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From Middle School through High School
From Middle School through High School
Planning for the Future
Planning for High School: Ages 10-14
- By age 10 it is recommended that children start coming to their meetings to gain familiarity with topics and questions about their health and education.
- By age 14 your child should be part of most of these meetings. He’s likely to have key input and ideas about plans and discussions about his future. Before your child starts high school, meetings should look at assessments of social skills, academic skills, self-help and self-advocacy skills, recreation choices, and the topic of sexuality if appropriate (see Social Opportunities, Recreation Activities, and Healthy Relationships). Your child can help make a plan to grow his independence at home and at school.
- When your child is 13 or 14, it’s good to start thinking about high school graduation requirements and diploma options (see below). You can form a plan based on your child’s individual needs that has the necessary services and supports that will help him reach his high school goals.
Early High School: Ages 14-16
- Student must successfully complete all state and district course requirements for graduation.
- Student must pass all subtests of the Utah Basic Skills Competency Test (UBSCT).
- Student must successfully complete all state and district course requirements for graduation.
- Student must provide documentation of at least three attempts to take and pass all subtests of the Utah Basic Skills Competency Test (UBSCT).**
- Student has completed his/her senior year, is exiting the school system, and has not met all state or district requirements for a diploma.
- Student may or may not have participated in the Utah Basic Skills Competency Test (UBSCT).
**For a small percentage of students placed in special education, the IEP/school team may determine that participation in statewide assessment should be through Utah's Alternative Assessment (UAA). For these students, three attempts of the UBSCT are not required. In order to be eligible to take the UAA, the student must meet all of the requirements outlined in Utah's Special Education Graduation Guidelines (

Points to Address in the High School IEP Meeting
- Determine classes and credits needed to complete graduation and plan classes and course of study in line with this.
- Think about driver education. See Transportation Options for Young Adults.
- Look at job interests and skills using career exploration, job sampling, and some job training. See After High School Options.
- Find community services that offer job training and placement.
- Think about summer employment or volunteer experience.
- Put together a job placement file with references and skills the student has gained.
- Apply to adult service agencies like State Services for People with Disabilities, Vocational Rehabilitation, and Independent Living Centers. Some agencies may have long waiting lists.
- Ask the school team about required tests for graduation, if it applies.
Late High School: Ages 16-22
What Can You Expect from the Medical Home?
Resources
Information & Support
For Parents and Patients
Student Transition and Youth Support, USDR
The 2015 Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA), has provision for pre-employment exit services to
students with disabilities who may be eligible for services. A counselor is assigned to every school district
in Utah. Training is subcontracted to six providers in Utah.
Utah Parent Center
A nonprofit organization that provides training, information, referral, and assistance to parents of children and youth with
all disabilities including physical, mental, hearing, vision, learning, behavioral, and emotional. Staff consists primarily
of parents of children and youth with disabilities.
Utah State Office of Education
This site provides information about Utah schools, charter schools, the school board, rules, regulations, and more.
Utah 2-1-1
A free information and referral line for health, human and community services. 2-1-1 provides information and referral on
topics such as emergency food pantries, rental assistance, public health clinics, child care resources, support groups, legal
aid, and a variety of nonprofit and governmental agencies. Call for quick answers. The online directory provides anytime access
to the same information. Confidential and free.
Transition Planning for Students
Outlines transition planning as a results-oriented process designed to facilitate the successful movement of high school-aged
youth with disabilities from school to adult life; includes information about special education law. Source: Autism Now.
Center for Parent Information and Resources (DOE)
Parent Centers in every state provide training to parents of children with disabilities and provide information about special
education, transition to adulthood, health care, support groups, local conferences, and other federal, state, and local services.
See the "Find Your Parent Center Link" to find the parent center in your state; Department of Education, Office of Special
Education.
State Education Contacts and Information
This page has contact information for state school resources, including the department of education, the higher education
agency, special education agency and adult education agency in any state, commonwealth, or territory; U.S. Department of Education.
Services for Patients & Families in Utah (UT)
Service Categories | # of providers* in: | UT | NW | Other states (4) (show) | | NM | NV | OH | RI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adolescent Health Transition Programs | 6 | 2 | 5 | 2 | 2 | 3 | |||
Disability Related Employment Programs | 79 | 4 | 22 | 20 | 4 | 16 | |||
Medical Care Expense Assistance | 52 | 35 | 40 | 61 | 35 | 39 | |||
Services for People with Disabilities | 18 | 6 | 19 | 31 | 7 | 18 | |||
Vocational Education | 80 | 1 | 9 | 45 | 1 | 10 |
For services not listed above, browse our Services categories or search our database.
* number of provider listings may vary by how states categorize services, whether providers are listed by organization or individual, how services are organized in the state, and other factors; Nationwide (NW) providers are generally limited to web-based services, provider locator services, and organizations that serve children from across the nation.
Authors & Reviewers
Contributing Author: | Gina Pola-Money |
Reviewers: | Tina Persels |
Alfred N. Romeo, RN, PhD |
2005: first version: Robin PrattCA; Barbara Ward, RN BSCA; Cheralyn CreerCA; Karen Ekker, RNCA; Carolyn Green, RNCA; Lynne Larsen-MillerCA; Elaine PollockCA; Kathryn PostCA; Helen PostCA; Lisa Samson-Fang, MDCA |