CARES
Collaborative Action and Resources for Educational Success
CARES teams are in place in all twenty Unit
5 schools. The primary function of the team is to provide
support in the form of intervention ideas, strategies, and
resources to teachers who refer students experiencing some type
of difficulty in the school setting. The critical goal is to
find the best combination of methods, materials, and strategies
to assist the student. Areas of difficulty vary; they may
include, but are not limited to, academic concerns,
social-emotional concerns, language/communication concerns,
health concerns, attention concerns, and motor concerns.
Teachers are required to notify the child’s parent(s) when they
make a CARES referral, and, in some cases, a parent may be
invited to the CARES team meeting. A parent, in consultation
with the child’s teacher, may also request that his/her child be
referred to CARES. CARES teams are also used to respond to a
parent request for a 504 Plan or a referral for a full and
individual evaluation. It is important to note that a gifted
student can also be referred to CARES if the teacher would like
ideas and strategies for better meeting the needs of the gifted
student within the classroom.
CARES team members typically include a building administrator, a
school psychologist, a school social worker, a special educator,
and general education teachers, called CARES Case Managers, who
have agreed to take on additional responsibilities. Depending on
the nature of the concern, other team members may include a
speech therapist, a Title 1 Reading teacher, an occupational or
physical therapist or a gifted lead teacher. At the junior and
senior high level, a school counselor is a regular team member.
Once a teacher refers a student to CARES, the building
administrator assigns a CARES Case Manager to the teacher. The
role of the CARES Case Manager is to work collaboratively with
the teacher to precisely define the nature of the referral
concern, the current functioning level of the student in the
area of concern, and the interventions that the teacher has
already tried and the student’s response to those interventions.
All of this information, along with information from the
student’s cumulative school file (group test scores, attendance
information, grades, etc.), assures that the team will have a
comprehensive picture of the student and will begin intervention
planning with a clear understanding of the student’s needs.
Team members brainstorm a variety of intervention ideas,
supports, and resources. The team selects those that are the
most appropriate for the student. The team/CARES Case Manager
then help the teacher select a data collection method and data
chart that will be used to track the effectiveness of the
intervention(s) over the next several weeks. A follow-up meeting
is scheduled at the conclusion of the initial CARES meeting. All
of the decisions and recommendations are recorded on a formal
CARES Accommodation Plan. The parents, team members, and any
other teacher/support staff member who works with the student on
a regular basis receive a copy of the plan and are expected to
follow the recommendations that relate to them. Interventions
are typically done at school, but at times may include
assignments that parents can do to assist their child. At the
follow-up meeting, the teacher and CARES Case Manager review the
progress the student made using the data gathered during the
intervention period. Team members, based on the data, then
decide next steps.
Depending on the outcomes achieved by the student, next steps
could include a continuation of the successful
strategies/intervention, an alteration of the intervention,
continued monitoring, or a decision to refer the student for a
full and individual evaluation if the team suspects that a
disability may be present. Although a student may be referred
for a full and individual evaluation at the first CARES team
meeting, it is generally advisable to attempt interventions and
note the student’s response to interventions to assist in
determining if the student’s difficulty is a result of a
disability or is, instead, a result of simply needing a slightly
different instructional approach, more practice opportunities,
or more direct instruction.
General questions about the CARES process should be directed to
Cory Tello, Special Education Director of Instruction at
454-2220. If, however, you have questions about whether your
child would benefit from a CARES referral, please discuss your
concerns with your child’s teacher.
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