Sunday, January 16, 2011

Creating Functional and Sustainable Systems of Ed: Expanding Our Comfort Zone

Being conscious and open to the possibilities of each person, to the potential of each person is often difficult. Our previous experience and exposure often dictates the amount of patience, understanding and willingness to remain open we allow ourselves to provide for others. It's easy to question our own kindness and flexibility when there is no change in how others respond to it.

So...Where do we draw the line? When do we begin to close off? How do we justify our purpose in doing so? What do we hope the result will be to the decisions we make? I believe that we must be true to our belief in others, to the greater goals of schooling. THIS is our purpose. This is what I read in pieces from leaders like Tom Altepeter (@TomAltepeter), George Couros (@gcouros), Harold Shaw (@hshawjr), Diane Lauer (@MrsLauer), and so many others.

 

As a special educator I try to reflect and reassess the way in which I interact with different students, at different times, and in different environments. A seminal article in the special education literature by Doug and Lynn Fuchs (1997) asked the question many still discuss today. What’s Special About Special Education?

The uncertainty in quality and effectiveness of special education programming has lead us to where we are today. What does identification do to improve the outcomes of those who are identified? Once a student is identified with a disability, what happens next? How does Placement and Least Restrictive Environment (LRE) improve an individual’s education?

I believe that it is important to place these questions within a context relevant to our current struggles within education as a whole. Special education services should not be a “catch-all” solution for students who struggle. Our school programs cannot be expected to function in isolation. An integrated framework must be adopted in order to meet the contemporary needs of students.

General educators must adapt and modify practices. Special educators must do the same. The current emphasis in special education service delivery is on unified and integrated service programming and delivery. However, if the system does not function in concert, student outcomes will not change.

In order to change outcomes for students with and without disabilities educational reformers have been forced to critically analyze measures of accountability to determine their effectiveness and validity. In conjunction with the use of Response to Intervention (RtI) for identification, integrated programs must be compelled to implement primary, and proactive programmatic opportunities that consider risk at an individual level and emphasize resiliency development.

Combining these efforts with the conceptual belief in all students’ ability to succeed can address the needs of those students who are perceived negatively but aren’t given the chance or opportunity to be successful because the system neglects (willfully or unintentionally) their needs, desires, goals and dreams.

Before we refer students for special education identification, we owe it to ourselves, to our students, to find ways to expand the capacity of our teams, our schools, and our districts, by remembering that special education is not always the answer.

True opportunity for individual student successes and increased positive outcomes for students with and without disability will come from a combination of legislation, policy and practice; none of these can influence change in isolation.

It is my duty as an educator, not a special educator, to expand my abilities, my influence, and my knowledge, to collaborate and share effective practices and to learn from my successes and my failures.

Fuchs, D., & Fuchs, L.S. (1997). What’s special about special education? In D. Podell (Ed.), Perspectives: Educating exceptional learners (pp. 39-48). Boulder, CO: Coursewise Publishing

3 comments:

  1. Thank you for your kind comments and including me in that kind of company. I don't really consider myself a leader, just another teacher, who happens to speak how he feels at times.

    Often just getting some students out of the mainstream classroom and exposing them to alternative teaching methods, smaller class sizes and different behavioral expectations makes a huge difference in a student's success. Special education classrooms are generally slower paced and more tolerant of differences in learning styles or individual "quirks". Special Education classrooms usually do not "do" school, they teach more to the students needs.

    I agree that Special Education shouldn't be the catch all or expected to solve all the problems that a student may have, just because they are eligible to receive Special Education services. Although some seem to think that is what is expected.

    The hardest thing for me in special education is the requirement for scientifically based curriculum for our students. Is this the only way to teach our students, it often means to administrators "canned" programs that focus on phonics until the students are phonic-ed out or memorized out and bored to death with remedial this or that. Yes special education students have challenges, but they also have significant strengths that could be focused into successful educational work, but to do that we would not be using a "scientifically" based curriculum, we would be teaching to student strengths. I struggle with that mandate, almost daily.

    The quality and effectiveness of a special education or regular program is often tied directly to a student's ability to access technology that allow them to make accommodations for their weaknesses. A teacher (regular or special ed) who can effectively integrate technology into their classroom will better prepare their students to function in today's technologically dependent future.

    I keep telling everyone that I am simply a teacher, not a Special Education teacher when I introduce myself and when they ask what I teach I say "I teach students." Too many in the public school system are hung up on what subject a teacher teaches and less on their ability to teach kids. I do believe that there is a certain amount of subject matter knowledge that is required and necessary to teach a subject, but knowing a subject, does not make someone a teacher.

    Students need the opportunity to be placed in situations that they can succeed whatever the name someone gives it: general education, RTI, 504, or special education based upon their Knowledge, Skills and Abilities not an artificial pacing guide or their current grade level expectations. If we do not give them that opportunity then we risk the possibility or probability of "loosing" that student educationally.

    Often in my opinion the only thing special about Special Education is often the Special Education teacher and how they teach the smaller number of students in their classrooms.a

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  2. Thank you for including me in that company. I don't consider myself a leader, just someone who speaks how he feels.

    Often just getting some students out of the mainstream classroom and exposing them to alternative teaching methods, smaller class sizes and different behavioral expectations makes a huge difference in a student's success. Special education classrooms are generally slower paced and more tolerant of differences in learning styles or individual "quirks". Special Education classrooms usually do not "do" school, they teach more to the students needs.

    The hardest thing for me in special education is the requirement for scientifically based curriculum for our students. Is this the only way to teach our students, it often means to administrators "canned" programs that focus on phonics until the students are phonic-ed out or memorized out and bored to death with remedial this or that. Yes special education students have challenges, but they also have significant strengths that could be focused into successful educational work, but to do that we would not be using a "scientifically" based curriculum, we would be teaching to student strengths. I struggle with that mandate, almost daily.

    The quality and effectiveness of a special education or regular program is often tied directly to a student's ability to access technology that allow them to make accommodations for their weaknesses. A teacher (regular or special ed) who can effectively integrate technology into their classroom will better prepare their students to function in today's technologically dependent future.

    Students need the opportunity to be placed in situations that they can succeed whatever the name someone gives it: general education, RTI, 504, or special education based upon their Knowledge, Skills and Abilities not an artificial pacing guide or their current grade level expectations. If we do not give them that opportunity then we risk the possibility or probability of "loosing" that student educationally.

    Often in my opinion the only thing special about Special Education is often the Special Education teacher and how they teach the smaller number of students in their classrooms

    Harold

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  3. Harold, Thanks so much for your thoughts. I agre that students need to be provided with opportunities to succeed. These opportunities have to include the wealth of options we have at our disposal. For example, smaller class sizes, small group instruction,integrated intervention and differentiation. I don't think that these and other aspects of the sped continuum need be exempt to students without identified disability.

    Look forward to continuing the conversation.

    Matt

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