Part 1: Introduction to Transition Planning;
1. Transition Planning and Special Education Law; Part 2: Transition Planning Practices;
2. An Interactive Framework of Activities Focusing on Community Access, Student Engagement and Post-School Goals Selection;
3. Collaborating With Families During the Transition Planning Process; Part 3: Assessments;
4. Medical Conditions, Assessment, and Transition: Implications of Disability and Medical Conditions on Work-Seeking Activities and Educational Progress;
5. Assessment Tools; Part 4: Transition Plan Development;
6. Transition Plan Frameworks: Creating the Transition Plan;
7. Career and Employment-Based Learning: Supporting Entry Into the Workforce and Postsecondary Education; Part 5: Special Education Programs: Responsibilities and Resources of Transition Team Members and Community and Governmental Agencies;
8. School Leadership and Transition Planning;
9. Roles of the Secondary Special Education Team and Community Agencies; Part 6: Special Considerations: Working With Diverse Groups of Students;
10. Students With Specific Learning Disabilities and Speech and Language Impairments;
11. Students With Emotional, Behavioral, and Severe Mental Health Disorders;
12. Students Who Are Blind, Visually Impaired, Deaf, Hard of Hearing, or Deaf-Blind;
13. Students With Autism Without Accompanying Language or Intellectual Impairment;
14. Students With Other Health Impairments, Chronic Medical and Orthopedic Impairments, and Traumatic Brain Injury;
15. Students With Mild, Moderate, Severe, Multiple, and Profound Intellectual Disabilities;
16. Students With Autism and Accompanying Language and Intellectual Impairment; Part 7: Special Education Transitions;
17. The Effectiveness of Transition Planning: Monitoring the Practices of the Special Education Team;
18. Special Education Transitions From Birth to Age 21