TAG | accommodations
By Sara Finegan
In my tenure as a special educator, I’ve taught kids in a Special Day Class setting as well as those who would be classified as Resource and kept in the general education environment. I’ve taught almost every subject area in separate classroom and general ed classroom, in grades 4 through 12. I’ve taught kids with mild to moderate learning deficits, and even a few with more moderate to severe disabilities.
The more I work with these wonderful kids, the more I am made aware that it is not the content of the lessons, but the manner in which we teach them that makes the difference in learning. Direct, explicit instruction, customized to the child’s individual learning style and need, is the key to the door that accesses, for the child, the material. Even the best teachers using the best practices for instruction, may need to tweak how they do things to accommodate our learners’ deficits.
Let me give some examples:
Avery was born premature and since early childhood has exhibited difficulties with memory, particularly sequential memory. He is now getting ready for middle school. He does not know the months of the year in order, or the seasons in which the months belong. He just learned his phone number. He has difficulty memorizing multiplication tables. He has significant deficits in the area of auditory processing, and may have receptive language deficits. He certainly displays difficulties with expressive language – he has difficulty at times retrieving even the names of long-time friends. He is friendly, funny, athletic, and popular in his class.
Justin is an upper primary student who has an anxiety disorder. He has trouble falling asleep at night, is fearful of the dark and strange places, and desperate that nobody know when he doesn’t understand something in class. He is shy, but friendly, and has a good sense of humor. He masks his terrible fear of exposure with a feigned carelessness. He refuses help at home from his parents and peers, which makes homework and remedial learning difficult. Justin, like Avery, does not process what he hears, and tries to model his academic behavior after what he sees his peers doing, without understanding the concepts being taught. A popular kid, Justin’s learning is impeded by his internal anxiety and his processing deficits.
Shayna has ADHD and needs to be constantly moving in order to function at all in class. She’s tried a variety of medications, all of which has side effects that made it impossible for her to continue. With preferential seating and lots of visual cues, she can manage in class for the most part, but has frequent episodes of panic when, after emerging from a short episode of inattention, she realizes that she missed something important and doesn’t know what to do. She is sloppy and careless in her work, but is motivated to learn. Her writing skills are very limited; spelling is atrocious, punctuation non-existent, and she often skips words, writes run-on or incomplete sentences, and never, unless prompted, uses detail to support her ideas and flesh out the text.
Toby is a high-functioning autistic learner. His expressive and receptive language deficits make understanding what the teacher is saying, including directions, difficult, so he does a lot of watching and copying what others are doing. He thrives where there’s math calculations to do, but in terms of setting up problems, navigating through word problems, or showing mathematical reasoning, he is far below grade level. Toby is a good mechanical reader, but his comprehension skills are limited to the surface, literal meaning of text.
All of these kids are in a general education class of 30 students, with a fabulous teacher who provides differentiated instruction better than anyone I’ve ever seen: Every lesson includes kinesthetic, visual, auditory, and musical and/or artistic segments designed to address every type of learner. She knows her stuff, and she knows how to make learning fun, energetic, and successful. Everything is color-coded, rhythmic, and well-spaced so that kids aren’t overwhelmed by the material.
And yet……….our four friends are falling seriously behind.
Walk into the classroom, and take a seat in a corner. You will see a dynamic teacher leading kids through a fun lesson. There are pauses for movement, there are funny accents to keep your attention in the right place, open-ended questions, modeling, and cooperative learning activities. Kids are active, engaged, and working together.
Look at our four friends. They are smiling. Eyes are glued on the teacher when she’s providing instruction. They copy everything she does. They are well-behaved.
But when it comes time to work with partners or independently, they are helpless. They look at what their partners are doing and try to follow along. Ask them what they are doing, and they can’t really say. If they’ve followed the modeled lesson and copied the info into the graphic organizer, using colored pencils, just like the teacher did, they don’t know what to DO with the information when left to their own devices. They let their partners do most of the work and strive to look busy.
Avery needs 45 more minutes than anyone else to finish a task. Justin doesn’t finish, but does enough to get by. Toby copies exactly what his partner wrote. Shayna walks over to the teacher eight times in 35 minutes to show her what she’s done so far and ask if it’s right. It isn’t very good, but at least she’s trying.
Next scene: math class. The kids are working on multiple-step problem solving. Avery and Justin are confused, and are using the wrong operation to solve equations. Shayna loses track of what she’s doing and has to start over again three times. Toby is sitting, staring at a word problem, unsure how to set up an equation. He shuts down completely until the teacher approaches and writes an equation out for him, at which point he quickly solves it in his head. He writes the answer without showing his work.
You get the picture. You’ve probably seen each of these kids somewhere in one of your classes.
So what is missing?
I think that what is missing is direct, explicit, step-by-step instruction.
