TAG | rigorous instruction
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
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
13
Nimble with Numbers: The Importance of Skip-Counting
No comments · Posted by readers1 in Math
By Sara Finegan
An inordinate number of kids are growing up without learning their multiplication facts. Some of this is due to the prevalent use of calculators. Some is due to the fact that there’s been an overall rejection of rote learning – throwing the baby out with the bathwater, in this case, I think. Some of it is due to low numeracy as a result of math disabilities.
Many kids with learning disabilities really struggle with numbers and their values. And, I think, it also has to do with processing memory and retention of information that isn’t used on a regular basis.
I think there’s a place for rote learning of math facts in a demanding classroom. The only way to learn multiplication facts and what happens when you add ten to a number is to recite them over and over in some way or another.
The way I use is skip-counting. Skip-counting can be done starting at any age, and should continue to be done if not daily, then at least several times a week once the kids know the routine.
I cannot stress enough the importance of visual cuing when it comes to math. In this case, a giant number line, or individual number lines to 100 for each student are in order. You can also use individual multiplication charts or a giant one; the point is that the kids have to have the numbers 1-100 in front of them when they are skip-counting, at least during the first few months.
A lot of teachers practice skip-counting with their students through 3, 4, and 5 multiplication facts, and then stop. As a result, many kids know their multiplication facts through five, and can’t go higher. Don’t let this happen.
It can be a part of your daily routine to start with 3, and have the kids skip-count to 60. Move to 4, then 5, and 6. Once they know those, move to 7 and 8. Practice them religiously. I like to point at the numbers on a chart or number line with a pointer or a yardstick at first, but later it becomes a favorite reward for a student to be allowed to stand at the front of the class and cue the numbers.
It doesn’t take long for kids to internalize the facts as they continue to skip-count regularly. But here’s the deal: You can’t stop here.
One mistake I’ve seen over and over again is special educators working on skip-counting with their students and then never extending the skill into actual math problems. And when I say “actual math problems,” I don’t mean a standard multiplication worksheet. I mean math problems that require critical thinking.
There’s no point in rote learning unless the information learned by rote is applied in complex situations. Skip-counting alone, in a vacuum, has little meaning. We need our students to be able to use the math facts to solve word problems, to reason through division problems, to figure out the value of x, and to calculate prices and amounts.
So teach the multiplication facts by rote, but then require your students to use them, and use them in a variety of ways. Only in this way will they truly be learning.
In a demanding classroom, rote memorization has a place in supporting mastery of facts to be used in deeper-level situations.![]()
critical thinking · demanding classroom · high expectations · learning disabilities · learning disabled · low numeracy · mastery · math fluency · math language · multiplication · Nimble with Numbers · processing · rigor · rigorous instruction · rote learning · Sara Finegan · skip counting · special education · standards · visual cuing
7
Reading Comprehension Skills: Getting Into Inferencing
No comments · Posted by readers1 in Reading
By Sara Finegan
Kids with learning disabilities often struggle with reading comprehension. As I stated in an earlier post, reading comprehension is a relationship with the written word comprised of a number of behaviors. One of these behaviors is inferring.
Making inferences about characters, the setting, motives, the problem, and possible solutions requires that a reader move beyond literal comprehension and start putting pieces of the story together. This is often very difficult for the struggling reader and when a child has expressive or receptive language deficits, it can be even more complicated.
In General Education, we teach that making inferences while we read is like reading between the lines to see what the author is showing us about what’s going on in the story. This is an excellent explanation for most of us, but when a child is a concrete thinker who focuses almost entirely on the surface meaning of things, it doesn’t resonate very well.
Students with learning disabilities who don’t make inferences while reading are not going to learn how to do so by explanation: I can yack all I want about inferring and even model how it’s done, but that is unlikely to have positive results unless we get the kids to actually start doing it.
And the way to do that is to show the kids that they already do make inferences, constantly, in their own lives.
Start by taking a look at the types of inferences we all make each and every day:
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We infer how people are feeling by their facial expressions and body language. -
We infer people’s attitudes by comments they make and tones of voice.
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We make inferences about why our students are behaving certain ways based on what we know of their home situations, health, or relationships with their peers.
