The current focus on curriculum-based assessment (CBA) presents a number of problems for many special education teachers. Preparing and using CBAs may seem difficult for teachers who are accustomed to viewing academics from a skills-based perspective or a criterion-referenced perspective that focuses on generic hierarchies of skills in various academic areas to plan a student's individualized education program (IEP).
If teachers are to have access to the general education curriculum for inclusion classes in a specific grade-level classroom—and its modifications—they need to know the grade-level specific skills usually used by general education teachers.
We usually see some discrepancies in focus between general and special education teachers because the latter teachers are usually engaged in helping students with mild disabilities who function below grade level "catch up"—as fast as possible.
Spelling Deficits
Most students have been taught by a writing-process approach, which would seem to reduce the effect of spelling problems on a report or story. But spelling continues to be a roadblock to fluent writing for many students with disabilities. Many students who learned to use invented spelling when taught language arts by the whole-language approach failed to make the transition to standard spelling. In addition, they find it difficult to proof their written work because they cannot detect or correct spelling errors.
Numerous prerequisites (i.e., auditory and visual perception, perceptual motor integration, phonics, handwriting) make spelling a difficult subject area for students with mild disabilities. Students who experience difficulty using word-attack skills in decoding new words in reading often experience difficulty with spelling.
Mercer indicated that required spelling competencies include the following:
- auditory discrimination
- consonants
- phonograms
- plurals
- syllabication
- structural elements (root words, prefixes, suffixes)
- ending changes
- vowel digraphs and diphthongs
- silent e
Spelling curriculums are generally composed of high-frequency words, and words that can be encoded by knowing basic spelling skills, which are primarily phonics and structural analysis skills. General education students using spelling basals are exposed to and expected to spell at least 3,000 words (at 20 words per week) by the end of the sixth grade.
Students with disabilities who spell a fraction of those words are at significant disadvantage in fluent written expression assignments. Appropriate programming for students with significant difficulties in spelling should begin with assessment to determine the student's individual spelling curriculum.
Source: https://ebookscheaper.com/creating-curriculum-based-assessments-in-spelling/