Our Curriculum

There are many pieces to our curriculum at Wildwood School. While individualizing it to meet every student’s needs, we utilize guiding, best practice programs that help our students achieve great things. All students are exposed to the Common Core Standards throughout their school day. Each program level collaborates to ensure students have access to various curricula that suit their needs. Staff work together in planning and creating lessons and objectives that will assist in students reaching their highest potential.

At our elementary and intermediate levels, students utilize the Autism Curriculum Encyclopedia (ACE). This educational system designed specifically for learners with autism provides staff the ability to assess, teach and evaluate progress using the most evidence based procedures. While using the ACE, students are taught skills spanning across eight domains including but not limited to: discrimination, communication, social, academic, self-help, community, vocational and leisure. This customizable curriculum makes it easy for staff to adapt each lesson to meet their student’s needs, graph their progress, and move them throughout the programs quickly, utilizing the individualized pace of instruction to best fit their needs. The ACE is aligned with the state learning standards, as well as aligned to our universal essential outcomes.

Wildwood School’s Instructional Technology program focuses on creating and developing 21st century teaching and learning opportunities for all students by intergrating various technologies such as computers, iPads, interactive Whiteboards, and web-based programs. A strong emphasis is placed on making learning meaningful, engaging, and personalized across all ages and educational domains (academic, social, communication, physical, etc.). Technology, as an accessibility tool, is also emphasized in order to provide opportunities for our individuals to live independent, productive, and fulfilling lives.
The goal of Wildwood’s adapted physical education program is to aid students in achieving their fullest potential throught the acquisition of knowledge and skills necessary to attain healthy levels of well-being and to maintain active lifestyles throughout their lifespan. The program at Wildwood School will help prepare students to participate at an adult recreational level of physical activity suitable for maintaining a health-enhancing level of fitness upon graduation. Effective human productivity depends upon optimum physical well-being and healthy living.

Education for physical development and health provides our students with the knowledge and attitudes to achieve healthful living throughout their lives and to aquire physical fitness and the development of a healthy lifestyle. Physical education is part of the total educational system that will provide experiences for our students through physical activity. This will prepare our students to meet the challenges of daily living and enjoy life to its fullest!
The art program here at Wildwood School encourages each student to explore a wide variety of media with both individual and group projects. The program participates in many painting activities and uses an assortment of building materials (especially magnetics). Education for physical development and health provides our students with the knowledge and attitudes to achieve healthful living throughout their lives and to aquire physical fitness and the development of a healthy lifestyle. Physical education is part of the total educational system that will provide experiences for our students through physical activity. This will prepare our students to meet the challenges of daily living and enjoy life to its fullest!
We provide many support and related services to students and family members such as occupational therapy, physical therapy, social work, speech and language therapy, behavior supports, nursing services, work based learning, transition coordination, instructional technology support, adaptive physical education, music therapy and art enrichment.

A functional skills curriculum that is criterion referenced meaning a student’s performance is measured against a set criteria rather than being compared to the performance of others. It has a wide variety of skills and initially focuses on the Essential Eight Skills. These skills have been identified as crucial skills students need to acquire before they can acquire more complex skills. The Essential Eight include: Making Requests, Waiting after making requests, Accepting Removals – Transitions, Sharing and Taking Turns, Completing Required Tasks – Completing Previously Acquired Tasks when asked to do so, Accepting “No”, Following Directions related to Health and Safety, Completing Daily Living Skills related to Health and Safety, Tolerating Skills related to Health and Safety.”  A Quick Assessment is completed to determine students performance in these skill areas and then learning objectives can be created to improve specific skills.  These skills are then assessed once per day and taught throughout the day as they occur naturally during scheduled activities, known as “event based teaching (EBT).” EBT involves creating a classroom schedule that allows students to practice skills in a meaningful, logical and natural way.  Rather than focusing on discrete trials of tasks, EBT focuses on functional usage in a manner that is motivating and meaningful to students.

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