Classroom problems are obvious: the student is not successful
academically or has behavior issues. The solutions are not so obvious.
Here is how GenEd and SpecEd can work together for solutions for the
student (and the classroom.) Honesty, transparency, clarity between
colleagues will produce true
solutions for students. Be ready for candid interaction, my GenEd
and SpecEd colleagues! There will be questions!
Scenario #1: The student makes an effort, but remains well below standards despite effective interventions.
SpecEd will ask (or should) for documentation of the intervention. The
parent should already know how many hours per day for how many weeks the
student has been in the intervention--and have products of the work
accomplished. The data of the student's further need should not be a
mystery to anyone. Parent contact should be regular. GenEd needs to be
organized for this. Hopefully, the intervention classes at the school
site are coordinating and use the same result templates so a parent or
SpecEd teacher can readily identify the strengths and needs of the
student during a specific time period. If there is other, more unusual
input over a period of time about the student, GeEd needs to document
this with type of behavior, date, and class activity.
An anecdotal report might go like this:
10/5/-- Margaret began classwork, but after 10 minutes was drawing
rather than writing the assignment. The picture was of a child, but it
was one big circle with a smile. She did this for 10 minutes, then sat
still, not working, despite many prompts to write.
With accurate data, Admin, GenEd and SpecEd should meet with the parents
and may then suggest Special Education testing to the parent, if the
parent has not already requested it.
A situation once arose at a Middle School where I was RSP for Grade 6.
The structure was four teachers on a team, and I worked in the
classrooms of Math and ELA. A Soc. Science teacher clued me into two
transfer students she noticed may be SpecEd but perhaps their paperwork
hadn't arrived yet.
One student had created an illustration for an essay that struck the
teacher as disturbing. She showed it to me, I was able to observe and
speak to the student. I contacted the Ed. Psychologist, and the Grade 6
Counselor. After getting contact info from his previous school across
country, we discovered the parent had not informed us the student had
been identified as ED (Emotionally Disturbed) and had a serious incident
the previous school year. We couldn't clarify why the parents did not
inform us, but because the Social Science teacher actually checked and
read her classes' assignments every day we could get him to the proper
placement quickly.
Another student was not able to understand the work at all, but was very
popular despite a stutter. Again, the team of Counselor, Ed.
Psychologist, SpecEd and GenEd did a search of his records, spoke to the
parents (who needed a translator, the Ed. Psychologist was fluent in
Spanish) and we found that due to frequent school changes, he had never
been tested for SpecEd, or Speech Therapy. I tested him from my end, the
Speech Therapist from his end, the Ed. Psychologist from her end, and
we were prepared for a meeting which resulted in a better placement.
Scenario #2: The student has shown grade level ability, but is too disorganized to function in the class.
Again, do we have a record of this behavior?
An anecdotal report might go like this:
Luis does well when he has his supplies and brings his homework and
outside reading book. But he is missing important items at least 3 times
a week. Dates of missing work for March: 3/3, 3/5, 3/9, 3/10, 3/14 etc.
Has GenEd contacted the parents about this lack of functioning? Is there
something unusual at home that might be the cause of the
disorganization? Now I'm going to get personal, only because I have had
to ask myself this question. How organized is the class? How's your
classroom management? Are enough cues and directives given to end one
activity and start another? Is the class tidy and organized so this
student has an appropriate amount of space to function? If the lack of
function is not the result of parents or teacher--there could be a
Special Ed. reason. Executive functions (ability to be organized) can be
impaired by learning disabilities. But not always. If the student's
previous teachers are available for comment, ask how little George did
last year. So if previous answers to these questions show a need
for testing, the SpecEd team will find out--is it ADHD? a learning
disability? or just a future Absent Minded Professor who needs a
personal assistant? (Kind of kidding about the last, but sometimes
parents and teachers feel like they are in that role.)
In my experience as RSP (Resource Specialist) we tested many more
students for learning disabilities than qualified for Special Education
programs, particularly in Grade 6. That is due to the fact that the huge
change in schedule created a perfect storm of confusion for awhile
until the kids got their sea legs. But a lack of executive function
could well show a need for Special Education support, so please document
the need so the student can be fairly evaluated.
Scenario #3: The student is a behavior problem.
Now we are to the real issue to solve. Why do students act up? For
attention, for control of the class, or to escape the class through
disciplinary action that takes them to the office or maybe to the ramp
outside the door (btw, that last strategy is an illegal move and should
not happen. Students need supervision.)
Again, do we have a record of this behavior?
An anecdotal report might go like this, and not necessarily only in a referral:
Student (Kayleigh) got out of seat three times in fifteen minutes, and
moved around the classroom. She then whacked Angelica on the back of the
head, disrupting class.
For a behavior referral for Special Education, you record all instances, and contact with the parents. The team of professionals that is your school and includes you, will research everything about the student, test the student, while effectively managing a positive behavior contract.
At the first, and I mean first, sign of defiance, contact
the parent and document. The most effective teachers I worked with, and
later emulated, did this simple thing, and ran a peaceful classroom.
Also, document the conversation. Is this tedious? Yes, GenEd, it
is. I know, I was GenEd, too. But a behavior issue is the most vital to
document. If, deep in your heart, you feel this student has an emotional
or serious behavioral issue--contact SpecEd, the Counselor, or the Ed. Psychologist.
Maybe the student doesn't have serious problems that may lead to self
injury or injuries to others. But maybe so, and you could save injuries
and lives if the student gets help early.
In one high school class during a reading intervention, a student was
doodling on his work one day. We discovered it was a rather graphic
picture of two young people, one threatening the other with a knife.
Taking the picture to the Ed. Psychologist, and having a meeting with
the parent led to counseling for the student who had been bullied and
assaulted the previous year. His uncle had been murdered in a gang
initiation 18 months before. The student was affected. He received
counseling.
To be transparent, a positive behavior plan is the most challenging to
coordinate with a team of teachers for effective implementation. Really
hard. But we don't give up. Good results help everyone.
When GenEd and SpecEd collaboration really works, there's nothing finer in the school system.
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