I think it's the additional deflection / drift at the top of the wall caused by beam rotation that is the main point of the original question. That is certainly a trickier concept.
I'd convert the wall moment into compression and tension at the post and hold down. Apply those as point loads to the beam. And, calculate the beam deflection from that. Then for the drift at the top of the wall due to this beam deflection, extrapolate that from the point load deflections at those two points.
Note: this would be pretty conservative. Because to a large degree, the shear wall will reduce the deflection in the beam.... That's just not something that we traditionally rely upon.