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         Wyoming Disabled & Special Needs Schools:     more detail

21. LittleRock.BabyZone.com -- Your Local Guide To Pregnancy And Parenting Resources
Little Rock special needs Resources. educational links for parents of disabled children,lists of WI Northeastern WI - Milwaukee wyoming Canada Calgary
http://littlerock.babyzone.com/parentresources.asp?type=Special Needs Resources

22. LittleRock.BabyZone.com -- Your Local Guide To Pregnancy And Parenting Resources
Little Rock Support and special needs. educational links for parents of disabled children,lists of WI Northeastern WI - Milwaukee wyoming Canada Calgary
http://littlerock.babyzone.com/parentresources.asp?type=Support and Special Need

23. Fremont County BOCES
that seamlessly correspond to specific wyoming and local special needs This newchannel organizes selected sites to serving the needs of disabled and gifted
http://www.fcboces.org/wedgate/default.asp
MAIN Home
Calendar

COURSES Staff Development
Technology Training

Dual Credit

PROGRAMS Community Technology Centers Lights On! 21st Century Community Learning Center
Career Development

Professional/Technical
... Fremont County Content Delivery Network
CONTACTS BOCES Board Members School District Board Members Member District Administrative Staff Fremont County The Wyoming Education Gateway Downloads - Training Map WEdgate Information What is it? http://www.wyoming.edgate.org The Wyoming Education Gateway (WEdGate) is a partnership between the Wyoming Department of Education and EdGate.Com. WEdGate is an internet-based collection of tools and content that provides information, products and services to improve K-12 student achievement. WEdGate aids educators in achieving their goals, helps schools meet local academic expectations and keeps families and communities involved in their children's learning. Exploring the WedGate The gateway is a place where administrators, educators, families and students can access quality educational resources including curricula, lessons, activities and ideas. Here are some of the features of the gateway.
  • Curriculum Matrix - provides comprehensive, online learning resources and activities that seamlessly correspond to specific Wyoming and local standards, classroom curriculum, and performance and knowledge assessments.

24. McREL - Changing Schools - Summer 2002
nation's largest advocacy group for disabled and gifted dealing with issues relatedto special education. Following the 2001 revamp of wyoming's charter school
http://www.mcrel.org/PDFConversion/ChangingSchools/CSsummer2002.html
Changing Schools
A Newsletter from the Central Region Educational Laboratory
Summer 2002 Table of Contents
Scientifically Based Research Emerges as National Issue

Legislative News Individuals With Disabilities Education Act in Reauthorization Process

Reviewing the Research

Colorado's CSAP Nearly Aligned With No Child Left Behind Act
...
Changing Schools Staff
Scientifically Based Research Emerges as National Issue When the No Child Left Behind Act was signed into law in January 2002, reauthorizing the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, much of the ensuing discussion zeroed in on the legislation's assessment and accountability requirements. But another issue has recently come to the forefront: the notion of "scientifically based research," a phrase threaded throughout the 1,080-page Act. The No Child Left Behind Act (Public Law 107-110) calls for programs and practices that are built on scientifically based research. This requirement for rigorous evidence that programs and practices will work has led to an impassioned debate among educators, policymakers, and researchers. At the core of the issue are a number of questions including, What defines scientifically based research? Who decides what programs qualify? And if education research that conforms to a scientific model is not readily available, how do we proceed? What Is Scientifically Based Research?