I like to tell the kids stories about real-life events and encourage them to recognize the inferences we make:
Me: Yesterday morning, the sink in the kitchen was clogged, and my husband spent about 30 minutes before we left for school trying to fix it. I was popping in and out to check on his progress while I was getting dressed. He had his head in the plumbing and was giving these deep sighs, like this (sighing heavily) and muttering under his breath like this (muttering) and at one point he even cursed at the cats. (Pause for comments.)
Me: Anyone?
Jonathan: Oh, he was mad.
Sandra: I bet he was frustrated!
Me: See, you two made excellent inferences! Jonathan, what made you infer that he was angry?
Jonathan: He was cursing. And that muttering thing.
Me: Yep, yep. And Sandra, how did you know he was frustrated?
Sandra: He was sighing. And muttering. And my dad curses when he’s frustrated or mad.
Me: Terrific! Both of you could support your inferences with info from my story. Anyway, this afternoon when we came home, he called the plumber. I had to go to the grocery store, so I missed it when the plumber got there. But when I came home, Richard was calling to the bank to find out how much money we have in our account, and looking very serious. He said “We might not be able to buy that new stereo this month.” (Pause for comments.)
Jayme: He was disappointed.
Simone: It’s going to be expensive to fix the sink.
Me: Oh, wow! Two good inferences! Jayme, what made you infer that he was disappointed?
Jayme: Because he looked serious and he can’t buy the new stereo now.
Me: Ah, good! Simone? What makes you infer that the repair is going to cost a lot of money?
Simone: Because he had to call the bank.
Me: Anything else?
Tommy: Because he won’t be able to afford the new stereo.
TIP: Keep showing the kids how they already make a lot of inferences. Name what they’re doing: they won’t connect the fact that they’re making inferences with the reading strategy unless it has a name that is used frequently and that they understand through experience.
The next step involves making inferences about visuals in print. I like to use cartoons and comics. I’ve got a bunch of them laminated that I pull out and let the kids mess with for awhile. I like to listen to them talk about the pictures, and I ask some open-ended questions, such as “how do the people feel?” “Why is he doing that?” “What is the problem in this picture?”
When we have a share-out about the comics and illustrations, we identify all of the inferences that the kids have made. Then I explain that they are going to learn how to do it when they read stories, too.
You can also have kids practice making inferences during read-aloud time. When you are reading a high-interest story out loud, whether it’s Harry Potter, or The Book of Three, or Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing, you can pause periodically and ask for some inferences. Keep a chart of all of the inferences the students suggest, and ask them to track those inferences as the story moves on.
I like to have kids do some short-text inferring practice in guided reading groups and also independently before they move to practicing the strategy with their independent reading books. You can throw together some paragraphs and multiple-choice or short answer worksheets that ask kids to make inferences about characters or situations based on passages. I’ve included some here as examples.
Practicing making inferences in independent reading work should take place over a period of time with accountability and exclusivity.
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When I say “a period of time,” I mean that you should encourage and support the reader for between a week and a month as she or he develops competence in the strategy.
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When I say “accountability,” I mean that your student needs to be able to show you the inferences being made. Sometimes this can be by giving the child post-its and asking him or her to record each inference on a post-it during reading time and placing the post-it in the margin of the passage in question. Then, during conferring time, you can talk about the inferences made and see how the child is thinking and processing. This will give you insight into where there still may be some weaknesses and what supports you might need to add.
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When I say “exclusivity,” I mean that we should not ask a child to practice more than one brand-new comprehension strategy at a time. Give the student time to develop strength and ability in making inferences, to gain experience in how it’s done and what it means during his or her independent reading.
There will be time later to work on other strategies. In a demanding classroom, students learn one step at a time, strengthening each new facet of thinking until it can be added to their repertoire of skills.
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connections · demanding classroom · expressive language · high expectations · inferences · inferencing · inferring · language deficits · learning disabilities · learning disabled · reading behaviors · receptive language · rigor · rigorous instruction · Sara Finegan · special education · standards · understanding
3
Jeopardy! Where the Answer is the Question
No comments · Posted by readers1 in Language in the Classroom
By Sara Finegan
Kids with expressive and receptive language deficits need to learn how to use and understand words. The speech section of the brain is an amazing thing, and synapses can be created, formed, and reformed without medical intervention. It is by using and reusing words, practicing them in different contexts over and over again, that our students can overcome, or at least significantly diminish their language disabilities.
One of our favorite ways in the classroom is to play Jeopardy.
