SE358 ASSESSMENT OF STUDENTS WITH EXCEPTIONAL LEARNING NEEDS Course Syllabus - Jane Bogan

Term
Fall 2025
Section
M1
Course Delivery
ln person­[FTF]
Class Program

SE358:

Credits 4
Description
This class will emphasize early childhood/special education intervention assessment, evaluation techniques and report writing. The course includes information on how to select, adapt, and administer formal and informal performance-based assessment for specific motor, cognitive and sensory disabilities, data collection techniques and analysis, team collaboration in various settings (home, public/private centers, schools, classrooms, and community agencies), and staff and program assessment and evaluation. Students will design assessment adaptations and modifications and study research-based instructional strategies for learners with a variety of exceptionalities across the curriculum.

Prerequisites

ED360 and Admission to the Teacher Education Program

Meeting Times, Location, & Course Delivery Details

Meeting Days:
MWF
Meeting Times:
8:00-9:00am
Location:
CH303
Delivery Details

The class is delivered face-to-face, in person.

Contact Information

Instructor:
Jane Bogan
Instructor Email:
jane_bogan@wilmington.edu
Office Location:
CH300A
Phone Number
937-481-2281
Office Hours:
MW 10:30-12:30; F 10:30-12:00; by appointment
Course Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course...
1. The student will utilize their knowledge of grades 4 to 9 and grades 7-12 students’ physical, cognitive,
social emotion and cultural characteristics to design learning activities that are relevant, engaging, and
sufficiently challenging.
2. The student will translate academic content standards into learning targets that are specific,
measurable, and appropriate for students in grade 4 – 9 and grade 7 – 12 and develop or select
activities and assessments that align with standards and each other.
3. The student will be able to analyze assessment data and design instruction according to student
strength and needs as indicated by the data.
4. The student will demonstrate knowledge of and can apply a variety of content area instructional
strategies that enable differentiation in order to meet the needs of all students.
5. The student will locate, analyze, and critique current research on educational strategies.

Course Materials

Textbook Name: Inclusive Assessment: An Applied Approach
Edition: 9th
ISBN:9780137849116 (Paperback)
Author: Terry Overton & Adam Jordan
Publisher: Pearson

Instructor's Course Objectives

Upon successful completion of this course…

  1. The student will be able to explain the types and purposes of assessments used in special education.

  2. The student will be able to apply principles of curriculum-based measurement.

  3. The student will be able to analyze assessment data to draw conclusions about student needs.

  4. The student will be able to utilize assessment data to make educational decisions.

  5. The student will be able to justify how professional and ethical practices were applied during assessments.

  6. The student will be able to synthesize assessment information to write a comprehensive evaluation team report and present levels of academic and functional performance section of an individualized education program.

  7. The student will be able to summarize how school psychologists and/or intervention specialists use assessment tools within their daily jobs.

  8. The student will be able to apply principles of basic statistics to raw assessment data.

Course Schedule

Tentative Schedule

Subject to change during the semester. Adequate notice of changes will be given.

Weeks/Dates

Topics

Readings

Assignments/Plan

8/18

Introduction to the Course

 

Go over syllabus & Bb; go over project and remind to bring book to class with them each time. Discuss what assessment is and is not. Set goals for the class.
8/20

Introduction to Assessment

Chapter 1

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class; Complete Assessment types quiz for HW
8/22

None

Go over Assessment types quiz HW; Con’t Chapter 1 and reading quiz and activities in class; Final activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 2

Last Day of Drop/ Add Period for full-semester classes

8/25

Laws, Ethics, & Issues

Chapter 2

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class; complete fair/unfair scenarios activity for homework
8/27

None

Go over fair/unfair activity HW; con’t chapter 2 and reading quiz and activities in class
8/29

None

Con’t chapter 2 and reading quiz and activities in class; Final activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 3
9/1

No class – Labor Day

 

 
9/3

Image removed.CBM

ABCs of CBM Chapter 1-2

Go over what CBM is and why it’s a good tool
9/5

ABCs of CBM 2 reading chapters or 2 math chapters

Develop a sample reading CBM or math CBM for HW and include administration instructions.
9/8

Descriptive Statistics

Chapter 3

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class; complete case study 3.1 for HW
9/10

None

Go over case study 3.1 HW; con’t chapter 3 & reading quiz and activities in class. Complete statistics packet for HW (due 9/16)
9/12

None

Go over statistics packet questions if any; wrap up chapter 3 & reading quiz and activities in class. Final Activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 4.
9/15

Reliability & Validity

Chapter 4

Go over statistics packet HW; Complete reading quiz & application activities in class; complete Scattergram activity for HW
9/17

