Skip to main content

TEA

TEA Brandbar

  • TEA Website
  • Contact TEA
  • Sign up for TEA updates
  • Sign up for SPED updates

Welcome to the new Texas SPED Support! Learn More

Home

Main navigation

  • Topics
    • ARD/IEP Supports
    • Assistive Technology
    • Autism
    • Behavior
    • Blind/Visually Impaired
    • Child Find
    • Deaf/Hard-of-hearing
    • Deafblind
    • Dyslexia and Other Related Disorders
    • Early Childhood
    • Evaluation
    • Inclusion
    • Instruction
    • MTSS
    • Significant Cognitive Disabilities
    • Significant Disproportionality
    • State Guidance
    • Transition
    • View All Topics
  • Resources
  • Learning
  • Contacts

Sign in (anonymous users)

Sign In
  1. Home
  2. Resource Library
  3. Autism Expert Interviews

Transition Assessment

ShareBookmark this collection

Autism, Behavior, Transition

Doing good assessment allows educators to craft the best possible plan for our students. Featuring Erik Carter, Ph.D.

  1. 1

    A Good Transition Plan
  2. 2

    Administrator's Role in Transition
  3. 3

    Approaching Employers
  4. 4

    Autism Expert Interviews
  5. 5

    Behavior as a Form of Communication
  6. 6

    Best Practices for Following Up
  7. 7

    Broadening Horizons
  8. 8

    Can only Board Certified Behavior Analysts (BCBAs) use Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) Strategies?
  9. 9

    Collaborative Teaming
  10. 10

    Connecting Students to Life
  11. 11

    Creating environments for neurodiverse learners
  12. 12

    Critical Conversations: Importance of Safety
  13. 13

    Critical Conversations: Sexual Needs and Desires
  14. 14

    Critical Conversations: Sexuality
  15. 15

    Daniel on Employment and Independent Living
  16. 16

    Daniel on Recreation and Leisure
  17. 17

    Daniel on Self-Advocacy
  18. 18

    Effective Professional Development for Educators
  19. 19

    Ensuring Educators are Managing Their Own Behavior
  20. 20

    Everyone Must Work
  21. 21

    Expectations Matter
  22. 22

    Family Consortium
  23. 23

    Futures Planning: Aiming for Best Case Scenario
  24. 24

    How detailed should Behavior Intervention Plans (BIPs) be?
  25. 25

    How do I implement a sensory area?
  26. 26

    How do we introduce Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) to administrators?
  27. 27

    How do you address compulsive behaviors in the classroom?
  28. 28

    How is Fidelity Accomplished?
  29. 29

    How to Fade Reinforcers
  30. 30

    How to Use Reinforcement
  31. 31

    Identifying Student Needs and Strengths
  32. 32

    Important Concepts for Students with Unique Needs
  33. 33

    Large Team Strategy to Support Students
  34. 34

    Learning from your Inappropriate Responses
  35. 35

    Medicaid Programs in Texas
  36. 36

    More Paperwork?
  37. 37

    Parent-Professional Relationships
  38. 38

    Personal Networks
  39. 39

    Planned Ignoring
  40. 40

    Self and mutual regulation
  41. 41

    SSI: Medicaid Eligibility
  42. 42

    Supported Decision-Making and Guardianship: Parent Perspectives
  43. 43

    Training as a Behavior Change Procedure
  44. 44

    Transition Assessment
  45. 45

    Transition is a Life-Long Process
  46. 46

    Transition Services will Look Different
  47. 47

    What are causes of problem behaviors?
  48. 48

    What are some key behavior principles to use in class?
  49. 49

    What behavior is communication?
  50. 50

    What behavior is functional?
  51. 51

    What Expecatons Should I Have for My Student with Autism?
  52. 52

    What is a preference assessment?
  53. 53

    What is a Replacement Behavior?
  54. 54

    What is Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA)?
  55. 55

    What is the difference between reinforcement and bribery?
  56. 56

    What is the three-term contingency?
  57. 57

    Why is emotional memory important?
  58. 58

    Why is Fidelity Important?

Related Resources

Impartial Mediators: Who, What, and When?

Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Inclusion

Data Collection: Frequency Recording

ARD/IEP Supports, Behavior, Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Autism, Evaluation

Tips and Strategies for Special Education

Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Instruction, Behavior

Fact Sheet: Summary of Performance

Transition, Evaluation

Peers as Bridge Builders for Students with Complex Access Needs

Significant Cognitive Disabilities, Inclusion

Comunicación con Profesores

Significant Cognitive Disabilities

TEA High Quality Instructional Materials Introduction Video

Inclusion, Instruction, Assistive Technology, ARD/IEP Supports

Pre-Employment Transition Services (Pre-ETS)

Transition

Child Find Public Awareness

Child Find

TEA - Texas Education Agency | Texas SPED Support

Stay Connected 

TEA - Texas Education Agency

  • Texas Education Agency
  • 1701 N. Congress Avenue
  • Austin, Texas, 78701
  • (512) 463-9793
  • Compact with Texans
  • General Education Complaints
  • Equal Educational Opportunity
  • Governor’s Committee on People With Disabilities
  • Trail
  • Where Our Money Goes

© Copyright 2025 Texas Education Agency (TEA). All Rights Reserved.

Opens in a new window

Share

mail

Join Texas SPED Support

Login or Register to save your bookmarks.