I use Jeopardy games primarily for Social Studies, but it can be adapted for any content area. All you need is some sort of board (I took a large portable bulletin board or white board, covered it with contact paper, and it can stand on an easel quite easily), a document camera, those little envelopes they put in books at the library (or laminated construction paper envelopes you affix to the board), and index cards.
I keep five columns of four card slots each on the board at all times. Then I can switch around the categories and the answer cards with ease.
NOTE: Our school district is putting smart boards, or Promethean Activboard smart boards in all of our classrooms. (Lucky us!) This is going to change the way I do Jeopardy because I can set up a Jeopardy game right on the computer and work with it on the smart board. But I haven’t done that yet.
If you’re not familiar with the television game show, Jeopardy, it’s essentially a trivia game where the answers are provided and the contestants have to formulate the correct questions. In a demanding classroom, we play Jeopardy at least once a week, sometimes twice, depending on where we are in a social studies unit, and our games last anywhere from 40 minutes to an hour and a half, depending on how much fun the kids are having. And they have a lot of fun.
All of the “trivia” in our games consists of information from our current social studies unit.
TIP: As the year goes on, our Jeopardy game may expand to include prior units. Thus, at the end of last year, one category was about ancient India, one about ancient China, one about ancient Mesopotamia, and on category was just about vocabulary related to history.
Most of the time, the categories are something like this: geography, lifestyle, religion, leaders. But that is not cut in stone; we often have a vocabulary category, one on military matters, one about trade, one about inventions. It just depends, as I said, on where we are in the unit.
I will preface my description of the game by saying that you should not have high expectations at first. At the beginning of the year, students will just not do very well and will need lots and lots of coaching and extra time. Even later in the year, in the early part of a unit, kids just aren’t as familiar with the facts as they will be. What’s amazing is that within a matter of a day or two, the kids are really learning, integrating the facts, internalizing the information, which is better than simple memorization. And did I mention they are having FUN?
How do I know this? Because years later, my students are able to discuss with ease historical facts and ideas and concepts that they learned long ago in our classroom. My student teacher, on a tour of the school by one of my students this year, was treated to a long description of prehistoric humans and the development of key concepts including domestication of animals and plants, inventions of new tools, and ideas about religion and nature. Another of my students from years ago recently texted me that he got an A in world history in high school because he had so much background knowledge from our sixth and seventh grade history class.
Jeopardy is played, at the beginning, with teams of two or three students. You’ll find that as the year progresses, many students want to play alone, and others will still want a partner. This is fine. It’s great, even. And you’ll be amazed at who emerges as the stars of the game, confident in their ability to formulate correct questions properly.
I have prewritten the answers on index cards and put them in the slots or envelopes on the Jeopardy board before we begin. (when the kids see me changing the cards earlier in the day, they get excited knowing that we’re going to play – they really look forward to it.)
The first team picks a category and an amount (I have 100, 200, 300 and 500 points as our amounts, but you can use any numbers you like). I pull the appropriate card, and show it under the document camera. (This is a big help to those kids who are visual learners and need to see the words of the “answer,” not just hear them.) I remind the team to put their response in question form. I don’t use a timer, because I want the kids to feel pretty relaxed as they figure out their response and put it in the proper words.
An example of an “answer” might be: Wheat and barley. The proper question could be: “What grains did the ancient Mesopotamian farmers raise?” or “What are two grains domesticated by Mesopotamian farmers?”
Periodically, I do a mini lesson or reminder lesson about clues we can use to determine the question form. Sometimes, the kids need reminders, for example, that an answer that contains a date needs a question that starts with “when”, or that a location implies a “where” question. Often, however, I’ll catch kids coaching each other on this, even if they are on different teams.
According to our former Speech Language Pathologist, the effort of thought it takes the kids to use the answer/fact to form a question is a challenge that results in significant improvements in their speech skills. We’ve noticed a huge jump in confidence, mastery of facts and concepts with great ease, and a terrific increase in use of rich vocabulary and complex sentences.
We also have a classroom full of history buffs, who are proud to demonstrate their mastery and expertise both orally and in writing.
In a demanding classroom, kids talk about information in a variety of ways instead of just repeating back what we tell them.