Instructional trends have been moving increasingly to the exploratory learning module, where kids are given open-ended questions and work together to explore and reason through answers using grade-level materials. Understanding the concepts behind mathematical operations is given the same importance as being able to use the operations properly. Experimenting with concepts and ideas and giving kids time to try on and try out different ways of writing, thinking about the content of the textbook constitute a good part of the day. We want kids to be able to reason, not just answer by rote, right? Absolutely.
But there’s a problem with this. If our kids can’t really understand the language, can’t process it or use it, if their processing deficits impede the reasoning needed to do the work at grade level, or if their reading and writing skills are below grade level so that they struggle just to make sense of the textbook, all of the exploratory learning in the world is not going to achieve anything at all. In fact, it is going to confuse the kids and get them more tangled up with feelings of inadequacy and confusion, frustration and anxiety, than they need to be.
These kids need coping strategies, problem-solving strategies, and to be taught, shown, and given multiple opportunities to practice, the step-by-step process for doing the work.
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They need to have those steps provided to them clearly, in writing, on charts displayed in the room, and in their binders. They need to be shown, over and over, each step, in isolation. Practice just doing Step 1 ten times. Then do Step 2 ten times. Then practice Steps 1 and 2 five times. And so on.
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They need to be told what you are looking to see them do. “I want to see you reading the question, and underlining the key word.” “I want to see you scanning the text, line by line, looking for the key word.” “I want to see you lining up your problem one number right underneath the other.” “I want to see you highlighting the operations words in the math problem.”
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Give them templates. Give them checklists. Give them small group supervision as they practice, without making them feel that they are being singled out because they’re dumb, or “special”. Send them home with the step-by-step instructions and five practice opportunities as homework, with a reward when they bring it back.
What does this require of us, the teachers? It requires that we be willing to break tasks down into smaller bits, and to create clear, concise, and easy to remember explanations or instructions for each. It requires that we be creative enough to find mnemonics, songs, goofy slogans, and pictures of the key elements of the lesson. It requires that we be flexible enough to create small group opportunities, DAILY, to help guide our students with learning difficulties, in the general education classroom, not as a pull-out where they are singled out as “special”. It requires that we be sometimes willing to go against the teaching modules that our newer textbooks and educational programs dictate , to include the older-fashioned direct instruction that these kids need.
accommodations · differentiated instruction · direct instruction · directions · explicit instruction · exploratory learning · Inclusion · learning · learning disabilities · learning styles · repitition · resource · rote learning · Sara Finegan · special education · teaching strategies
By Sara Finegan
Now that I’ve got the standards identified and turned into tamed beasts, I turn my attention to the resources I’m going to need to teach them. This is where I become a sleuth, poring through books and magazines and the internet to find materials to use in the classroom.
The following are some of the places I’ve used to build a bank of resources for use in my classroom and to support IEP students in the general education environment as well.
• English Language Learner resources in your district
Most districts don’t have a ton of lower-level reading materials that can be used in conjunction with grade-level science and social studies units. Some, however, have materials for English Language Learners, and those should be grabbed by you whenever possible and used as a part of your instruction. Second Language learning materials use simplified text and have more visual resources than the general ed texts we have in our classrooms. If your district has them, find them and get at least one set.
• Visit the book room for primary grade materials
Most schools have a book room or closet containing books that teachers can use at a variety of levels. One of my schools had a small walk-in closet with shelves full of baskets of leveled books as well as books by topics. Another one had an entire room with bagged sets of books at each level. Some were to be used for Extended Day Reading or Intersession classes, but all were available to any teacher who wanted to go through them.
I started at the lowest level and moved my way up, pulling books at every level that were related to anything I was teaching or that my general ed colleagues would be teaching. I was initially surprised at how much was available from the primer level on up about things like rocks, magnets, landforms, stars and planets, plants, the food chain, and habitats. I was even more surprised to find books about famous people at even the lowest grade level.
The unit bins that I’ve left for my third, fourth and fifth grade gen ed colleagues to use next year with their inclusion students have books for kids at every reading level.
• Discarded materials
When I first started teaching at the school I am now leaving, my principal didn’t give me the current texts for social studies, language arts, or science. What she did do was introduce me to the book room at our school, where we had, for many years, an enormous library of discarded textbooks at every grade level. I was encouraged to take whatever I wanted, and I did.
Discarded text? you may ask. How exactly does an older version of the fourth grade social studies curriculum help teach my kids who read below grade level? Hah! The following are some ways that I have used discarded texts:
- I cut out illustrations and maps from the pages of discarded social studies and science textbooks and paste them on index cards. In some cases, I label the photos/maps and use them as visual cues for the kids as we are teaching. In other cases, I put the labels on a separate card, and we use entire sets of cards as sorting cards. This is how I got a bunch of pictures of prominent people in the early history of the U.S., and now my kids can play a memory game, matching portraits to names.