25. Snake River Ecology
Students with special needs disabled students who have special needs for this instructorand provide documentation to Western wyoming Community College
http://www.wwcc.cc.wy.us/xbiology/snake_river_ecology.htm
Biology Programs Faculty Courses Jobs in Biology Western Wyoming Community College Course Outline Summer 1997
Course Name: Snake River Ecology Credit: 1 semester hour Instructor: S. Eric Heltzel Dates: evening of July 11, 12, 13, 1997 Where: Gros Ventre campground, Grand Teton National Park Required Material: No textbook is required for the course. Reference books will be furnished by the instructor. Each student will be responsible for his or her own camping gear and appropriate clothing. Students will provide their own journal/portfolio and writing utensils. Prerequisites: None Transferability: This course transfers only to those schools having a similar course. Course Description: Snake River Ecology will survey a variety of environmental topics. This is an intensive two day/two night, field-based course. Students camp two nights at Gros Ventre campground in Grand Teton National Park. All instruction will take place on the river and in adjacent areas. This course focuses on teamwork, rafting safety, and etiquette, and natural communities of Jackson Hole. Besides tuition and administrative fees, there is a course fee of $175.00 per student to cover rafting, camping, and meals. Assessment Goals: The student will be able to: •communicate his or her understanding of information acquired in verbal and written formats •retrieve information from reference materials •discuss and evaluate environmental issues facing Jackson Hole and identify strengths and weaknesses of a variety of positions from different societal perspectives

26. Birmingham.BabyZone.com -- Your Local Guide To Pregnancy And Parenting Resources
Deaf and Blind includes four schools, a healthcare for those in the disabled communityand Family Advocacy Services Assist special needs families with insurance
http://birmingham.babyzone.com/parentresources.asp?type=Special Needs Resources

27. Post-Crescent - Learning’s Costly Curve
Part of the solution may be labeling fewer students as disabled. wyoming. specialeducationresearch is not rigorous or coordinated enough to support needs
http://www.wisinfo.com/postcrescent/news/archive/local_4981028.shtml
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Main Page

News

Sports

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Pit Stop Picks

Posted Aug. 04, 2002
Schools cope amid growing disabled-student population, special-education expenses By Kathy Walsh Nufer Post-Crescent staff writer Freedom made the commitment to ensure all children equal access to a public education well before state and federal governments made it law in the early 1970s, he said. Yet, in times of tight budgets there is no denying the mounting cost of educating everyone from the blind, deaf and medically fragile to children with cognitive and emotional disabilities and speech delays. While Congress considers reauthorizing the 28-year-old law now known as the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), area school systems are picking up the bulk of the bill for an ever-growing number of special-education children. Two dozen Fox Valley school districts spent more than $62 million in district, state and federal dollars in the 2000-01 school year to educate 7,597 students with disabilities, according to the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute. In the coming school year, Freedom, with a total enrollment of 1,590, will spend $1.9 million of its $12.2 million operational budget educating 215 children with disabilities.

28. EdGate.com: Educators
World for a whole set of resources for special needs and gifted gifted child withnew challenges, or get special resources for disabled children, you
http://www.wyoming.edgate.org/pa_pt_sngs.html
Home Parents Parents' Toolbox Select an Education Resource Parents' Toolbox Current Events School Athletics Center Research Center Music Hall
The ADD Action Group

This non-profit organization is designed to help treat learning disabilities, Attention Deficit Disorder, dyslexia, and autism without medication. Read through their articles, check out recommended books, or attend a meeting in your area.
Gifted Resources Home Page

If you have a gifted and talented child, visit this site for links to summer school programs, talent searches, specialized schools, and other educational enrichment sources. You'll also find publications, organizations, and pen pal exchanges for gifted students.
ADOL: Adolescence Directory On-Line

This guide contains online resources about the issues faced by today's teens. If your teen is struggling with eating disorders, alcohol, violence, or a variety of other issues, you can help them cope with the resources on this Web site.
Education World's Special Education Center

Visit Education World for a whole set of resources for special needs and gifted students. Whether you need to put an end to a new misbehavior, provide your gifted child with new challenges, or get special resources for disabled children, you'll find some of the Web's best resources here. Then meet with other parents and teachers on the Special Education discussion board.
Adoption.com

