Adapted Physical Education


January 7 , 2002,
Vol. 4, No.1

Conference/Workshop Calendar


 Editorial

Happy New Year. Hopefully your holiday season was joyful. As a new year begins, may all of you continue working to keep your New Year's resolutions.  In an effort to provide information that has been requested on the adapted listserve, this section will focus on the topics of:

  1. Physical education for individuals with disabilities. How is it defined, where does the mandate for a least restrictive environment play into the picture, how does assessment and instruction become the rule for providing the appropriate physical education programs for students with disabilities.
  2. Spina Bifida - some basic information that is needed when providing physical education services and offering physical activities for individuals with this condition.
  3. Basic information through a Did You Know section covering a multitude of issues in APE.

Cindy Piletic
Adapted Section Editor


 Physical Education for Children with Disabilities

Physical Education includes:

  • physical and motor fitness; fundamental motor skills and patterns;
  • health related physical fitness; motor fitness; and
  • skills in aquatics, dance, and individual/group/lifetime games & sports

Adapted Physical Education...(APE) is physical education which may be adapted or modified to address the individualized needs of children & youth who have gross motor developmental delays. This service should include the following:

  1. Assessment and instruction by qualified personnel...means that professionals are prepared to gather assessment data and provide physical education instruction for children & youth with disabilities and developmental delays. The National Consortium for Physical Education and Recreation for Individuals with Disabilities has detailed APE National Standards which describe what a qualified APE teacher must know. Teachers who have met these criteria are described as Certified Adapted Physical Educators (CAPE's)
  2. Accurate assessment data...including diagnostic and curriculum-based data collected by qualified personnel.
  3. Individualized Education Program (IEP) Goals and Objectives/ Benchmarks... are measurable and objective statements written by the physical education instructor. The goals and objectives are reflective of the physical education instructional content and monitored/evaluated according to district policy, to ensure that goals and objectives are being met in a timely manner.

Instruction in a Least Restrictive Environment

(LRE)...refers to adapting or modifying the physical educati on curriculum and/or instruction to address the individualized abilities of each child. Adaptations are made to ensure that each student will experience success in a safe environment. Placement is outlined in the IEP and may include one or more of the following options:
  1. The general physical education setting;
  2. The general physical education setting; The gen eral physical education setting with a teaching assistant or peers;
  3. The general physical education setting; A separate class setting with peers;
  4. The general physical education setting; A separate class setting with assistants; and
  5. The general physical education setting; A one-to-one setting between students and instructor.

Source:
National Consortium on Physical Education and Recreation for Individuals with Disabilities (NCPERID) website, 2001.

 IDEA

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), Public Law 105-17 (1997), mandates physical education as a required service for children & youth between the ages of 3-21 who qualify for special education services because of a specific disability or developmental delay. According to the federal mandate: The term 'special education' means specially designed instruction at no cost to parents or guardians, to meet the unique needs of a child with a disability, including-

  1. Instruction conducted in the classroom
  2. Instruction in physical education

IDEA 1401 (16), (1997)



 2002 Winter Paralympics

2002 Winter Paralympics
7 - 16 March 2002
Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

The VIII Paralympic Winter Games Salt Lake City 2002 will feature three sports to be contested by some 500 elite athletes with a disability from 35 countries. This Games Section of the IPC website provides basic information about the Salt Lake City 2002 Paralympics.

For more information check out the Paralympic website.




 Did you Know?

  1. Inclusion is not required by law, instead LRE is!!

  2. Some states have developed or are beginning to develop student entry and exist criteria for adapted physical education.

  3. Fourteen states required teacher s to be certified as Adapted Physical Educators.

  4. There is a national certification for adapted physical educators.  See APENS http://www.twu.edu/o/apens/ 

  5. Graduate assistantships are available at Western Illinois University fo r those wanting to study Adapted Physical Education. http://www.wiu.edu/grad/pe.htm or Contact: Cindy Piletic 

  6. Movies including individuals with disabilities have been around since the early 1900.  Consider using film to increase disability awareness.  Especially such films as:&nbs p; At First Sight, Simon Birch, The Other Sister, Room with a View, and Bone Collector.  These films address technological advancements, family expectations, individual  abilities. 






Questions to Ask, or
Thoughts to Share?






Join more than 10,000 subscribers currently receiving a biweekly e-mail posting of the latest PELINKS4U news.

Enter your email address below, then click the 'Sign Up' button:

 

 



 Contribute YOUR Ideas

If you have ideas, comments, letters to share, or questions about particular topics, please email one of the following Adapted PE Section Editors:

Carol Huettig
Ph.D., Texas Woman's Univ.
Cindy Piletic
Ph.D., Western Illinois Univ.
Chris Stopka
Ph.D., U of Florida
Sue Tarr
Ph.D., U.Wis-River Falls

 Understanding Spina Bifida

Spina Bifida - considered to be the most common congenital spinal malformation that leads to a physical disability. Evidence supports that 2 out of every 100 live births have some form of Spina Bifida. 

The spina bifida is a condition that ranges in severity from spina bifida occulta (the vertebral arches fail to fuse and no spinal cord damage) to spina bifida cystica (the spinal sac is portruding outside the vertebrae while containing either the lining of the spinal or both the lining and the spinal cord itself).

The resulting neurological impairments ranges from mild muscle imbalance to paralysis of the one or both of the lower limbs.

Many of the children born with the more severe condition of Spina bifida also have  hydrocephalus, and will require shunts to be in place to drain the extra fluid around the brain









 Safety Considerations

Safety Considerations for Students with Spina Bifida

  1. Awareness of whether a student has a shunt.  If so, activities that may cause displacement of the shunt must be avoided.
  2. Awareness of activities that may place pressure on the sensitive area of the spine where the protrusion exists.
  3. Awareness of possible allergic reactions to latex.  Be aware of materials used to make different pieces are equipment.  Many equipment manufactures are now making equipment free of latex.




 Teaching Suggestions

Teaching Suggestions for Students with Spina Bifida

  1. Students should be integrated into the regular physical education setting when it is the least restrictive environment.  They should also be working toward goals similar to the able-bodied student.
  2. Physical fitness should be a primary goal because students with spina bifida have a tendency toward obesity.
  3. Emphasis should be placed upon upper limb development.
  4. Modifications should be made to accommodate the different modes of locomotion.



 Modifications

Equipment modifications:

Check out the following websites for information on modifications or purchasing adapted equipment.

Project inspire

PE Central

FlagHouse

Sporttime

Sportime Abilitations

Gopher sports

Things to remember when making modifications:

  1. Safety is the number one concern.

  2. There are no rules.

  3. Be creative.  

  4. Think outside of the box.


Home | Adapted PE | Archives | Calendar | Coaching | Contributors | Elementary PE | Health, Fitness & Nutrition
Feedback | Interdisciplinary PE | Links |PE Forum | PE News | Secondary PE | Site Sponsorship
Book Reviews | Store | Technology in PE
jjjjj
E-mail:  pelinks@pelinks4u.org | Fax/Phone 509-925-4175 | Copyright © 1999-2001 | PELINKS4U   All Rights Reserved