- Some social studies textbooks in my district have full-page illustrations that are great for laminating and using in a variety of activities. I found three old California history texts that had a full-page illustration of each type of resident of California. I cut them out of the book and laminated them, and now we have an easy-to-read, completely labeled picture of a Spanish explorer, a California Native, a Mexican Ranchero, A Gold Rush Miner, and a Railroad builder. I can create questions for kids to answer using the illustrations, or let kids use them to write sentences, among other activities.
Textbooks from lower grades often have stories or information that applies to standards at higher grades. I found a short and easy story about a pioneer child in a primary grades language arts textbook that my own students can use as we learn about westward expansion. There was a nice little story about the American flag in an old first grade book that I cut out and laminated for my students. On more than one occasion I’ve found texts I can use for upper grades science instruction in a kindergarten or first grade book. You just never know!
- Districts don’t just discard textbooks; there are a variety of other books and materials that become outdated and can be culled for use in differentiated instruction. In past years, I’ve been able to find timelines to post in my room for history units, supplementary math workbooks to use, graphic organizers, maps, two globes, posters, and games designed to use with specific textbook activities.
Other teachers have given me old story books they no longer use, and that’s how I’ve obtained a goodly number of Native American tales, easy biographies of scientists, books about farm life to use in colonial and pioneer units, fiction stories about fish to use in an ocean habitat unit, and picture books about stars and the solar system to use in science instruction. I recently found a whole booklet a fellow teacher, at the kindergarten level, had given me about Native Americans. It had been part of a Thanksgiving unit or something, but it contained a plethora of things I could use in American history at levels all of my students could read.
All kinds of books can be recycled and re-used in any classroom, if you’re creative enough.
• Teaching materials you can purchase
Awhile back, when I had some extra money for my classroom, I purchased several books of reading material at the second and third grade levels for my kids in the fourth, fifth and sixth grade. They were put to great use in our reading instruction. I discovered later that they are also terrific for science and social studies. In the second grade reading book, I found short biographies of American leaders, five short texts about plants and plant life, three short pieces about stars, the sun, and galaxies, and about eight pages of text about different aspects of the human body. All of them provide basic information with comprehension questions to answer, and all of them became parts of my different unit resources for social studies or science.
The third grade book had stories about ocean life, pieces about landforms (mountains, lakes, rivers), and short biographies of famous Native Americans. Once again, perfect for our upper elementary social studies and science units!

Ute children
As I was rummaging through my storage bins, I found some first and second grade level readers theater books I’d purchased at around the same time. To my surprise, they had a bunch of short scripts that could be incorporated into our units of study: one was about the solar system, one was about Johnny Appleseed, one was about the water cycle, and one was about Plains Indians. Perfect!
Our local 99 cent store often has things I find useful. I’ve gotten coloring books that have fairytale characters, space and solar system pictures, and plants and flowers that can be incorporated into low-level literacy or science unit bins. I’ve also found playing cards of the different American states, which are fabulous to use in US history.
I wouldn’t spend a lot of money on these kinds of materials, but if you find anything at used bookstores, discount stores, or yard sales, snap them right up.
• The internet: materials to download
I have spent hours surfing the net for materials I can use with my students. There are millions of websites with millions of things you can download or copy for free. Most of my sorting card photos come from google images – the copyright laws allow you to use them in the classroom so long as you don’t disseminate them elsewhere. I’ve gotten short stories and easy reading texts about science and social studies we have used for years. I’ve pulled easy-to-read fairy tales and printed them out for kids to use. You would be surprised at how much free stuff is out there that can be used directly or used to create other materials for our students.

Seminole dwelling
I found a great site that described the different kinds of houses that Native Americans lived in, complete with pictures. I printed out information on each type of housing on separate sheets of paper to be used in small groups or the document camera. Even though the text may be too difficult for some kids to read on their own, it can be read aloud to them. Then, I copied each of the photos and printed them to be used to sorting cards. Now my students, who will be learning about how Native Americans in each region of the U.S. lived, will be able to match the pictures to the names of the houses, and thus demonstrate what they’ve learned.
• The internet: materials to download for a fee
Whenever possible, I try to get what I need for teaching without paying anything out of my own pocket. However, there are a variety of websites that have materials that are available to members who pay a small fee. Over the years, I’ve purchased one-year memberships and downloaded everything I could before allowing my subscription to lapse. I now have, saved on my school computer, my home laptop, and a flashdrive, an enormous library of materials that I can pull out as needed.
Enchanted Learning is a teacher website that provides materials and activities, mostly for k-3 levels, on a huge variety of topics. The fee to join is less than $30, I believe, and for that money, I’ve gotten booklets, worksheets, and activities related to math, science, social studies, and literary genres. They form an integral part of my resource bins for both my own classroom and gen ed inclusion:
- The fifth grader with severe cognitive impairment can make a weather words wheel and learn several new sight words.