None

Go over Scattergram activity; wrap up Chapter 4 & reading quiz and activities in class. Final Activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 5
9/19

None

Complete Assessment 1 in Blackboard; this will cover things we have learned in the first four chapters and ask you to apply what you have learned to scenarios.
6 9/22

Norm-Referenced Assessment

Chapter 5

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class; complete chronological age activity for HW
9/24

None

Go over chronological age activity HW; con’t Chapter 5 & reading quiz and activities in class
9/26

 

Wrap up Chapter 5 & reading quiz and activities in class; CBM project check in with what has been accomplished thus far, answer questions, etc. Final activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 6
9/29

CBM & Other Informal Measures

Chapter 6

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class; complete Data Graphing activity for HW
10/1

None

Go over Data Graphing activity HW; con’t Chapter 6 & reading quiz and activities in class; complete Task Analysis activity for HW
10/3

None

Go over Task Analysis activity HW; wrap up Chapter 6 & reading quiz and activities in class; Final activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 7
10/6

MTSS & RtI

Chapter 7

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class.
10/8

None

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class; Final activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 8
10/10

No face-to-face class – state meeting.

Practical Guide to HLPs in Special Ed Chapter 4

 

Write an explanation of the big ideas in Chapter 4 and why this is important for you to understand.
10/13

No class – Fall Break

 

 
10/15

Academic Assessment

Chapter 8

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class.
10/17

None

Wrap up Chapter 8 & reading quiz and activities in class
10 10/20

Academic Assessment

WJ-IV-ACH

WJ-IV-ACH training and practice administration
10/22

None

Continue practice with WJ-IV-ACH and go through administration project and report writing (due 11/22)
10/24

None

Practice report writing activity in class together; CBM project check in; Final activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 9
11 10/27

Assessment of Behavior

Chapter 9

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class.
10/29

None

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class
10/31

Practical Guide to HLPs in Special Education Chapter 5

Discuss Chapter 5 and why this is important to know. Final activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 10
12 11/3

Measures of Intelligence and Adaptive Behavior

Chapter 10

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class.
11/5

None

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class
11/7

None

Wrap up Chapter 10 & reading quiz and activities in class; Final activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 11
13 11/10

Early Childhood Assessment

 

No face-to-face class on Monday or Wednesday due to CAEP visit

Chapter 11

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class.
11/12

None

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class.
11/14

None

Wrap up Chapter 11 & reading quiz and activities in class; Final activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 12
14 11/17

Transition Assessment

Chapter 12

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class.
11/19

None

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class.
11/21

None

Wrap up Chapter 12 & reading quiz and activities in class; Final activity is Think Ahead question for Chapter 13; Test Admin & Report Writing Projects due today.
15 11/24

 

Practical Guide to HLPs in Special Education, Chapter 6

Discuss Chapter 6 and why it is important to understand.
11/26

No class - Thanksgiving Break

None

None
11/28

None

None
16 12/1

Interpreting Assessment for Educational Intervention

Chapter 13

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class.
12/3

None

Complete reading quiz & application activities in class. Final CBM Project Check in
12/8

Final Exam Meeting (8-10am)

 

Present CBM Projects
Course Assignments

Application Activities: These are short activities that we will do in class. They will allow you to practice applying what you have learned in each chapter. Some of these will be done together in class; some will be started in class and finished for homework. Some will be worth points and others will be just for practice. I will include slides in the deck that are titled Application Activities and include an explanation of the activities. If you miss a class, pay special attention to those slides to see what activities you have missed. I recommend you check in with another person in class to find out the activity details. There will be 65 points for these activities.

Reading Quiz: There will be a short multiple-choice quiz over the weekly readings on Blackboard. Complete these quizzes as you are reading (you may use the textbook) for points. There will be 65 points for these quizzes.

Homework Activities: These are activities that you will do outside of class for a larger number of points. Sometimes we will practice the necessary skills in class and then you will do a larger assignment for homework. These will be worth between 10-25 points each and there will be 6 of those assignments.

Test Administration Project: You will learn how to administer a standardized academic achievement assessment and practice with it in class. This project asks you to administer the assessment to another person and collect the data from the assessment. This will be worth 25 points.

Report Writing Project: You will learn how to write a summary report using the standardized academic achievement assessment that you will be administering. You will be given a score report from the assessment and write a summary report detailing what subtests have been administered and identifying the strengths and weaknesses for the student. This will be worth 30 points.

