building a continuum of transportation education judy l. shanley, ph.d., director, administration...

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WWW.PROJECTACTION.ORG Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility Management, & Student Engagement Projects, Easter Seals Transportation Group, Washington, DC Michael J. VanDekreke, Manager Accessibility, RTA Chicago Nathan Neely, Travel Instructor, Chicago, IL ATI National Conference August 2013

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Page 1: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

WWW.PROJECTACTION.ORG

Building a Continuum of Transportation Education 

• Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility Management, & Student Engagement Projects, Easter Seals Transportation Group, Washington, DC

• Michael J. VanDekreke, Manager Accessibility, RTA Chicago

• Nathan Neely, Travel Instructor, Chicago, IL

ATI National ConferenceAugust 2013

Page 2: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Today’s Agenda

• Overview of Easter Seals Project ACTION - Judy

• Rationale for this Work - Michael• Knocking on the Door of School Districts - Judy• Strategies to Build a Continuum of Transportation Education & Travel Instruction - Judy

• Student-Family Summits – Nate

• Activities and Discussion

Page 3: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Easter Seals Project ACTION (ESPA)• Mission: promote universal access to transportation for people with

disabilities…

• Supports Transportation and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)

• Begun by Congress twenty three years ago to build bridges of understanding between the Transportation and Disability Community

• Cooperative Agreement funded by the Federal Transit Administration and Administered by Easter Seals

• Aligned with Easter Seals work to improve the lives of children, youth, and adults with disabilities

Page 4: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Four Functional Areas to Help Local Organizations Build Accessible

Transportation Capacity• Training Events – travel training, webinars, online training

• Technical Assistance – 800#, email, in-person coalition building events

• Applied Research – fund catalyst and gap filling programs to stimulate academic inquiry and leverage new product development

• Outreach – build awareness & create partnerships

Page 5: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

A Poll

What is your experience with Project ACTION?

1. I participate in ESPA events, trainings, and use products - Project ACTION is a must have resource!

2. I have heard of Project ACTION – and that’s about it

3. I have never used resources - I am so excited to learn more about Project ACTION and can’t wait to find out about events, trainings, and products!

Page 6: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

A Message from a Transportation Perspective

Michael VanDekreke, Manager Accessibility, Regional Transportation Authority, Chicago

Page 7: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

An Introduction to this Work

• How did this work come about?

• What was the process?

• Why does it matter?

• Lessons learned for others to replicate

Page 8: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Transportation education creates a culture, accompanied by a coordinated set of practices, to

connect students, families, educators, pupil transporters, and public transportation

professionals to ensure students have knowledge, access, and choice regarding a continuum of

accessible transportation options across grade levels, and especially as they transition from

school to postsecondary education, employment, and independent living.

Page 9: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Voices from Youth

I feel like I am independent. I don’tneed to depend on my mom and dad to

take me places. Now I can ridethe bus to get to my job and to the movies

with my friends

Spontaneous Choice

Page 10: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Travel Instructors Can Knock on School Doors and Leverage

• Existing school reforms and programs– Work around college & career readiness– Focus on common core state standards– Focus on Employment First – Inclusive post-school outcomes

• Factors that get school districts in trouble– High drop out rates– Poor transition plans and services– Poor post-school outcomes– Legal requirements of IDEA

Page 11: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Ready by 21 Insulated Pipeline

College and Career Readiness

Families Peers Community Members

ECD & Child After-School Civic, Social, Work Social & Strategic PlacementCare Providers Programs Opportunities Supports & Coaching

Transportation, Health, Mental Health, Housing, Financial

http://www.readyby21.org/

Align Transportation Education With….

Page 12: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Align Transportation Education With…

Implementation of the Common Core Standards

Page 13: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Transportation Content can be Integrated Across the IEP

Page 14: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

IEP Goals and Benchmarks

Example (Literacy and Transportation Content)

•Given picture representations of 25 community signs or symbols with which he is

unfamiliar at the start of the IEP year, and the verbal prompt “What (sign or symbol) is

this and what does it mean?”, Manuel will independently verbally state the name and

meaning of each one in 5 of 5 trials to demonstrate mastery. – Benchmarks can fade level of prompting– Benchmarks can increase number of correct responses– Benchmarks can increase number of signs/symbols

Think Forward

•To increase his skills with a future goal, the context might be recognizing those same

signs/symbols when out in the community as part of community-based instruction.

Page 15: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Examples of Post-Secondary Outcomes • After graduating from high school, Andrew will independently

travel to and from work using public transportation.

• After completing high school and moving to college, Mikela will

utilize campus transit options to attend her weekly classes.