- The student reading at grade 1 can learn about famous American leaders by reading easy books about George Washington, Abe Lincoln, Cesar Chavez, and Martin Luther King.
One thing I love about Enchanted Learning is that each thematic unit has activities that cross strands of the curriculum. Thus:
- Kids can practice alphabetizing lists of words related to units about the solar system, Christopher Columbus, the weather, seasons, and mammals.
- When we study analogies, kids can practice using facts or ideas related to science or social studies units.
- Similes and Antonym matching sheets are available for most of the science units I’m preparing.
I’ve gotten more than my money’s worth from Enchanted Learning, and no, they have not compensated me for this endorsement at all!
School Express is another one of those fabulous websites with hours of downloading fun. By joining this year, I was able to obtain thematic units on a variety of science and social studies topics – everything from landforms to the Revolutionary War to a biography of Thomas Edison. The text isn’t at most of my students’ levels, but it can be read aloud in most cases and provides an alternative or supplement to the even harder social studies textbooks. Each thematic unit has a fun activity booklet from which you can pull things for kids to do.
School Express also has e-workbooks with very low level math and literacy learning opportunities. I’ve gotten series of booklets to use in addition, subtraction, multiplication and division activities, phonics materials, grammar resources, and vocabulary support. My library of writing prompts for sentences, paragraphs, and narrative stories has been greatly enhanced. I added to my resources for the fairy tale genre unit by downloading all of the fairy tales in booklet form that kids can read and color. All in all, this is a terrific site, and again, they have not rewarded me in any manner and have no idea that I’m recommending them on this blog.
Awhile back I purchased a one-year membership to Reading A-Z, an online teaching resource site that has leveled booklets you can download. I downloaded everything I could at the lowest levels, and now I have them, permanently, to use. Initially, they became an integral part of my guided reading instruction resources, as the stories could be easily copied and then used and re-used. Later, I realized how many of them, both fictional and expository, can be used in conjunction with science and social studies instruction. For example:
- The story about a salmon became part of the bin on Indians of the Pacific Northwest as well as the Rivers Habitat unit bin.
- Booklets about pond life include, at level A, “Pond Animals”, level B, “Pond Life”, Level D, “The Busy Pond”, and Level I, “Life at the Pond”.
Reading A-Z costs a little more than the other sites, but it provides enough materials make it worth the cost in many cases. If you can get your school to reimburse you, more’s the better. (And yet again, they have not compensated me in any way for this mention.)
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accessing grade-level · accommodations · grade-level standards · lesson planning · modifications · resources · rigorous instruction · Sara Finegan · science · social studies · sorting cards · special education · teaching strategies
11
Nuts and Bolts of Standards-Based Special Ed Instruction
No comments · Posted by readers1 in Inclusion
By Sara Finegan
All children can learn. This is not merely a slogan, it’s a fact. The question, of course, is WHAT can they learn? In our public schools, the answer must be “the state standards” for each subject area. Now, when I first started teaching, I wasn’t so sure whether all students with learning disabilities could learn the same concepts and strategies as their general education peers.
Certainly, students with mild-moderate disabilities can with support, master the general ed curriculum. It was the kids with moderate to severe disabilities that I questioned: How, exactly, were kids with mental retardation, for example, supposed to be able to master ancient history or biology?
My bias continued for several years, and only gradually dissipated as I came into contact with students whose learning and cognitive impairments were more severe than my usual group of kiddos. Nowadays, I am certain that children on all levels of academic functioning can participate with their non-disabled peers in most subject areas.
The key is for teachers, using our understanding of how kids learn and how learning disabilities impact learning, to create the means for kids to access the curriculum. In order to do this, we need to be creative, knowledgeable, and methodical.
The Foundation: Know the Standards
I have been teaching the grade-level standards to my Special Day Class students every year for the last 10 years, and have spent a great deal of time collaborating with my general ed colleagues to make sure kids with IEPs in the gen ed environment are able to access grade-level curriculum. Even so, I have to get the standards out out and revisit them when I begin the process of planning units and lessons. So will you.
As you read them, think about how a child might be able to demonstrate mastery of each of the strands within the standards. Think about which strands in the standards are the most important in terms of setting a foundation for future learning. When I started creating the inclusion unit bins for my peers last month, I began by printing out the third, fourth and fifth grade standards for social studies and science.
I took one set at a time, starting with the fifth grade science units. For each of the science standards sets (physical sciences, life sciences, earth sciences) I examined the different strands and highlighted the ones I thought students at all levels could access. Strands that seemed a bit more than any of my students could meet I simply simplified or adjusted to create a framework within which differentiated instruction could be provided.