CBM Project: You will complete a semester-long project that involves providing instruction and monitoring progress for a student in an area of need (reading or math). You will use research-based interventions and develop progress-monitoring assessments to collect data and create a graph to visually display the collected data. This will be worth 125 points.

Course Final Exam
Dec. 8 from 8-10am in CH303
Evaluation of Work

The grading scale will be as follows:

GradeRangeNotes
A373-400 (94-100%) 
A-357-372 (90-93%) 
B+345-356 (87-89%) 
B333-344 (84-86%) 
B-317-332 (80-83%) 
C+305-316 (77-79%) 
C293-304 (74-76%)Must hit this grade or higher to pass the class.
C-277-292 (70-73%) 
D237-276 (60-69%) 
F0-236 (0-59%) 

Instructor Course Policies

Instructor's Course Attendance Policy

You are expected to be in class. The college provides for 4 types of excused absences.

  1. Activities in which the student serves as an official representative of the College (e.g. musical performances, athletic contests, field trips, etc.).
  2. Personal illness, with documentation by the College nurse or a physician, if possible.
  3. Family or personal emergencies.
  4. When severe weather makes travel to campus dangerous.

You will have up to one week of absences permitted, which equals to 3 class days for the semester. Again, significant issues will be addressed on a case-by-case basis. However, if you miss more than 3 days (excused or unexcused), I will notify Academic Success that attendance is an issue and your grade can and will be impacted.

 

If you are running a fever do not come to class!

 

If you must miss class, I cannot send you a zoom link for class. The Radient Technology is reserved for students with documented medical issues preventing them from attending class in person. That notification for need for the Radient Technology comes from Academic Affairs, Academic Success, or the Office for Disability Services. It is not a decision made by me.

If you must miss class, it is your responsibility to connect with another person in the class to get a copy of the notes and find out what we did in class. Yes, you did miss important information and it is your responsibility to catch up on that information. Content from this class makes up 20% of the Primary Intervention Content OAE and 20% of the K-12 Intervention Content OAE. 

Instructor's Academic Integrity Policy

The Education Area uses a warning flag system to address any Academic Dishonesty or other dispositional issues. The full policy is laid out in the Academic Catalog. However, for a first offense,  you will have a meeting with the Area Coordinator, the instructor (or site supervisor if the issue occurs in field), and the field director (again, if the issue occurs in field). After discussion about the issue at hand, you will be asked to develop a plan to avoid similar situations in the future. The area coordinator will provide you with a template for the remediation plan. Once you submit the plan, the area faculty will review it and 1) approve it; 2) ask questions or ask for clarification as needed with resubmission; or 3) ask you to start over because you missed the entire point of the exercise. Once the plan is approved, you will check in weekly with the area coordinator and/or field director for the remainder of the semester to ensure completion of your plan. A warning flag will be documented in your file.

A second offense will result in a meeting with the whole education faculty. After discussing the issue at hand, a remediation plan will be drafted for you and you will check in twice weekly with the area coordinator. for the remainder of the semester. A second warning flag will be documented in your file.

A third offense will result in a meeting with the area coordinator where you will be dismissed from the education program. You will need to change your major because you will no longer be permitted to take education classes toward licensure. 

Late Work Policy

Late work will generally not be accepted. If there is an extenuating situation like you have a medical issue that prevents you from completing the assignment, you will need to communicate that to me prior to the deadline for the assignment and we will work something out. I will be closing assignments at the due date and once it is closed it will not be re-opened for assignment submission.

If you neglect to turn in more than 3 minor (10 points or less each) or 2 major (more than 10 points each) with no communication or valid reason (e.g. significant medical issue, etc.), I will submit your name to Academic Success for being at risk for not passing the class. 

Diversity

In this course, you will be learning about the use of assessment in the field of special education. There will be an emphasis on the exceptional learning needs of students and how assessment tools can provide information about best instructional practices and settings. Additionally, I would strongly encourage you to write and speak using "person-first language" where the person precedes the disability (Retrieved Aug. 11, 2023 from https://www.nih.gov/nih-style-guide/person-first-destigmatizing-language#:-:text=Describe%20what%20the%20person%20%E2%80%9Chas,a%20person%20who%20is%20bipolar). Using person-first language in writing or speaking, we would write or say "the child with a learning disability" rather than "the learning disabled child". The only exception this standard is when referring to a deaf person. Many deaf people have long felt that deafness is part of who they are and prefer to not have person-first language applied to them.

