Home Education After-School Program Inclusion Guide

After-School Program Inclusion Guide

$19.00

A 39-page inclusion guide for after-school program staff, summer camp counselors, and youth program leaders serving kids with disabilities.

Description

Kids with disabilities spend six hours a day in school. The other ten hours of their waking life happen outside it — including after-school programs, weekends, summers, and evenings. The people working with them in those hours often have a fraction of the training, none of the IEP information, and a fundamentally different role: this is supposed to be the fun part of the day, not more school. This After-School Program Inclusion Guide gives non-specialist program staff what they need to include kids with disabilities well — practically, respectfully, without pretending to be teachers or therapists.

What’s Inside

The After-School Program Inclusion Guide is 39 pages organized into 12 sections:

  • Why inclusion matters in after-school programs — brief framing
  • What’s different about after-school inclusion — no IEPs, voluntary, fun-focused, mixed-age, less trained staff
  • Welcoming families — registration signals, the intake conversation, what to ask without being intrusive
  • Ongoing communication with families — routine touchpoints, how to share concerns
  • Reasonable accommodations without IEPs — what you can do, plus universal design strategies
  • Behavior support in non-academic settings — reading behavior as communication, proactive strategies, in-the-moment response
  • Sensory considerations — gyms, pools, outdoor, art rooms, music, drama, field trips — each with specific helpful strategies
  • Activity adaptations — sports, art/music/creative, group games
  • Safety planning — elopement, medical emergencies, allergies, water safety, plus a fillable Individual Safety Plan template
  • Staff training basics — what every staff member should know, with a 60-minute training agenda
  • Building inclusive program culture — peer relationships, language, belonging, addressing exclusion
  • When you can’t accommodate — the questions to ask before concluding, the honest conversation if needed, legal protections to know about

This After-School Program Inclusion Guide Is For…

  • After-school program directors, coordinators, and staff
  • Summer day camp and overnight camp leaders
  • Sports coaches and recreation leaders
  • Art class, music class, and dance instructors
  • Robotics, STEM, and academic enrichment program staff
  • Scout leaders and faith community youth leaders
  • Drama, debate, and other club advisors
  • YMCA, Boys & Girls Club, and community center program staff
  • Childcare providers and family-care programs

The After-School Program Inclusion Guide Is Written For Non-Specialists

This guide assumes you care about including kids with disabilities and want to do it well. It doesn’t assume you have special education training — and doesn’t require it. The skills you need are different from classroom teaching skills. The strategies, templates, and conversations in this guide are designed for the realities of after-school programs: limited budgets, limited time, high staff turnover, no formal disability documentation.

Acknowledges the realities

  • No IEPs or 504 plans available to you
  • Voluntary participation (kids and families can leave)
  • Fun-focused, not learning-focused
  • Mixed-age groups
  • Different settings (gyms, pools, outdoor) with different sensory profiles
  • Often part-time or seasonal staff
  • High turnover, frequent retraining

The strategies work in those realities.

The Bottom Line

Kids with disabilities deserve great after-school programs. Programs deserve the tools to include them well. The difference between programs that include well and programs that exclude (or merely tolerate) is usually not money or expertise — it’s intentional practice. $17 — instant PDF download.