• After completing high school and while continuing to live with his

family, Devon will, with assistance, use pedestrian skills to walk

to business in his community for shopping opportunities.

Page 16: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

A Poll

Have you had experience in working with schools on programs that integrate transportation content and other school programs?

Page 17: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

WWW.PROJECTACTION.ORG

A Curriculum to Build the Knowledge of Educators, Human Services, Families, and Transit regarding Transportation Education

and Travel Instruction

http://www.projectaction.org/Initiatives/YouthTransportation/TransportationEducationCurriculum.aspx

Page 18: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Building an Accessible Transportation Continuum for Students with Disabilities to Support Transition

Interconnected Systems and People

Students & Families

http://www.saferoutesinfo.org/

http://www.napt.org/www.nasdpts.org

http://tsdconference.com/www.ahead.org

http://www.apta.com/www.ctaa.org

www.cec.sped.orghttp://www.dcdt.org/

http://www.rehabnetwork.org

Easter Seals Transportation Group

J. Shanley, Easter Seals, 2013

Page 19: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Module 9

Module 1

Modules 2, 3, 4

Modules 5, 6

Module 7

Module 8

What you will learn

Page 20: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Activity

• How Can You Contribute?

Page 21: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

District-Wide Transportation Education

- Provide professional development to educators around accessible transportation supports

- Engage families & students in transportation ed in early grades- Integrate transportation content across grade levels and curriculum

(ELA, Math, geography, etc.)- Rely on transit for community-based experiences

- Invite transit into schools and programs- Establish linkages across educators, pupil transportation and public transportation;

Provide travel instruction and orientation

Focused Transportation Assessments & Education

- Travel Training Assessments- OT/PT Behavioral assessment

- Travel Instruction - Familiarization

Intense Services

- Travel Training- Paratransit eligibility

- OT/PT/Behavioral Interventions

Moving up the Tiers•Fewer numbers of students•More defined services•Greater time & resource commitment•Specialized training and competence of providers

Building a Continuum of

Transportation Education

Page 22: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

What Are you Doing at Each Tier? What Can you be Doing at Each Tier?

Tier Current Activities Future Activities

What do you need to make it happen?

Can you integrate transportation content in any current reforms?

Page 23: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Some Ideas….Strategies to Integrate Accessible Transportation and Transition Services

• Engage families, students, and colleagues – hold a transportation summit– Invite students who use transit, businesses, Voc Rehab

• Conduct resource mapping of transportation resources & travel training

services – shared services (church, school, business)

• Connect with transit organizations and mobility management systems– Federal Untied We Ride – www.unitedweride.gov

• Contribute to IEP goals around accessible transportation

• Invite transit professionals into events

Page 24: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Strategies to Integrate Accessible Transportation and Transition Services

• Use & visit transit – field trips

• Embed transportation content into curriculum and instruction• Look for grant opportunities to focus on accessible transportation

• Connect with local teacher education and rehabilitation preparation programs

• Integrate transportation content into professional development

• Understand travel instruction and its components

• Consider offering travel instruction services

– Partner with human services organizations, transit agencies, State agencies

Page 25: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Yellow School Buses as the First Step• Relationships with Pupil Transportation (National Association for Pupil

Transportation www.napt.org and National Association of State Directors

of Pupil Transportation Services http://www.nasdpts.org– Simulate public buses

• Establish fare cards• Use public transit signage• Invite public transit drivers on school grounds• Develop schedules and route maps• Provide students/clients computer route maps• Mimic driver alert systems on buses• Replicate social variance on bus

Page 26: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

WWW.PROJECTACTION.ORG

Engaging Students, Families, Transportation, and Other Key Stakeholders

Module 3

Page 27: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Interconnected Systems and People

• Students and their families drive the process

• Educators and transition coordinators include content in teaching

and develop IEP goals around transportation skills. Working with

related services professionals such as occupational and physical

therapists, educators inform transportation planning in areas such

as:– Student learning styles and instructional methods– Behavioral and social performance– How transportation content can be aligned with academic content

and classroom instruction

Page 28: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Interconnected Systems and People

• Pupil transportation and college campus professionals can offer

information about school and college based transportation

services.– Pupil transportation professionals participate in IEP

meetings and share information about student mobility, travel and transportation options

• Public transportation can support school content related to the

use of public transportation and the services provided in

particular areas.

