Assistive technology (AT) is any item that improves the functional capabilities of a student with a disability.
IEP teams are legally required to consider the need for AT during the development of all IEPs. (34 CFR § 300.324). Example below is from Illinois IEP form.
Each professional on the IEP team has a role to play. The legal responsibility for AT consideration doesn't belong to a specific person.
Consider AT before the IEP meeting so you are prepared to discuss it and document it.
What are the adverse effects of the student's impairment(s)? See eval/re-eval documentation.
What educationally-relevant activities and tasks are difficult due to the adverse effects? See IEP goals and curriculum expectations.
What is the student's current level of performance on the difficult activities and tasks? See Present Levels.
The student has been using AT on a regular basis and progress monitoring data supports its ongoing effectiveness.
An AT assessment was recently completed and pre/post data shows improved task performance with AT and/or increased independence.
The IEP team has determined that no-tech accommodations are sufficient to reduce or remove adverse effects.
For example: Extra time will compensate sufficiently for slower processing.
However, consider AT as a replacement for human assistance to increase independence (e.g. text-to-speech instead of "tests read" by a human).
The IEP team has determined that AT tools will not improve the student's performance because tool features cannot reduce or remove the specific task-demands that are difficult for the student.
For example: AT features cannot directly augment or replace the cognitive demands of reading comprehension. (But text-to-speech CAN reduce the demands of visual decoding (accuracy and fluency), which might give a student better access to comprehension.)
For example: AT features cannot augment or replace social perception in students with autism. (But researchers are studying a product that uses artificial intelligence to recognize emotions.)
An AT assessment was recently completed and pre/post data shows no improvement in specific task performance with AT.
The IEP team does not have enough data or expertise to answer the question.
The AT currently documented on the IEP is no longer effective but the student is still struggling.
The learning environment and/or learning tasks have recently changed and AT needs to be reconsidered (AT should be reassessed annually).
A. What's the problem?
Identify the activity/task that is difficult to do
B. Why is it occurring?
Analyze the task-demands of the activity
Determine which specific task-demands are difficult for the student
C. What are we going to do about it?
Use a consideration guide to find AT features that could compensate for (augment or replace) the difficult task-demands
Request an AT consultation if assistance is needed
Choose specific product with the desired AT features that also match the student's preferences and the environment(s) in which the activity is typically performed
Teach the student how to use the tool
Test-drive the tool using "pre/post" protocols or extended trials
Compare performance with the tool to performance without the tool to determine AT effectiveness
Provide more training until the student can use the tool independently
Train staff and parents (as needed)
Create an implementation plan to maximize opportunities for use, identify team member responsibilities, and determine outcome criteria
D. Monitor Progress
Monitor AT use and effectiveness over time
Reassess the need for AT periodically
Request an AT consultation if the IEP team needs assistance with AT problem-solving.
Assistive technology is any item that improves functional capability (34 CFR § 300.5)
IEP teams are legally required provide AT services to students who need it (34 CFR § 300.6). AT services legally include:
Functional evaluation in the child's customary environment
Purchasing, leasing or otherwise providing for the acquisition of AT
Selecting, designing, fitting, customizing, adapting, applying, maintaining, repairing, or replacing AT
Coordinating and using other therapies, interventions, or services with AT
Training or technical assistance for the student and, if appropriate, the student's family
Training or technical assistance for staff, employers, or other individuals who provide services to the student or are otherwise substantially involved in the major life functions of the student
AT reduces barriers to learning for individual students by augmenting or replacing specific task-demands.
UDL reduces barriers for ALL students by building multiple pathways into learning and assessment tasks.
Multiple means of engagement
Multiple means of representation
Multiple means of action and expression
Learn more at https://www.understood.org/en/school-learning/assistive-technology
Learn more at https://www.ctdinstitute.org/
Learn more at https://atinternetmodules.org/
Learn more at https://qiat.org