Transition Assessments IEP ITP Sped Student Interview Survey Life Skills Jobs
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Description
This special education IEP transition assessments packet is tailored to secondary education students in the inclusion setting and is an ideal addition to IEPs (Individual Education Plans).
This assessment bundle is differentiated and provides the tools students need for career and vocational interest exploration.
Cutely designed and created to be student and teacher friendly and fast.
The assessments are useful for middle school, junior high school, and high school students with disabilities.
Transition assessments are required to be included in all Special Education IEPs when a student either turns 14 or enters the ninth grade. Available in printable pdfs or shareable Google Docs for students to type their answers onto.
Included in the Special Education IEP Transition Written Assessment packet:
★ Assessment 1: Interest Inventory: This interview assessment has 13 questions that all focus on the students likes and desires.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills, Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 2: My Best Day Ever: This interview assessment has 13 questions that summarize a student’s dream day.
Areas Assessed: Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 3: My Worst Day Ever: This interview assessment has 13 questions that summarize a student’s least desirable day.
Areas Assessed: Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 4: My Top Ten: cut, order, and glue: When provided with a list of 17 categories, the student selects the top 10, cuts them out, orders them and glues them to a paper. Then the student explains why the categories were chosen and specifically ordered.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills, Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 4 alternative: My Top Ten: highlighting: When provided with a list of 17 categories, the student selects the top 10 by highlighting them and then orders them by writing a number next to the categories. Then the student explains why the categories were chosen and specifically ordered.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills, Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 5: Down the Road: This assessment is set up as a questionnaire and uses 14 questions to guide the student through what they plan to be doing in 15 years.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills, Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 6: Money Management: This assessment is set up as a questionnaire and uses 13 questions to discover the student’s finance plans.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills, Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 7: Dealing with Crisis: This assessment uses 13 crisis scenarios to discover the student’s reaction to crisis situations and able to effectively handle life’s challenges.
Areas Assessed: Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 8: Job Path: This job inventory assessment uses 13 questions the student about his or her desired job. The student can answer the questions or use research to complete the assessment.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills
★ Assessment 9: All About Me: This 3-page assessment is divided into categories including “I am able to,” “Subjects I enjoy,” “My educational goals are to,” “I hope to live in a,” “I prefer to work,” “Personal qualities that I have are,” and “Strength, Average, Weakness, and Not sure” skill questions. Each category is set up to allow the student to place a checkmark in front of the items that describe him or her.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills, Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 10: Advice for Myself: Students are asked to think of advice they would give their younger self pertaining to 20 different topics including education, employment, and life skills.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills, Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 11: Crystal Ball: This assessment asks the student to pretend to gaze into a crystal ball and predict their future within different topics.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills, Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 12: Make a Meal: This life skills assessment asks the student to plan a nutritious meal for themselves and their family 15 years in the future. The student must identify important parts of the cooking process including cost, necessary materials, represented food groups, and more.
Areas Assessed: Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 13: My Life Goals: Use this assessment to allow the student to select from a list of 50 common life goals. This is great for a fast assessment that covers education and career goals.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills, Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 14: Shopping List: This 3-page assessments asks the students to choose essential items to buy for a new place they have just moved into. The assessment is created as a check list that allows the user to easily and quickly identify the items most important to them which creates a fast compilation for the teacher to insert into the IEP. I recommend using this assessment to document a student’s life skills and able to live independently.
Areas Assessed: Independent Living Skills
★ Assessment 15: Resume Builder: This assessment helps the student build a resume. An editable (Microsoft PowerPoint or Apple Keynote) template is included along with an example and guide to assist the student in identifying the necessary information to include in their resume.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills
★ Assessment 16: Job Shadowing: Help your student research about a job of interest to them and participate in a job shadowing. A three-page guide is used to help the student plan for the job shadowing, take notes during the event, and reflect afterwards. Use this guide to help plan for educational and career goals.
Areas Assessed: Employment Skills, Education/Training Skills
Useful for students with an identified disability that qualifies them to receive an IEP: Multiple Disabilities, Orthopedic Impairment, Deaf or Hard of Hearing, Emotional Disability (ED), Specific Learning Disability, Language/Speech Impairment, Mild Cognitive Disability, Moderate Cognitive Disability, Severe Cognitive Disability, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Traumatic Brain Injury, and Other Health Impairment (ADD/ADHD).
See what happy buyers are saying about this set of transition assessments:
"Wow! Wish I could have had these 10 years ago when I first started having to do transition plans. Wide variety of options and ways to assess. Something in here for every ability level and kids don't necessarily realize they are being assessed. These are a must have item."
"I love how this gives my CDC kids so many things to think about and do when it comes to life skills. They enjoy the activities and it helps me get to know them too!"
"I have been wanting to update my transition assessments for my 7th and 8th graders. These are great and there are enough that I can divide the assessments up between the two grades."
"These are great! Very useful to get students thinking about life after school. They also help with transition IEP information. Thanks"
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