I went over the standards several times, each time with a different student or ability level in mind. In this summer’s case, I’ve been creating these units of resources in grades 3, 4 and 5 for kids in the following ability categories:
- a student who thinks at about a four year old level;
- a group of fifth graders who read at a first or second grade level;
- a fourth grader with mild autism and profound anxiety and sensory overload susceptibility who operates at a second grade level;
- a group of fourth graders whose focus and attention deficits require substantial interventions;
- kids with auditory processing deficits;
- numerous kids at each grade level with profound language deficits, be they EL or expressive/receptive disabilities.
Here’s an example of what I was working on:
Grade 5: Earth Sciences
Standard--Water on Earth moves between the oceans and land through the processes of evaporation and condensation. As a basis for understanding this concept:
- Students know most of Earth’s water is present as salt water in the oceans, which cover most of Earth’s surface.
- Students know when liquid water evaporates, it turns into water vapor in the air and can reappear as a liquid when cooled or as a solid if cooled below the freezing point of water.
- Students know water vapor in the air moves from one place to another and can form fog or clouds, which are tiny droplets of water or ice, and can fall to Earth as rain, hail, sleet, or snow.
- Students know that the amount of fresh water located in rivers, lakes, under-ground sources, and glaciers is limited and that its availability can be extended by recycling and decreasing the use of water.
- Students know the origin of the water used by their local communities.
Became…
Standard--Water on Earth moves between the oceans and land through the processes of evaporation and condensation. As a basis for understanding this concept students will:
Learn about the water cycle and identify the parts of the cycle. - Learn about each phase of the water cycle and what you might see during it.
- Identify water when it appears in each form: liquid, solid, vapor.
- Know the difference between fresh and salt water and their sources.
- Understand that freshwater is limited and that conservation and recycling it is important.
And thus…
Standard--Energy from the Sun heats Earth unevenly, causing air movements that result in changing weather patterns. As a basis for understanding this concept:
- Students know uneven heating of Earth causes air movements (convection currents).
- Students know the influence that the ocean has on the weather and the role that the water cycle plays in weather patterns.
- Students know the causes and effects of different types of severe weather.
- Students know how to use weather maps and data to predict local weather and know that weather forecasts depend on many variables.
- Students know that the Earth’s atmosphere exerts a pressure that decreases with distance above Earth’s surface and that at any point it exerts this pressure equally in all directions.
Became…
Standard--Energy from the Sun heats Earth unevenly, causing air movements that result in changing weather patterns. As a basis for understanding this concept, students will:
Identify weather types and climate vocabulary: sun, sunny, mild, harsh, winter, summer, fall, spring, storm, calm, rain, hail, sleet, snow wind, breeze, hurricane, tornado.- Identify influences on the weather: ocean, water cycle
- Use weather maps to show where different weather types and climates can be found in our nation.
I went through the same process for the social studies units. In most cases, I was able to simplify and rework the standards. Thus, for example:
Grade 5: Social Studies
Standard--Students know the location of the current 50 states and the names of their capitals.
Became…
Sing the Fifty Nifty United States.- Label at least 10 states on a map, including California, and identify the capitals of New York, California, Illinois, Florida, and Texas.
And…
Standard--Students describe the major pre-Columbian settlements, including the cliff dwellers and pueblo people of the desert Southwest, the American Indians of the Pacific Northwest, the nomadic nations of the Great Plains, and the woodland peoples east of the Mississippi River.
- Describe how geography and climate influenced the way various nations lived and adjusted to the natural environment, including locations of villages, the distinct structures that they built, and how they obtained food, clothing, tools, and utensils.
- Describe their varied customs and folklore traditions.
- Explain their varied economies and systems of government.
Became…
Standard--Students describe the major pre-Columbian settlements, including the cliff dwellers and pueblo people of the desert Southwest, the American Indians of the Pacific Northwest, the nomadic nations of the Great Plains, and the woodland peoples east of the Mississippi River.
Identify the regions of the U.S. and some of the the land masses, animals, and vegetation that might be found in each and create a visual display of one region in depth.
- Identify the Indian cultures that lived in the Pacific Northwest, Central and Great Plains, Desert Southwest, Eastern Woodlands and their lifestyle, including foods, hunting prey, clothing, and housing of each.
- Read legends and myths from each of the regions.
Don’t Just Try and Wing It
Don’t make the mistake of over-generalizing by failing to really know the standards for each unit. The risks are numerous:
- You and your colleagues may become overwhelmed by the task. There’s a huge difference between “How do I teach this child about Westward Expansion” and “Ok, this child can learn how to identify the modes of transportation used in pioneer life, read about Lewis and Clark, use a chart to label a map of expansion routes, and states created as a result of expansion; and, oh, since earlier this year she learned about the landforms and geography of North America, she can now use those same maps she labeled to think about the terrain along the Oregon Trail.”
- Using only the class textbook to identify what needs to be learned can lead you down the wrong path. Entire sections on economic development in a textbook, which are too complicated for a child with learning disabilities to grasp, are just the authors’ way of addressing a standard, and your own review of what your State expects may reveal more manageable concepts.