Page 29: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

STRATEGIES FOR ENGAGING STUDENTS

Page 30: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Engaging Students

• Students are critical informants to transportation education– Integrating transportation content into academic standards and

curriculum (Module 5) will help students become more involved in transportation content and discussions about transportation options as they move across grades

– Providing students with opportunities to express their preferences and interests in transportation options will better ensure that choices are aligned with student needs

– Using tools, such as the social and sensory scans, can help engage students

– Assisting students in developing a self-advocacy plan teaches self-determination

Page 31: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Social and Sensory Scans for Students

• One way for students to become involved is to help them understand their own preferences and styles

• Students have sensory and social preferences which are factors that may affect their choice to participate in a particular activity

• These preferences can influence their choices in selecting particular modes of transportation

• Students can build transportation plans that are aligned with these preferences

Page 32: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Self-Advocacy to Enhance Transportation Choice: Tools to Assist Students in Identifying Transportation Options Based on Preferences

These materials are part of the Integrated Self-Advocacy (ISA) Curriculum

developed by Dr. Valerie Paradiz, an internationally recognized researcher

and educator. Dr. Paradiz adapted the ISA Sensory Scan™ and ISA Social

Scan™ for ESPA to help students understand and address sensory and

social challenges. This increased knowledge and awareness enables

students to build a self-advocacy portfolio around accessible transportation

that is aligned with sensory and social needs.

Page 33: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Social and Sensory Preferences Webinar

Transportation and Self-Advocacy Education to Support

Student Transition to Post-school Settings

http://www.projectaction.org/Initiatives/YouthTransportation/SelfAdvocacyCurriculum.aspx

•This ESPA webinar, conducted with the support of nationally

recognized researcher Dr. Valerie Paradiz, introduces both educators

and students to basic self-advocacy and ways to develop advocacy

plans related to using transportation.

Page 34: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

ESPA tools you can implement in your classroom

• ISA Sensory Scan™ for Transportation– This is an activity that can be done in or out of class (or both).

Students can work in pairs or solo (then share with the group). The worksheet prompts you to assess your individual sensory experiences in the environment you are scanning. For students who need support, a fellow student can assist with the scan, or a teacher or other classroom staff can fill out the worksheet by student self-report or by staff observation. The scan can be completed first in the classroom setting for practice, then again later in a transit setting. Link to ESPA resources.

Page 35: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

• My Self-Advocacy Experience– This is an in-class activity that educators and students can do to identify the

three steps of self-advocacy by reflecting on an experience from their own lives Link to ESPA resources

• My Sensory Experience– This is an in-class activity for educators and students to support the

exploration of the different sensory systems and what they do. The activity also provides opportunity to explore one’s own sensory experiences Link to ESPA resources

ESPA tools you can implement in your classroom (cont.)

Page 36: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

STRATEGIES FOR ENGAGING FAMILIES

Page 37: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Engaging Families• Families may be fearful or hesitant to

let their children explore a continuum of

transportation options– Providing forums for families to express their

concerns is important– Facilitating connections across families whose

children have successfully received a continuum of services, with those families who may be fearful, can demonstrate the positive outcomes related to transportation education

– Organizing events such as a summit is one way to engage families

Scroll here to click forward arrow

Page 38: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Developing Student-Family Summits to Engage Families

• Determine targeted audience

• Determine the number of attendees

• Secure a location

• Set a date/time

• Create an agenda

• Market the event by flyers, phone calls, emails, and mail

• Reach out to potential panelists such as:

– Students and their families of students who have learned to use public transit, employers, educators, vocational rehabilitation counselors.

Link to Summit Planning Template

Link to Summit Agenda

Page 39: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Developing Student – Family Summits

• Prep panelists on questions before the summit

• Meet with facilitators and review breakout session questions

• Do a walk through at location prior to the summit

Link to Sample Facilitator Notes

Link to Sample Summit Flyer

Page 40: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Activity

• In small groups, use the Summit Planning Template

to plan for a student-family summit

• Discussion Questions– What are critical elements in your planning?– What challenges could you potentially have?– What are the outcomes of the summit?

Page 41: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

STRATEGIES FOR ENGAGING PUPIL TRANSPORTATION PROFESSIONALS

Learn how Pete Meslin, Director of Transportation, Newport-Mesa Unified School District, CA Works with Educators

Click here for a transcript

Meslin Video

Page 42: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

A Poll

Do you collaborate with school pupil transportation professionals?

-Describe the activities.-What do you think contributes to the success of these relationships?

Page 43: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Engaging Pupil Transportation ProfessionalsThe National Association for Pupil Transportation (NAPT)

www.napt.org is the school transportation industry’s largest and most

diverse membership organization, providing cutting-edge education

and timely information services for its members throughout the world.

