribal school - Two Eagle River School, where the Transitions Secondary component will serve high school students to provide an intensive one-on-one college preparatory coaching program. The goal is to increase college readiness skills and support high school graduation. Number of participants: 40 Preschool children and 30 High school students Contact:
    Joelfre Grant
    58138 Highway 93
    Pablo, Montana 59855
    Phone: 406-675-8475
Roger Holt

Coaching Self-Advocacy to Children With Disabilities - 0 views

  • Although there are a variety of school-based services available for children with learning, emotional, and social disabilities, one critical need often goes unfulfilled: providing guidance and strategies that instill self-advocacy.       Most students have only a superficial notion of the reasons they receive these special accommodations, and many children are completely uninformed. Resource teachers and specialists do not generally have the authority to label and enlighten students about their disabilities, the foundation for building self-advocacy. If children are to learn how to become better consumers of educational resources, especially as they grow older, someone must take the lead.      Parents of children with disabilities can fill this role by doing the following: Introduce children’s diagnoses to them in elementary school so that they can make sense out of their struggles Use a matter-of-fact tone of voice when explaining to children that they learn/behave/relate differently from other students and, therefore, need extra help to ensure that they can succeed just like their classmates Don’t leave out the disability label—such as writing disability, ADHD, or Aspergers Syndrome—since labels are a reality of their educational life Emphasize that the teachers and special staff at school who help them will be aware of this label and prepared to help in certain ways to make school a fairer place for them to learn and grow      It’s important to review with children the ways in which their school must provide special help and services. Emphasize that these accommodations are rules the school must follow. “You have the responsibility to do your best job, and teachers must follow the learning/behavior/friendship helping rules that make things fair for you,” is one way to put it. Explain how extra time on assessments, decreased homework, or social skills groups are examples of the helping rules that schools must follow. Discuss how there is a written promise called the individualized education plan (IEP), which includes all the helping rules and makes all of this clear.      Find child-friendly resources—such as books, websites, and videos—that explain in detail their specific disability and the ways other children have learned to cope and achieve despite these limitations. Use these materials as a springboard for deeper discussion about past times when their disability created significant stress or barriers to success. Reassure them that this was before their problem was known and that there is so much that can be done to build a plan for success now that it has been identified.      Point out that one of their most important responsibilities is to be able to discuss their disability with teachers and ask for extra help and accommodation when struggles are too great. Make sure that these discussions take place before middle school, when developmental factors make it harder to get such discussions started. Ensure that they know what practical steps are in their IEP at each grade so that they can respectfully remind teaching staff if necessary.      Having a disability is like having to wear glasses; students with glasses have accepted this fact as necessary to seeing clearly.
Roger Holt

When Autistic Children Are Children No More - Chicago magazine - March 2013 - Chicago - 0 views

  • Many autistic adults have a hard time finding their place in the world. Less than half enroll in higher education or find work. (According to the Social Security Administration, only about 6 percent of adults with autism work full-time.) Many lack the skills to live alone. Those who cannot work generally qualify for monthly Social Security disability payments, which are too low to cover vocational coaches, therapeutic day programs, or other interventions that may help an autistic person reach a modicum of self-sufficiency. Meanwhile, the federal government does not require school systems to provide special education for students older than 18 (most states, including Illinois, have extended the requirement through age 21). “If you have a developmental disability like Frank, when you turn 22, you disappear,” says Craven’s mother, Jane Gallery, a 61-year-old Winnetka resident. “You fall off a cliff.”
Terry Booth

Western Montana - CSPD August Institute - Missoula - August 8-10, 2011 - 0 views

  • Click here for full conference information and registration What: Want an intriguing conference that will channel you and your students to an invigorating new level, change the current path of your classroom, and set the course for change in your school? Then don't miss the 2011 August Institute. There is something for everyone regardless of how you perceive your classroom technology integration skills and teaching. You’ll leave with new ideas, knowledge of at least one free online application and many techniques to set your students on an exciting path of innovation and self motivation. When: August 8-10, 2011 Where: Phyllis J. Washington Education Building - University of Montana Missoula, MT Conference Highlights: Keynote address and presentations by Kevin Honeycutt (Teaching Wired Learners) Half-day sessions (novice & intermediate) with Tony Vincent (Project-based Learning) Wes Fryer ( iPhoneography 101; Talk with Media: Simple Ideas for Powerful Sharing and SmartNetworks) Concert with Chance McKinney Technology workshops for both novice and Intermediate users Technology coaches to support participants during workshops for novice users Presentations by our regional technologists, Diane Woodard and Dean Phillips Monday Evening Poster sessions highlighting Best Practices in Technology by teachers participating in the SLATE grants Tuesday Evening – Tech in the Wild session – using technology outside the school walls Ability to earn 2 semester credits or 22 OPI renewal credits Plus...many of our other sessions on school culture, RTI, special education, Indian Education, gifted ed, reading and math interventions … and much, much more
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