29. Cincinnati Builders : Community Guide
Western Water, Goshen — 513722-1682; wyoming City Water — 513-821 special needs. ofinformation about state and federal laws that affect disabled students in
http://www.cincinnatibuilders.com/comm_guide/others.html

Tax Information
Important Phone Numbers Special Needs Indiana Public Schools ... Shopping Malls
TAX INFORMATION
Indiana
  • Indiana Department of Taxation 317-232-2240.
  • State Tax is 3.4% of taxable income. Personal and dependency exemptions are $1,000. Federal Income Tax is not deductible.
  • Dearborn and Ohio Counties assess both real and personal property per $1,000 of value (tax rate of 81.22 with a 33% ratio for an effective tax rate of 27.7).
  • Sales Tax is 5%.
Kentucky
  • Kentucky Income Tax Division 502-564-3111
  • Kentucky Tax Rate Schedule on taxable income:
    over - $8,000 6%
  • Property Tax: Imposed on real and tangible personal property. Rates vary according to each tax district. Tax is levied on each $100 of assessed valuation. Assessed valuation is 100% of true value.
  • Sales Tax is 6%.
  • A resident of Kentucky does not have to pay income tax to the city of residence if it is different than the city of work.
Ohio
  • Ohio Department of Taxation 513-852-3300.
  • State Income Tax is based on federal adjusted gross income. Personal exemptions are $650. The tax rates are as follows:
    Taxable Income Rate
    over - $100,000

30. Untitled
Care Services Families with disabled Children in Non Disabilities Factors AffectingResource Allocation in wyoming; of Students with special needs on Teachers
http://extension.usu.edu/acres/rseq_f_11.html
Journal Abstracts
Home
Journal/Newsletter RSEQ Abstract Archive Other Publications Volumes 01-05 Volumes 06-10 Volumes 11-15 Volumes 16-20 Instructions: Click articles to display full title, details, and abstract. Volume 11, Number 1 (Winter 1992)
  • Introduction to Topical Edition on Rural Independent Living
  • Independent Living Centers In Rural Communities
  • Extending the Independent Living Center Model to Rural Areas: Expanding Services through State and Local Efforts
  • Delivering Independent Living Services in Rural Communities: Options and Alternatives ...
  • Native American Independent Living Volume 11, Number 2 (Spring 1992)
  • Introduction to Topical Edition on Multicultural Needs
  • Cultural Accessibility of Services for Culturally Diverse Clients with Disabilities and their Families
  • Identifying Unique Challenges to the Provision of Rehabilitation Services on the Navajo Reservation
  • Secondary Disabilities Among American Indians in Montana ...
  • Understanding the Cultural Characteristics of American Indian Families: Effective Partnerships Under the Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP) Volume 11, Number 3 (Summer 1992)
  • The Dropout Problem: Rural Educators' Perceptions of Intervention Priorities
  • The Entrepreneurial Model of Supported Employment
  • Training Preservice School Psychologists to Facilitate the Implementation of the Regular Education Initiative in Rural Schools
  • Identification of the Advantages and Disadvantages of Special Education Service Delivery in Rural Kentucky as a Basis for Generating Solutions to Problems ...
  • Children's Voice Problems: The Frog in Your Classroom Volume 11, Number 4 (Fall 1992)
  • 31. Vita Of Katharin Alcorn Kelker, Ph.D.
    the quality of life for developmentally disabled citizens of Natrona County schools,Casper, wyoming, April 1988 Parents Rights in the special Education Process
    http://www.kelker.org/About/vita.html
    VITA
    KATHARIN ALCORN KELKER 2438 Rimrock Road, Billings, Montana 59102
    406/652-6716 (home)
    406/657-2070 (office)
    E-mail: kkelker@ureach.com Send E-mail
    PROFESSIONAL
    EXPERIENCE
    Montana State UniversityBillings
    Billings, Montana
    Parents, Let's Unite for Kids
    516 N. 30th St.; Billings Montana 59101
    Director of a program providing information and support to parents of children with disabilities throughout Montana
    Family Assistance Project
    NIMH Grant, $30,000 per year, renewable
    Alliance for Technology Access (ATA)
    Directed project providing information about assistive technology to parents of children with disabilities
    Information and Referral (Part C)
    Developmental Disabilities Division Grant, $32,000 per year, renewable
    Parent Training and Information Center
    D.O.E. Grant, $750,000 for 5 years
    MonTECH Access Co-Op, Tech Act Grant
    $24,500 per year, renewable
    Montana Center for Handicapped Children
    Eastern Montana College; Billings, Montana
    D.O.E. GRANT, $416,446 for 3 years
    Montana Center for Handicapped Children
    Eastern Montana Collegel Billings, Montana