- There’s a danger in just taking one part of a set of standards and ignoring the others when you don’t piece out all of the different strands. It is perfectly acceptable to drop one or more strands after you’ve looked at them closely, but it is not okay to ignore them completely. I know, for example, that this strand…Identify the significance and leaders of the First Great Awakening, which marked a shift in religious ideas, practices, and allegiances in the colonial period, the growth of religious toleration, and free exercise of religion… is not going to be manageable with any of my students. But I can plan activities in which kids learn about freedom of religion and religious tolerance as two of the foundation stones in American democracy.
- There is a great temptation, especially when we lack time for in-depth planning, to make assumptions about our students and about the curriculum standards that are inappropriate. Teachers who are rushing through the planning process may think that skipping steps saves time, and perhaps it does. But the result may be that we have short-changed our students by skipping curriculum and standards that they can and should learn, or that we overlook key skills and information they need to know before moving to the next unit.
The obligation to carefully piece through each of the standards and their related strands for the units we are required to teach is non-negotiable, in my book. We are honor-bound, in crafting lessons and activities for our students with special needs, to be experts in what they need to know. Only armed with this knowledge can we begin the process of figuring out how to help them know it and use it.
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accessing grade-level · accommodations · grade-level standards · Inclusion · Sara Finegan · science · social studies · special education · standards
11
What Inclusion Is and What It Must Never, Ever Be
No comments · Posted by readers1 in Inclusion
By Sara Finegan
Before I talk about how to locate and create materials to facilitate inclusion in general education, it’s important to understand why we are doing it and what inclusion should look like.
Placing a child with learning disabilities or cognitive impairment into a general education class has two purposes: First, it promotes socialization and the skills necessary for any person to participate with his or her community in the daily activities of learning and working. Second, it allows that child to access grade-level standards with his or her general ed peers.
In any special day class, kids should also be accessing grade-level standards. The difference is that in a general ed class, your students with IEPs will be working in a different kind of environment. In many but not all cases the instruction and assignments are more in-depth and high-level. (If you run a demanding special day classroom like mine, however, the work may actually be at the same level or even slightly higher. In such a case, the difference will be in class size and pace, not work level.)
Until recently, most school districts had special education services and classrooms at a variety of levels. In my district we had, just a few years ago: ILS (independent living skills) classrooms for kids with profound disabilities; PACE (adaptive curriculum) classrooms for kids with mild mental retardation and moderate-functioning autism; ED classrooms for students with mental illness and behavior issues; and yet another classroom for kids with mild-moderate learning disabilities. We also had a Resource program for kids with IEPs who could still participate in the general education classroom; they were pulled out in small groups for guided instruction in targeted areas, but most of their time was spent with the general ed teacher.
Unless a parent demanded it, kids who had cognitive impairments or who were more than one or two grade levels below their peers were not part of the general education classroom, on the theory that they needed a smaller, more structured environment in which to learn. As long as the instruction provided in those separate classrooms was rigorous, there weren’t many drawbacks to sheltering kids from the larger classrooms and there were many pluses.
Nowadays, in many districts, kids at all cognitive and learning levels are increasingly being placed in general education classrooms, with varying levels of support. Thus, in a general education classroom, you may have 26 gen ed students, some of whom are below grade level and some of whom are far above, and 10 students with IEPs, with any of a wide range of disabilities: ADHD and focus difficulties; mental retardation; autism; receptive/expressive language impairments; visual and working memory deficits; visual processing impairments; auditory processing difficulties. Most of these kids will not be able to read at grade level and have problems with writing and math as well.
Without structure and support, many of these students will struggle with sensory input. For them, the noise level and activity associated with large-group settings will be profoundly difficult to handle.
Frustration with the materials and the work may lead some kids to shut down or act out and disrupt the classroom. Kids who don’t process what you are saying very quickly may miss entire chunks of instruction and directions and thus have no idea what to do when independent work time rolls around.
Our job as special educators is to provide the structure, support, and differentiated learning activities that will reduce those struggles in the general ed classroom. It’s a complex process and one that requires a lot of thought and ongoing monitoring in order to be successful. If we don’t plan purposefully, or if we don’t supervise the support provided by our aides when we aren’t able to be present, there’s a danger that our students will be relegated to the corner of the classroom with work that is too easy or without meaning.
Here’s what inclusion is:
It is the provision of differentiated instruction and learning activities that accommodate a child’s special learning needs within the general education classroom. The learning and the work are purposeful, meaningful, and serve to teach the child new information and skills.
Here’s what inclusion is not:
It is not separate activities for students with special needs; sponge work and other busywork that serve only to keep a child occupied instead of accessing the curriculum directly; minimal standards and expectations with high praise for accomplishing the mundane. In short, it is not babysitting.
There is babysitting in the general education classroom, and then there’s inclusion.