AI Policy

As you may have seen, AI has become relatively popular in the last few months with several different types of AI to provide things such as images, music, art, and writing. In my class, I expect assignments to be a demonstration of your knowledge, not the knowledge of an AI program. The content of this course is tested by the state of Ohio on the content OAE exam and if you are using AI to complete the assignments, it will not benefit you on the OAE or in your career as an educator. I would expect you to be mature and professional and to complete your own assignments using the knowledge you have gained in your time in the Wilmington College education program. If you are confused about the assignment, you are welcome to come to Office Hours or set up an appointment to meet with me and we can walk through the task together to ensure you understand what you need to do.

OAE Test Frameworks

The following are the parts of the OAEs that cover content from this course. These are the subdomains and specific bits of knowledge that you will need to know from this class for the OAEs.

058 Primary Ed Intervention Specialist Test Framework:

 

0003 Understand formal and informal assessment instruments and procedures for evaluating strengths and needs of students

with disabilities in grades PK–5.

Includes:

1.       Demonstrate knowledge of measurement principles, types, and characteristics of formal and informal assessments (e.g. validity, reliability, diagnostic, formative and summative assessments, screenings, rubrics, observations, checklists, portfolio and alternative assessments). Weeks 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14

2.       Apply knowledge of methods and practices of gathering formal and informal assessment data from multiple sources to inform appropriate educational decisions, including maintaining ongoing data collection to analyze students' progress toward measurable outcomes (e.g., developing and evaluating interventions, goals, and objectives; progress-monitoring progress monitoring behavior and academic progress and appropriate eligibility decisions). Weeks 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14

3.       Analyze diagnostic, formative, and summative data (e.g., academic and/or behavior data) to plan, differentiate, and adjust targeted instruction, interventions, and goals and to monitor progress. Weeks 3, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14

4.       Demonstrate knowledge of procedures for developing informal assessments and gathering ongoing informal assessment data to support all areas of the curriculum for students with disabilities (e.g., examples of progress monitoring, data collection methods, task analysis, classroom data collection systems, self-assessment). Weeks 3, 7       

5.       Apply knowledge of strategies and procedures for administering assessments, including strategies for the use of technology-based assessments and adaptations, and practices for administering standardized assessments. Weeks 6, 9, 12

6.       Apply knowledge of strategies for modifying and adapting assessments, including the use of assistive technology, to accommodate individual students' abilities and needs, including those of students from diverse backgrounds, and the implications of modifications and adaptations to assessment validity and reliability. Weeks 5, 10

7.       Apply knowledge of the appropriate uses and limitations of various types of assessments for evaluating students with disabilities, including strategies for selecting and administering nonbiased assessments and assessment practices (e.g. accessibility, legal and ethical assessment issues, responsible assessment practices). Weeks 2, 3, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14

043 Special Education:

0003 Understand procedures for selecting, adapting, modifying, designing, and using various types of formal and informal assessments.

Includes:

1.       Demonstrate knowledge of basic assessment terminology and the characteristics, uses, and limitations of various types of formal, informal, and alternative assessments. Weeks 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14

2.       Apply knowledge of strategies for selecting, adapting, and modifying multi-level assessments (e.g., Response to Intervention) to identify students at risk, provide evidence-based interventions and instruction, and monitor student progress. Weeks 3, 8

3.       Apply knowledge of strategies and procedures for administering assessments, including strategies for using technology and procedures to avoid bias during the assessment process. Weeks 2, 3, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14

4.       Apply knowledge of how to collect, organize, interpret, and evaluate assessment data to inform and improve instruction and interventions. Weeks 3, 7, 9, 10, 11, 13

Institutional and Program-Level Policies

Final Exam Schedule

All exams will follow the Final Exam Schedule. Students scheduled to take three or more final examinations on one day may request to arrange their examination schedule, so no more than two exams occur on one day.
Requests for early or late exams are considered only under extreme circumstances. Prior to the exam period, the student must file a written request on the Early/Late Exam Form available in the Student One Stop Center, Academic Records, and on the WC portal. The form must be signed by the Instructor and the Academic Dean, approving the alternate exam time. This process must be completed prior to the scheduled exam period.

Undergraduate:  SP25 Final Exam Schedule    Graduate:  

 

Out-of-class Work Expectation

A minimum of 2 hours of out-of-class student work is expected for each hour of in-class time for traditional face-to-face courses. For online and hybrid courses, the combination of face-to-face time and out-of-class work should be equal to 3 hours per credit hour per week.

Instructional Course Delivery                                                                                                            

Definition of Courses

Academic Integrity Policy

The use of generative AI is prohibited except where expressly allowed in assignment instructions.

Academic Integrity Policy

Class Attendance Policy                              

Institutional Class Attendance Policy

Accessibility and Disability Services