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Rigor and Proficiency: The Ideal and the Ultimate
No comments · Posted by Sara (readers1) in Planning and Rigor
By Sara Finegan
Some students are so far behind that they cannot keep up with a general education class. Some students process in a way that requires more time, more space, more opportunities for practice, and a slower pace in order to master new concepts.
Some students need a small group – less noise, less activity, less chaos – in order to learn. Some need instruction provided in ways that aren’t commonly found in a general education room – more visuals, more guided work, more modeling, more incremental.
All students with learning disabilities need at least one, if not most of these things in order to learn how to learn. Notice that I didn’t say they need them in order to learn everything. Only to learn how to learn.
Full inclusion after rigorous preparation
I favor inclusion of students with special needs in the general education classroom – after they have been given the appropriate, rigorous instruction and practice in the basics that will allow them to function on a par with everyone else. I do not favor inclusion where the child enters too far behind to ever catch up and spends the rest of his or her school career vainly trying to do what the other students do.
Our goal as special educators is to help our students bridge the gap between where they are and where they need to be in order to be able to follow along in a general ed classroom, at a general ed pace and in that kind of environment.
In order to push our kids up to that level, we may have to enfold them in a Special Day Class or separate classroom environment for some or all subjects for a period of time. In the best of all possible worlds, this would take place in the elementary school level, and by middle school, the vast majority of kids with IEPs who had spent time in a Special Day Class would be out in the general school population for most classes.
How quickly depends on the child and on us
How quickly we can bring kids up to the appropriate skill levels depends on each child’s areas of need and strength, and the level of rigor we infuse into our classrooms. A demanding classroom will firmly and lovingly raise students who use their brains like a muscle in a gym, stretching, pressing, and moving from strength to strength.
- I’ve had students arrive from other schools or lower grade Special Day Classes who lack the ability to do independent work, who have become so dependent on the assistance of aides and teachers that they are unable to problem-solve and try out new skills.
- I’ve seen special education classrooms which rely on endless series of packets and worksheets, done quietly at student desks, where no questioning takes place and compliance with behavioral rules takes precedence over learning.
- And I’ve worked with many colleagues who become so frustrated with their students’ challenges that they lose sight of what we’re working toward and begin to teach so far below grade level that nobody will ever catch up.
None of this is going to move our kids from our classrooms into the general education population with any success. All of this will perpetuate the deficits our kids arrive with.
Keep in mind what we want for our students
If we want kids with in our special education classrooms to move from deficit to ability to competence, we must be relentless in our rigor of instruction, and stand firm in our expectations of learning.
We must keep our eye on the ultimate goal, which is that we will shoo our students from our learning nest into the big wide world and watch them fly, fly into their lives as learners.
Rigor is not the equivalent of harshness. A demanding classroom is a nurturing environment where students are not expected to learn and function on their own, but where scaffolds and supports are in place and are gradually removed or reduced as mastery takes place.
A demanding classroom is one whose staff is attentive to the small signs of growth and need, and adjusts instruction accordingly.
A demanding classroom is one where students themselves, at all ages, work with staff to set reasonable, achievable goal and celebrate success.
A demanding classroom is one where the teacher’s motto is “yes, you can, let’s work to find out how…” and where failure is seen as an opportunity to try again.
A demanding classroom is one where a student who doesn’t get it just hasn’t been taught it the right way yet – and where the staff is committed to finding the right way for that child.
A demanding classroom is one where laughter, curiosity, and determination are reflected in the faces and work of the children, and where academic behavior is as important as social behavior.
When we demand of our students…
When we demand excellence of our students and fail to show them how to achieve it, we are not providing rigorous instruction.
When we demand competency from our students and don’t support them in their learning, we are not providing rigorous instruction.
When we require compliance from our students without understanding and ownership, we are not providing rigorous instruction.
And when we reduce expectations to accommodate learning deficits, we are certainly not exhibiting any rigor at all in our own work.
If we want our students to be able to do general education work in a general education classroom, we have to teach general education skills, not special education habits.
We must demand of our own instruction and planning the same thing our colleagues in the general education classroom demand of themselves and their students. To do less is to abdicate from the position as teacher.
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demanding classroom · high expectations · Inclusion · learning disabled · proficiency · rigor · rigorous instruction · special day class · special education · standards
