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TASH RESOLUTION ON EDUCATING YOUNG CHILDREN WITH SIGNIFICANT
DISABILITIES
Statement of Purpose
All young children are entitled to high quality early childhood education and care.
Educating young children with significant disabilities is built on the idea that all
children need meaningful opportunities within natural settings and with typical developing
peers. All children, therefore, deserve to have age appropriate and positive learning
experiences.
Rationale
Young children, regardless of ability, need consistent and natural experiences to play,
interact, explore, and learn in safe and creative environments with their same aged peers.
The education for young children, particularly those who are labeled as having significant
disabilities, is grounded in the value that the inclusion of all people in all aspects of
society is the rule.
A spirit of community must exist Members Only to be truly valued. Teaching children
to be socially responsible for their environment, each other, and all living things is a
cornerstone to building community where all children and family are truly welcome. Other
principles and assumptions that guide service delivery program development for young
children with significant disabilities and their families are:
- A climate of community, which honors diversity and is responsive to individual
priorities of all members, must exist.
- Because families are the primary caregivers and most important influence in a child's
life, healthy partnerships between families and professionals across multiple disciplines
are vital to ensuring excellence and integrity. Families must have meaningful choices so
that their lifestyle and priorities are preserved.
- The effectiveness of a child's program must be viewed as a chief focus. Services and
supports should be integrated, coordinated, and embedded into naturally occurring routines
and activities. ¨ The ability to exercise personal control over the environment and one's
own life must be fostered to ensure that interdependence, choice and decision making, and
problem solving are achieved. These outcomes must be cultivated early in a child's life so
that they may be generalized across the lifespan.
- Fostering important outcomes such as membership, competence, peer relationships, self
esteem, and joy are essential for creating a strong foundation which can be developed
throughout a child's life.
- The role of technology is critical for ensuring that young children with significant
disabilities are able to interact with the world through the use of individualized and
useful systems.
Adopted July 1999
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