- Babysitting is having a child play with blocks while everyone else working on place value and numbers to a billion.
- Babysitting is having a child spend an hour coloring pictures of the a tipi while everyone else is learning about the Native American houses.
- Babysitting is writing vocabulary words on a piece of paper and having the child go over them with highlighter every day while the other students are writing paragraphs about the water cycle.
- Babysitting is having a student draw a picture of a snowman while the teacher does a mini-lesson about weather.
- Babysitting is placing a child at a listening center to listen to nursery rhyme songs while the rest of the class is learning about the genre of fairytales.
True inclusion would look like this:
- During math, while others are working on the standard and word forms of numbers to a billion, other kids are working on numbers to a hundred or a thousand. Still others may be using manipulatives to represent numbers in the tens and hundreds. When they’re done, perhaps they are playing a math vocabulary game where they have to read a number word and match it to a digit.
- After reading an easy book or chart about Native American housing, some kids are using sorting cards to match the names of the houses to the pictures. Others might be making a booklet about the different kinds of houses using pictures they’ve drawn or cut-outs the teacher provides. Still others might be pasting small pictures of the types of houses on a map showing the different regions of North America. (For example, a hogan goes in the desert Southwest, whereas a chickee goes in the Southeast.)
- While some kids are drawing the water cycle on poster board, some kids are using a word bank and labeling the different segments of the cycle on a worksheet. Others might be listening to an aide or peer read a story about a rain drop.
- After listening to a mini-lesson about types of weather, some kids are either playing a Memory game with sorting cards (matching photos of weather to the names) or are writing sentences about each of the new vocabulary words. (Ex: A blizzard is a big snow storm. A hurricane has lots of wind and rain.)
- During a unit on the fairy tale genre, some kids are listening to Hans Christian Andersen stories on tape, and others are reading books. Some kids are writing reports on fairy tales, and others are identifying the different elements of a fairy tale in stories they’ve read, using a chart prepared by the teacher. Still others might be looking at a laminated illustration from a well-known fairy tale with an aide, who is asking them to point to various items in the picture.
Inclusion is not about keeping the kids busy and quiet. It’s about giving them opportunities to use the vocabulary and practice new skills related to whatever you are teaching.
It’s not about enabling them to continue to operate with limited skill sets; it’s about guiding them forward, onward, and upward within the context of their current levels.
It’s not about having higher-level students help them; it’s about letting them experience the curriculum with higher level students.
It’s a new responsibility for many general ed teachers, and a terrifying thing for us special ed teachers, whose natural instinct is often to keep our students sheltered from the large-group learning environment, where they may get lost or overwhelmed.
The key is careful and purposeful planning, with constant monitoring and ongoing assessment to determine next steps. Much of this is done by special educators, in addition to the work we are already doing.
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accessing grade-level · accommodations · classroom aides · cognitive impairments · differentiated instruction · differentiated learning · frustration · general education · learning disabilities · Paraeducators · resource · rigorous instruction · Sara Finegan · socialization · sorting cards · special day class · special education · student monitoring · supports
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Some Words About: Homework and Special Education
1 Comment · Posted by readers1 in Planning and Rigor
By Sara Finegan
I’m a big fan of homework, but it has to be meaningful homework, and it has to be customized to fit your learners and their current skill levels. Here are my thoughts about designing home practice in a demanding classroom:
It must be purposeful.
Homework for the sake of homework is detrimental to a struggling learner. Kids aren’t stupid, and they know on some level, no matter how old they are, if you are just making work for them because you think that’s what teachers are supposed to do.
The purpose of homework in a demanding classroom is to:
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give the child additional practice in a newly-learned concept or skill and
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to provide a structure for a task they should be doing on a regular basis.
When it comes to additional practice, a demanding classroom teacher designs a set of practice problems or questions that address what was worked on that day in class. Examples might be: 5-10 addition problems; a set of similar word problems that require the child to set up an equation; comprehension questions that pertain to one or two plot features; practice making inferences based on short pieces of text.
There are some excellent workbooks available in stores and online that provide practice problems in many content areas. There are also some awful ones. I remember a child I worked with in an after-school program who had a reading homework packet that was obviously written in the 1960’s: it was dry, pedantic, and completely uninteresting to me and the student.
A goal should be to establish a sense of competence.
I do not want my students to have their parents do their homework, spend hours with their child struggling to get it done, or to leave the kitchen table feeling utterly drained and unskilled.
I want my students to leave the homework table feeling like they get it, or are on the way to getting it. I want them to feel able. Now this is not going to happen all the time, particularly when we’re learning new skill sets.
But if, over time, the student is confident that in general, he or she is going to be able to master the skills, or retain the information, or do the task fairly well, most kids will be willing to struggle a bit from time to time at home.
A homework routine should create study habits.