    32. USCS: Charter Schools And Special Education
    are all over the map on disabled students, p. 25 Charter Guidelines and ApplicationSpecial Education {Information wyoming, No written policies for students with
    http://www.uscharterschools.org/lpt/uscs_docs/4
    Print Version
    Print This Page Return to Web Version
    Charter Schools
    and Special Education:
    A Report on State Policies
    by:
    Eileen M. Ahearn, Ph.D. Prepared by:
    Project FORUM
    National Association of State Directors of Special Education
    1800 Diagonal Road, Suite 320
    Alexandria, VA 22314 Prepared for: Office of Special Education Programs U.S. Department of Education> Final Report Deliverable #1-3.2 Under Cooperative Agreement No. H159K70002 March, 1999
    Project FORUM at National Association of State Directors of Special Education (NASDSE) is a cooperative agreement funded by the Office of Special Education Programs of the U. S. Department of Education. The project carries out a variety of activities that provide information needed for program improvement, and promote the utilization of research data and other information for improving outcomes for students with disabilities. The project also provides technical assistance and information on emerging issues, and convenes small work groups to gather expert input, obtain feedback, and develop conceptual frameworks related to critical topics in special education. This report was supported in whole or in part by the U.S. Department of Education (Contract No. HS92015001). However, the opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the position or policy of the U.S. Department of Education, and no official endorsement by the Department should be inferred.

    33. Sports & Recreation - Disability Links For People Of All Abilities
    and ocean kayaking for people with special needs. locate recreational opportunitiesfor all abilities in wyoming. offers skiing for the disabled throughout the
    http://www.allabilities.com/sports.html
    Disability Links for people of All Abilities
    Home
    Shopping

    Advertisements:
    Equipment
    Handcycling Organizations Paralympic Games ... Wheelchair Racing
    Equipment (misc.)
    Back to Top
    Handcycling

    34. Websites
    resources, video clips of learning disabled students benefiting general populationabout the special needs of people Hearing Parents in wyoming will find all
    http://www.bhsu.edu/education/edfaculty/cpollard/websites.htm
    Websites The following web sites are related to classes or topics that are dealt with within the Special Education field. Enjoy! Adolescents Assessment Inclusion Early Childhood ... Written Expression Adolescents Adolescence Directory On-Line (ADOL) : Is an electronic guide to information on adolescent issues. The Center for Adolescent Studies Focuses on meeting the social and emotional growth and development needs of adolesce3nts through providing support to adults working with youth, investigating current social issues and providing tools for teens to learn and practice new, healthy behaviors. Normal Adolescent Development Physical, Cognitive, and Social-emotional development of adolescents Site designed by four teachers from SD!! Adolescent Development Teenage Students with Dyslexia This web site would be very good to give to a teenage student who is facing the challenges of dyslexia. It is composed of items that have been entered by teens to help other teens understand that others are going through the same problems and that they are not alone. Fetal Alcohol Syndrome This site was established for teenagers. Good site!!

