Recognizing Presuming Competence in Practice for Students with Complex Access Needs
In this video, Cheryl Jorgensen, an expert on inclusion for students with significant cognitive disabilities advises administrators regarding evidence of presuming competence that may be found in a classroom. This video aligns with the Rubric of Effective Practices for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities.
Related Content
Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Inclusion
Presuming Competence for Students with Complex Access Needs
Inclusion, Significant Cognitive Disabilities
Inclusionary Coaching Guide For Students with Complex Access Needs
Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Inclusion
The Fundamentals of Inclusive Education for Students with Complex Access Needs
Significant Cognitive Disabilities
Teamwork and Transitions
Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Inclusion
Guide to Implementation of Presuming and Constructing Competence
Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Inclusion
Fidelity Checklist and Reflection Tool: Presuming and Constructing Competence
Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Inclusion
Importance of Presuming Competence for Students with Complex Access Needs and the Least Dangerous Assumption
Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Inclusion
Least Dangerous Assumption: Evidence Based Practices for Students with Down Syndrome
Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Assistive Technology