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complex sentences · demanding classroom · expressive language · high expectations · Jeopardy · language deficits · learning disabilities · learning disabled · mastery · Promethean board · receptive language · rigor · rigorous instruction · Sara Finegan · special education · speech language pathologist · speech skills · standards · vocabulary
25
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
20
Building Independent Learning: Finding Information
No comments · Posted by readers1 in Planning and Rigor
By Sara Finegan
I’m all in favor of worksheets, as long as they are challenging, require the students to write complete thoughts with detail as opposed to one-word answers, and as long as they are designed for a purpose other than just seat work.
The danger of using worksheets in a special ed classroom is that you will inadvertently or through ignorance keep the kids at the most basic levels of intellectual behavior.
We want the kids to move up, not remain static. This can be done when the information and concepts they learn are re-enforced at ever-increasing levels of intellectual demand.
I use worksheets in social studies and science to teach and re-enforce students’ independent thinking and learning. They are designed to get kids thinking, finding information that they’ve learned already, and using it appropriately. When the system works well, it creates a ladder upwards for kids to move through the critical thinking levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy:
In many special ed classrooms, students stay at the Knowledge level and never proceed upwards. In others, Knowledge and Understanding are the sum total of the instructional plan.
Such limitations will re-enforce student reliance on adults for learning.
Such limitations will teach kids that learning is all about knowledge, not what you do with it.
We use charts, and more charts
In a typical unit of Social Studies, we will create 5-10 charts of information about a culture, civilization, or era.
I like to create “thinking maps” (also known as “mindmaps”) while we’re studying, and use different colors of marker to delineate the categories of data we are taking in.
We also create mindmaps that have a standard organization; for example, kids know that “Lifestyles” is usually on the right hand side of the “spider,” and time periods and locations are in the upper left and upper middle of the map.
These charts are posted all around the room or pulled off of hangers to display when we are doing content-area work. They are used for a variety of activity types, all designed to promote ever-increasing critical thinking among the students.
The purpose is for kids to learn where to find and retrieve information that they learn. I don’t require them to memorize historical information. They will, of course, by the time we’re done with a unit, but the goal is actually for them to be able to apply the facts to ongoing themes of understanding and analyze these themes as we continue to learn.
I create worksheets several times per week throughout the course of a unit. When we begin to study a topic, the questions are all knowledge-based:
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When did Menes unify Upper and Lower Egypt?
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Where did Homo Habilis live?
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Which tribes lived in the southeast region of North America?
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Who paid for the Mayflower Pilgrims’ passage to America?
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List two grains grown by colonists in Virginia.
Students are encouraged to get up and move around the room looking for the answers to the questions. (See related topic, “Moving into Learning.”) They quickly learn in my classroom that they can predict where they’ll find information, using the color-coded organization of the mindmaps.
I repeat questions using different forms and formats, because I do want the kids to begin to really internalize the facts. Thus, in almost every worksheet on the Ancient Maya, I’ll have similar questions about religion, clothing, food, and government. Similar, but not identical, because I want kids to see that we can think of the same information in different ways.
As we progress through the unit and the kids do more and more searching for and finding facts, the information begins to embed into the kids’ memory banks. As this happens, I want them to start using the information they have more readily available, and I want them to think more deeply about the information.
My questions become more complex or demanding. I might begin to ask:
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What did Menes do to symbolize his control over both Upper and Lower Egypt?
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Why didn’t Homo Habilis eat a lot of meat?
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Why did many tribes in the southeast region have separate villages in the summer and winter?
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Why did the Virginia Company agreed to lend the Pilgrims the money to travel to America?
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Why didn’t the colonists in Connecticut grow rice?
TIP: One of the first things we decide in my class at the beginning of the year is how to answer questions.
We decide what constitutes knowledge and what shows that someone is a smart thinker. We decide that one or two word answers do not show either knowledge or smart thinking. We determine that all questions should be answered in complete sentences, unless I specifically state otherwise.
We also decide that the use of appropriate word choice is important. This is something that we work on strengthening throughout the year, and expectations raise as we go. Within a few months, kids know that verbs such as “were” and “had” need to be abandoned in favor of more specific ones, such as “resided,” “lived,” “created,” or “contained.” “Many” and “numerous” replace “a lot.” “Crafts,” “artifacts,” “tools,” and “belongings” are used instead of “things.”