    35. Links: Disability: Arts - Alabama Council For Developmental Disabilities
    SEDPA) An organisation of disabled people providing a into local educational agencies,parochial, and special schools. VSA arts of wyoming - Promoting the
    http://www.acdd.org/Links/disability/Arts.htm
    You are here: Home Links Disability Arts
    Arts
    Home About Definition Planning ...
    • The Able Workshop - Disability and woodworking, resource of photos, tips, hints, and tricks of those with a handicap who found solutions to work shop barriers. Art Disability Expression - Interactive exhibit explores the historical, social/cultural and artistic representations of people with disabilities in the past as well as how artists with disabilities today present disabilities as content in their artwork, and use alternative methods and materials to create their art. Art Enables - Art Enables is an arts-based training and employment placement program for persons with developmental disabilities sixteen years and older in the Washington, DC, metropolitan area. ARTability, Accessing Arizona's Arts - News and calendars of accessible arts events in Arizona, including audio-described and American Sign Language interpreted performances.Links to many Arizona arts and disability sites. Arts Access - Arts Access is based in Melbourne, Australia and provides access to arts and cultural activity for people who are disadvantaged, including people with a disability.

    36. Learning Disabilities OnLine: LD In-Depth: Tips For Choosing A Summer Camp For Y
    of the Better Business Bureau in Colorado and wyoming to establish Many camps forlearning disabled children are purely recreational Go to special needs section
    http://www.ldonline.org/ld_indepth/parenting/camp_tips.html
    Tips for Choosing a Summer Camp
    for the child with Learning Disabilities
    By
    Ann Cathcart
    Founder, The Learning Camp
    Searching for a positive learning environment for her own child, Ann Cathcart left her position as CEO of the Better Business Bureau in Colorado and Wyoming to establish The Learning Camp. "Choosing the appropriate summer environment for your LD child can become one of the many challenges facing parents. It was such a challenge for me that I started a camp myself to create EXACTLY what I wanted for my son! (I do not recommend that others take that route!)" ... Ann Cathcart Ann Cathcart with son, Tucker
    When sending your child into the care of others it is so important to be certain that they will understand and take good care of your child. Your confidence in a summer camp will be enhanced by lengthy conversations with camp personnel or the director. If a camp is too busy to return your phone calls, or take the time to talk at length with you, will they be too busy for your child as well? Regardless of all that a camp may have to offer, if the director or the staff are too busy for you now, it should be a red flag! Find a camp that will give you and your child the time and attention that you both deserve. Feel free to ask for references, and then talk to other parents about their experience with the camp you are considering. It is extremely important that you feel comfortable with the program you are choosing and sometimes that requires many questions.

    37. Special Education Advocate & Attorney Directory N-Z - Search For A Special Needs
    org We are a nonprofit Independent Living Center for the disabled. WA, CA Ten yearsof litigation experience, serving special needs children and WY - wyoming.
    http://www.education-a-must.com/aalistnz.html
    Find an advocate or attorney in your state.
    Parenting Support Group for parents, advocates, and attorneys. Ask your questions about special education law, IEPs, 504s... or ask about local resources here.
    Directory A-M NC ND ... WY
    NC - North Carolina
    Stacey B. Bawtinhimer
    Attorney-at-Law
    703 McCarthy Boulevard
    P.O. Box 12125
    New Bern, NC 28561-2125
    Phone: (252) 636-9010
    Private Practitioner with over six (6) years of experience in representing and advocating for disabled students. Admitted to all NC state courts and federal district courts of North Carolina, Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals and US Supreme Court. Consultations and representation available on a sliding scale for low income families. The Law Firm of Paul L. Erickson, P. A.
    Asheville Legal Center
    Paul L. Erickson
    Attorney at Law
    North Carolina Office: Building One Suite Three 1998 Hendersonville Road Asheville, North Carolina 28803 Phone: (828) 684-7884 Fax: (828) 684-6889 Email: justs4all@ioa.com

