Specific Duties of a Special Education Paraprofessional

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A special education paraprofessional, also called a teacher's aide or assistant, is a classroom teacher's right hand man. Students who receive special education have Individualized Education Plans (IEPs) that may require them to receive modified or different instruction than the rest of the class. A paraprofessional is an ideal job for someone who wants to work with special needs students in a classroom but does not have teacher certification. Often, the classroom teacher determines a para's daily job assignments. Specific job requirements vary from district to district and state to state

1 Small Group Instruction

A special education paraprofessional may lead a small group in instruction that is different than, or modified from, the instruction given to the rest of the class.

2 One- On- One Instruction

The paraprofessional may assist one student who needs extra help or reinforcement, or one who is working on an assignment different than the rest of the class

3 Modifying materials

The paraprofessional may simplify or redesign materials for students with special needs. He may enlarge the font of a worksheet, create a word bank for a fill-in-the-blank activity, or modify a multiple choice work sheet to include fewer choices.

4 Record Keeping

Another part of the paraprofessional's job may be to implement and record data focusing on a specific student's behavior plan, as mandated in the student's IEP.

5 Monitoring Common Areas

The paraprofessional may be responsible for standing in the hallways during class changes in order to preserve order and ensure safety. He also may be asked to help monitor large groups of students during lunches or recess.

Lisa Weber is a freelance writer/editor and former special education teacher. She has a bachelor's degree in journalism and professional writing, and a master's degree in special education. Over the last 15 years, she has written for a variety of newspapers, magazines, and on-line publications.

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