Career transition lesson plans

Note: Multiple users from different school buildings can all use the program simultaneously.

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Features and Benefits

Comprehensive

Accessible

Widely Applicable

Save Time

LCE instruction is ready-made, readily available

Be Accountable

Meet legal requirements for transition plans

Respond to Workforce Realities

Transition from school to life takes skill

LCE Assessment Instruments

Our Life Centered Education (LCE) transition curriculum includes three types of assessment instruments to measure degree of skill attainment and target instruction accordingly. They can be used alone or together depending on reading level of individual students and amount of improvement data required by the setting.

  1. Competency Rating Scale – behavioral checklist, qualitative
    An inventory completed by teachers and/or parents based on their judgment of student mastery on each LCE sub-competency.
  2. Knowledge Battery – multiple-choice items, quantitative
    A set of written test items that students complete either online or on paper. An audio option is available for each test item.
  3. Performance Battery – rating scale of observed performance, qualitative
    Consists of scenarios that teachers arrange and judge regarding amount of student skill acquisition. Involves students in role-plays, card sorts, etc.

LCE assessment results are stored, tracked, and reported within the online system, so you can readily and justifiably:

Interested in learning more or signing up for a FREE trial of LCE? Click HERE . Contact lce@exceptionalchildren.org for questions. Fill out this order form to order LCE, or renew your order .

LCE FAQs

What is LCE’s intended audience?

LCE is intended for all age and grade levels regardless of disability severity or involvement. It includes lessons at three (increasing) levels of complexity. Suggestions for differentiated instruction, including modifications and accommodations, are included in the lesson plans.

How does LCE fit into a normal school’s curriculum?

LCE could be infused into existing courses or it could be a self-standing elective or independent study course. Lessons on personal finance could be taught within math or economics. Lessons on voting could be taught within government or social studies.

Can non-readers benefit from LCE?

Lessons are meant to be teacher-led and require no reading from students. Worksheets can read aloud by the teacher or other peers and test items have audio feedback, which does not require reading. Two of the three forms of testing require demonstration of mastery, not reading.

What training is available?

CEC has online videos, and you can contact lce@exceptionalchildren.org for more resources and information. Webinars are available at 90 minutes for $950 and live, full-day workshops are available for $4,000 plus travel and lodging expenses.

What are LCE’s technical requirements?

All you need is a computer and a web browser. The LCE portal works best on Internet Explorer 8 and above and the latest versions of Chrome, Safari, and Firefox. The test item audio playback function can be accessed from most browsers.

Does the account administrator have to be an administrator?

No, the LCE account administrator needs to be someone willing to serve as the main contact for users and take responsibility for entering usernames into the system. (Note: Users can be teachers, local agency partners, parents, etc.)

Can school administrators view student progress in the system?

Teachers have the only access to student data. However, they can share their student data across classrooms and screens of performance data with supervisors, upon request. Not all user teachers need to be in the same building.

What makes LCE unique?

Unlike the few competitive products on the market, CEC’s LCE transition curriculum does not rely on kits, discs, manipulatives, or binders. LCE is paperless and completely accessible online. Plus, it is the most comprehensive transition program on the market that:

Where do you start once your LCE license is activated?

The account administrator enters a username and password for each teacher, who then names and enters his/her classes into the system. Teachers assign each student a username and password and enters them. Then, the teacher scrolls through the objectives, selecting which to test first. They then create a customized (mini) test or choose a test stored in the online system. Once students complete the test, the system stores individual results as a baseline. Teachers follow the system’s lesson plans (arranged by level of complexity), then re-test; results get stored within the system for easy transfer to IEPs. The system ultimately contains several years’ worth of instruction with over 1,200 lessons.

Is LCE accessible on an iPad? What about via Moodle?

Yes, the LCE portal is accessible on an iPad and the audio playback feature, which is available for the knowledge battery test items, should also work. As for use in Moodle, create a link from Moodle that launches the LCE portal.

Can I just get the lesson plans for the entire curriculum?

No, CEC does not distribute the lesson plans alone because they are directly tied to related test items and worksheets, which would be necessary to implement the lesson plans.

When building a knowledge battery, is it possible to “pick and choose” individual questions from an existing battery and place them in a new test?

No, you cannot pick individual questions to place in a customized mini-test. But, you can select groups of questions that relate to a sub-competency’s objectives.