Later questions are more open-ended and require the kids to utilize the facts to come to and defend conclusions. I might give a short paragraph describing an archeological excavation in Spain that uncovers a small settlement used by prehistoric peoples. Archeologists find remnants of a campfire with animal bones, and a hand axe. The time period in which they were used is approximately 1.5 million years ago.
The kids are asked to identify the probable species of early human who used the settlement, and explain their reasoning. I will expect them to discuss the use of fire and tools as well as the time period to substantiate their conclusion that it belonged to Homo Erectus.
By the middle of the year when we study Ancient Civilizations, my students are expected to answer the following question:
If you were an archeologist wanting to begin an excavation in Ancient China looking for the remnants of the earliest settlements, what points would you look for on a map and why?
I would expect all of my students to be able to articulate that one would look near a fresh water source, because people needed water to drink and to water their crops.
By mid-year, I expect my students to be describing the types of information they are going to learn when they open to the newest unit in the textbook, and to make predictions using their considerable bank of background knowledge about what each culture or civilization contained as it grew and developed.
In a demanding classroom, kids are expected to retrieve and use information, not just have it.
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Bloom's taxonomy · charts · critical thinking · demanding classroom · high expectations · learning disabilities · learning disabled · mindmaps · rigor · rigorous instruction · Sara Finegan · social studies · special education · standards · thinking maps · word choice · worksheets
18
Progress and Mastery: Not Necessarily Mutually Exclusive, Part 2
No comments · Posted by readers1 in General, Math
By Sara Finegan
I’m teaching a general education math class this year that includes many of my own kids with learning disabilities as well as kids who do not have IEPs. We’re about six days behind the other class at the same grade level, and both of us finished the first two units well before the district’s first math benchmark assessment.
Greg Roy, my general education colleague, has, as I have said before on this blog, taught me a great deal about math and math instruction. He and I disagree about mastery, by the way, but that doesn’t impair our ability to collaborate. He moves at his speed, and I move at a different one, but we’re both moving forward.
Anyway, Greg’s a proponent of math routines, and he does them at the beginning of the day as well as at the beginning of a math class. Routines are great, for several reasons.
• First, they provide kids with ongoing practice of previously-learned skills. My routines always have problems from lessons we have worked on since the beginning of the year – usually types of problems the kids struggled with mightily, so that the skills will become firmly embedded.
(A recent math routine had a word problem involving adding negative numbers, 2 fraction simplifications, 1 changing from mixed fraction to improper fraction, 1 changing improper fraction to a mixed number, and 2 dealing with multiplying decimals by 10, because my kids bombed that area on the last unit test for some reason, as well as a problem from yesterday’s lesson.)
The kids get to use their notes and math encyclopedias on the routines, and we go over the results really quickly. The whole thing takes about 15 minutes each day.
• The second benefit of a daily routine is that they give you a snapshot of each student at that moment. This is particularly helpful as you plan your instruction. I can tell at a glance how many of the kids in my class have mastered yesterday’s lesson or skill, and what the next steps might be. Because I make my kids show their work on each routine, I can pinpoint where in the process of problem-solving they are struggling.
• Finally they give kids a terrific sense of competence. As they experience over a series of weeks and months the increasing ease of solving problems using skills they’ve learned, they realize that they can do it, that they are actually good at it.
The other day, a parent of one of my general education math students told me that her daughter, who has always struggled with math, is coming home saying “hey, mom! I’m smart at math!” This student is the first to raise her hand in my class, the first to want to show the class how she solved a problem, the first to ask questions, and the first to finish her work these days. It’s not because of me; it’s because every day, when she starts learning math, she is reminded that she’s already got terrific skills.
Many special educators neglect daily routines, or don’t make their routines as comprehensive as they should be. We need to recognize that our kids should have multiple opportunities, over a long period of time, to practice newly-mastered skills, or those skills will evaporate like steam after a shower.
We need to challenge our kids daily, while at the same time reminding them that they have ability already, or they will never challenge themselves, and never remind themselves of how far they’ve come.
We need to push, push, push our kids, using all of their strengths, innate and learned, or they will never catch up to their general education peers.
In a demanding classroom, mastery is not something to be admired and then ignored; it’s about skill sets we use, reuse, and apply in newer ways on a regular basis.
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demanding classroom · high expectations · learning disabled · mastery · math instruction · proficiency · rigor · rigorous instruction · routines · Sara Finegan · skills practice · special education · standards · student monitoring · supports

