E.L.P.S. STUDENT SERVICES
During the past year, the East Longmeadow Public Schools
Special Education Department
provided supportive services to approximately
six hundred and twenty-seven students.
Most of these services were provided in the context of the public
schools and consisted of educational
assistance and remediation, speech
and language therapy, occupational
therapy, physical therapy, counseling, and adaptive physical education.
Twenty-six of these students with more significant needs attended programs provided by the Lower Pioneer
Valley Educational Collaborative to which East Longmeadow is a member. Twenty-two students with even more
significant needs attended private special education
schools. These include Curtis Blake Day
School, Valley West Day School, White Oak School, The Children’s Study Home, May Institute and Tri County Youth
Programs. Two students with severe needs
attend residential school programs.
During the past two years, the department has been
involved in the creation of the Learning
Centers. These self-contained programs,
formerly part of the Lower Pioneer Valley Educational
Collaborative, were absorbed into
the student bodies at Mapleshade,
Birchland Park Middle School and East Longmeadow High School. Not only did the district save a considerable
amount of money through the implementation
of these programs, but it afforded students with significant language-based
learning disabilities the opportunity to receive an appropriate education
in the least restrictive environment. All Learning Center programs afford students
the opportunity for mainstreaming, as well as the opportunity to receive
remedial education and related services that
are necessary to maximize students’ opportunities for success. Increased parent outreach and involvement,
more accessible administration, and
special programming, such as Special Olympics, has enhanced the comprehensive
educational opportunities for these
students.
There still continues to be a trend of many students
entering the elementary schools with significant disabilities. These disabilities have included extensive
medical/physical needs, autism, pervasive developmental disorder and students
who are behaviorally challenged. The
focus of programming for these students continues to be their inclusion in many
normal school programs and classrooms.
Providing supports to enable students with challenges to receive a
quality education is a creative, demanding process that
evolves, changes and grows. During the
past years, many of the special education
programs have undergone changes that
have supported this philosophy.
Increasingly, services to students at
all levels have moved towards providing supports within the regular education class to help students succeed.
East
Longmeadow continues to be a member of the Springfield METCO Program. This program allows fifty-three multicultural
students who reside in Springfield to be educated
in East Longmeadow. This program has
allowed for cross-cultural relationships
to develop and has been very successful.
Each student is funded by a grant program through the Massachusetts
Department of Education.
As
in the past, the most important goal of the Student Services program continues
to be the provision of effective programs for students with learning difficulties
and other handicaps which enables the students to reach their maximum
potential.
Respectfully submitted,
Raymond Sylvain, Administrator of Student Services