 NAPT’s vision is to be first and foremost in leading, supporting and

developing world-class professionals who provide safe and efficient

pupil transportation for our children.  The NAPT mission is CLEAR:

Communication; Leadership; Education; Advocacy; Resources.   Review the ESPA Presentation conducted with pupil transportation

professionals to learn about ways to collaborate

Page 44: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

STRATEGIES FOR ENGAGING PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION PROFESSIONALS

Page 45: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Engaging Your Local Transit Agency

• Most public transportation agencies have an ADA Compliance Officer that

would be a good initial contact

• Transit agencies are invested in increasing fixed route use while reducing

paratransit ridership costs– Highlight your efforts in increasing the use of the fixed route system rather than

paratransit

• Ask your transit system how you can partner with their Travel Training

Program if they offer a program

• Ask transit professionals about local transit policies and fare programs for

people with disabilities

Page 46: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Person-Directed Mobility Management

Mobility management works at the community level by ensuring that transportation is accessible and the pathways to transportation are accessible. At the community level, mobility managers connect with

transportation service providers and communities on developing coordinated transportation plans and policies that promote accessible

transportation and accessible pathways for people of all abilities

http://www.projectaction.org/Initiatives/MobilityManagement.aspx

Page 47: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

A Poll

Are you Involved in Coordinated Transportation Systems or Transportation Advisory / Planning Committees?

Page 48: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Guided by Several Projects• Easter Seals

– Mobility Management Independent Living Coaches Program

• National Center for Mobility Management– Partnership across Easter Seals, Community

Transportation Association of American, and the American Public Transportation Association

• Strengthening Inclusiveness Transportation

Partnerships

Page 49: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

• Participate in advisory groups

• Encourage cultures that welcome a diverse range of perspectives through accessible meeting venues, by varying meeting times, and using materials in multiple formats.

• Provide input regarding the accessibility of varying media and technology platforms.

• Collaborate with transit and human service organizations to: write products; review materials; conduct presentations; co-host forums and events; write grants and seek funding together; and develop policy and practice statements.

We Learned about Specific Strategies…

Page 50: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

• Consider career pathways for persons with disabilities and older

adults:– Connect with guidance counselors, school transition

professionals, employment centers, Dept. of Labor one-stop centers.

– Serve as a venue for internships, placements.

• Implement job shadowing, job sharing, and mentorship programs.

• Share equipment and technology.

• Attend professional development forums together – including online

forums.

We Also Learned…

www.transitplanning4all.org

Page 51: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Opportunities for Participation!

• Learn about the coordinated transportation

infrastructures in your community

• Encourage the development of mobility managers

• Create venues for education, human services, and

transit to work together

• Identify opportunities for engagement in decision-

making about transportation systems.

Page 52: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Thoughts, Ideas, Questions?

Page 53: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Considerations for Hiring a Travel Trainer• Has the individual completed any structured course or training offered by a recognized

vendor?

• Has the individual had experience in all phases of travel instruction?

• Does the individual have school-based travel instruction experience?

• If the individual has completed training, what was the performance of the individual in the

course? Is this performance review documented?

• Does the individual have practical experience as a travel trainer? In what settings and with

what populations?

• Has the individual worked with educators and contributed to transition planning?

• Is the individual experienced with the transit systems they will be instructing students to

use?

• Does the individual belong to any professional associations, such as ATI, where they can

receive ongoing professional development?

Page 54: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Promoting Travel Training and Transportation Education – Be Engaged!

• Join the accessible transportation for students (ATS) online community-http://www.espa-ncst.communityzero.com/ats

• Sign up to receive all of ESPA notifications www.projectaction.org

• Use Project ACTION tools and materials http://www.projectaction.org/Initiatives/YouthTransportation.aspx

• Attend online Webinars – forming partnerships, advocacy, etc.

• Collaborate across disciplines– Council for Exceptional Children (CEC), Division on Career

Development & Transition, National Association for Pupil Transportation (NAPT) , National Association of State Directors of Pupil Transportation Services

Page 55: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Resources

• ESPA General resources to support accessible transportation

– www.projectaction.org

• ES Resources Related to Supports for Student Transition

– http://www.projectaction.org/Initiatives/YouthTransportation.aspx

• ESPA Mobility Management Resources and Online Community

– http://www.projectaction.org/ResourcesPublications/MobilityManagement.aspx

• Partnership for Mobility Management

– http://web1.ctaa.org/webmodules/webarticles/anmviewer.asp?a=1790&z=95

• Strengthening Inclusive Partnerships

– www.transitplanning4 all.org

Page 56: Building a Continuum of Transportation Education Judy L. Shanley, Ph.D., Director, Administration for Community Living, Mobility

Contact Information• Judy Shanley

[email protected]– 800-659-6428– 202-403-8354

• Michael VanDekreke– [email protected]

• Nathan Neely– [email protected]

We would love your feedback regarding how you use the information shared today – please send

me your thoughts and suggestions