Almost every school urges children to read for 30 minutes or more per day at home. Thirty minutes is a lot for a child who has little reading stamina, or who struggles mightily with decoding or comprehension. This kind of assignment, without any other components, isn’t going to help a child with learning disabilities as much as it could with a few modifications.
If a child is not able to read for 30 minutes in class without losing focus or melting down, do not require it at home. Build stamina slowly. A student who can only read for three minutes should be given a 3-5 minute reading assignment for home, followed by a book on tape or a story a parent is willing to read out loud. (Reading homework is not always just about reading skill, but also about our relationship to text and how we think about stories – books on CD, tape or read aloud can do just fine.)
At a certain age and stage, kids can be taught how to write a reading response. This is an extremely important skill and needs to be built in layers, slowly, with lots of practice. The practice can be done at home, provided that you give the child examples to follow or a formula to use in the initial practice stages. In early grades, a reading response can be an illustration with two or three sentences about a character or your opinion about the book.
My fifth and sixth graders are currently, in the fall of the year, writing three-paragraph responses: a summary of what they read; a description of a character or the problem; a connection that they are making to the story or to a character. By the end of the year I hope they will be doing deeper thinking and writing, but we are taking it one step at a time. Right now, their daily reading homework includes writing the response (yes, daily, though at least one child dictates to his grandmother because the act of writing is driving him crazy) because I want it to become an automatic habit for them in preparation for middle school.
As much as possible, coordinate, communicate, and negotiate with your partners: the parents.
We don’t want parents doing the homework, but we want them to support it. Nobody knows a child better than his or her parents, and we need to be responsive to them with regard to the work we send home.
Right now, I have a couple of students who have major difficulties with attention. One of them has autism and ADHD; the other has ADHD. Both of them have parents who are excellent about notifying me when homework is just too much. In these kinds of cases, we need to make accommodations and reduce the amount of homework in one or more ways.
We might limit the number of problems to solve on a math set, or require less reading.- We might change the type of work to be done. Multiple choice or short-answer, fill-in-the-blank homework works better for these kids than other kinds of comprehension or social studies assignments.
- We might change the way the homework needs to be done. Both of my students are allowed to dictate their reading responses to a parent or grandparent, because getting them to sit down and write after school, when meds are wearing off and the brain is tired is not going to be a pleasant experience.
- We might give choices. One of my students, who has moderately-functioning autism, fought homework at home for a long time. When he came to my classroom, I provided three to four tasks to be done at home – and instructed him to pick two. This gives him the power over the work, not me over him, and has made him voluntarily do his homework, without difficulty, when he gets home.
A goal should be to build internal drive and the self-discipline to get the practice done.
I don’t want my students’ parents to spend hours fighting with their kids to get work done. I also don’t want students neglecting their home practice. Home practice needs to become a routine, a habit.
In a demanding classroom, this is done with incentives as well as consequences.
An immediate, automatic, small reward needs to be given to kids with learning disabilities when they turn in their homework. As homework is checked in, kids can receive a sticker, a punch on “daily work index card”, a raffle ticket (dollar store prizes at a drawing once a week or every two weeks) or some other desired privilege. It should be automatic and not served with effusive praise unless the child has a history of not turning in homework, in which case positive comments are a good re-enforcement.
If you have other students check in homework, kids will be far more invested in getting it done. It’s hard to face a teacher or aide and explain why homework was not done, but for some reason it’s even harder to face your peers when all of them have been working hard. This can be especially true if there’s a class-wide reward for 100% homework turned in, a ploy I use every now and then ($5 pizzas from Little Caesars work every time). In general, the incentives should be small and cheap.
Consequences are more complicated.The traditional “you miss recess” consequence is not a good idea in most special education classrooms, where kids need to get outside and move around as a kinesthetic break from the intellectual activity you’re piling on.
I’ve been experimenting with a form letter that goes home, filled out by the student, for parents to read and sign. It’s on bright orange paper, and can’t be missed by anyone coming even close to a backpack, and it requires the student to acknowledge work that wasn’t done and ask for help creating a plan to do it. I keep all of them in my students’ portfolio folders, and it’s a great visual – neon orange is eye-catching.
Restriction of free time until the homework is made up is a pretty good consequence, though again, many students, particularly those with autism or who have sensory issues need to have some minutes of free time between tasks in order to keep their minds working well.
I’m inclined to use restriction from weekly class-wide fun activities as a consequence for not doing homework. If the last ½ hour of class on Friday is reserved for cupcakes or a great game, kids who didn’t do homework during the week can sit in another classroom or in the office to make up their work.
The combination of incentives and meaningful but not devastating consequences in a demanding classroom helps students learn good work habits at home and in school.
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accommodations · ADHD · assignments · attention deficits · autism · consequences · demanding classroom · high expectations · home practice · homework · incentives · learning disabled · modifications · parents · purpose · reading response · reading stamina · restrictions · rewards · rigor · rigorous instruction · Sara Finegan · special education · standards