    38. 21st Century Wyoming Education Policy Alternatives
    of additional programs for students with special needs and interests group of students,say, disabled students, or For example, if the wyoming elementary school
    http://legisweb.state.wy.us/2001/schoolfinance/map/reports/policy.htm
    Wyoming Education Policy Alternatives: Complying with the Recent Campbell Decision A MAP Inc. Issues Paper by James W. Guthrie Summary Wyoming has experienced three decades of judicial efforts to influence the state’s education finance system of contentious school finance litigation . Through four major decisions, beginning in 1971 and stretching to 2001, the state highest court has held that K-12 education: (1) is a constitutionally protected “fundamental interest” that must be guaranteed by state government, (2) cannot have its quality jeopardized by considerations of wealth, other than the wealth of the state as a whole, (3) must, in the court’s terms, be “proper,” “the best,” “unsurpassed,” and ”visionary,” and (4) must have its funding assured ahead of all other state endeavors.  The Court’s, February 23, 2001 ruling in Campbell County v State accepts the MAP Inc. “Cost Based Block Grant” education finance model as constitutional.  This most recent decision, nevertheless, poses for the Wyoming legislature an unusually complicated set of decisions. The Campbell II decision, taken in tandem with its predecessor, Campbell I, creates dual or overlapping authority.  It invests important decision making power, about how to achieve “the best” and “visionary” education system, both with local districts and with the state.  This overlap in authority could presage conflict. Strict adherence to the Supreme Court’s dictates risks having to spend more state funds on schooling than may be cost effective to meet the Court’s specified goal for Wyoming of having an  “an unsurpassed” education system

    39. Cognitive And Developmental Disabilities Resources
    Parents who have disabled children and want to enroll them Travel and Recreation forPeople with special needs. wyoming Division of Developmental Disabilities.
    http://www.familyvillage.wisc.edu/jpkf/mrsites.html
    Cognitive and Developmental Disabilities Resources (in alphabetical order by title) AAMR The Web site of the American Association on Mental Retardation. AUCD The home page of the Association of University Centers on Disabilities (formerly American Association of University Affiliated Programs). ADA and Disability Information A WWW page with links to other Web and Gopher sites dealing with the Americans with Disabilities Act and disabilities in general. ADA Information Center On-Line A Web site of information about the Americans with Disabilities Act, made available by the ADA Project. Located in Columbia, Missouri, the ADA Project is one of ten regional centers funded by the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, a division of the U.S. Department of Education. Their purpose is to provide technical assistance and training concerning the ADA to businesses, institutions, agencies, and individuals. The project serves the four state region of Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska. Adaptive Computing Technology Center The University of Missouri Columbia, Department of Campus Computing, Adaptive Computing Technology (ACT) Center's goal is to implement adaptive computing in a manner which enhances integration of people with disabilities into the higher education environment.

    40. A Study Of Charter Schools: First Year Report - May 1997 - Executive Summary
    Hampshire Louisiana (3) Rhode Island wyoming, Connecticut District developed to servea special population of atrisk, language minority, disabled, or ethnic
    http://www.ed.gov/pubs/charter/execsum.html
    A Study of Charter Schools: First Year Report - May 1997
    Executive Summary
    Preface
    This Executive Summary provides highlights from the first-year report of the National Study of Charter Schools (the Study), sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education as authorized by the 1994 Amendments to the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. The Study is a four-year research effort to document and analyze the charter school movement. By means of reports circulated online and in hard copy, the Study will provide descriptive information about the number and type of charter schools that become operational and about the factors that facilitate or hinder the charter schools' development and implementation. The Study will also analyze the impact of charter schools on student achievement and on local and state public education systems.
    Highlights
    • The Study includes the first definitive survey of all charter schools, including 90 percent of all schools in operation as of 1995-1996.
    • Charter schools are extremely diverse because of state and local factors. Their approaches to education often vary dramatically from one another.
    • States play a primary role in defining the possibilities of charter schools, and states vary greatly in their approaches.

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