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Week Nine: Inclusive Education in Elementary Schools April 10, 2007 A-117: Implementing Inclusive Education Harvard Graduate School of Education Dr. Thomas.

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Presentation on theme: "Week Nine: Inclusive Education in Elementary Schools April 10, 2007 A-117: Implementing Inclusive Education Harvard Graduate School of Education Dr. Thomas."— Presentation transcript:

1 Week Nine: Inclusive Education in Elementary Schools April 10, 2007 A-117: Implementing Inclusive Education Harvard Graduate School of Education Dr. Thomas Hehir

2 A117 Hermeneutic SCHOOL CLASSROOM CHILD

3 From Nolet & McLauglin – 1 st Edition

4 Executive Processes -Regulation of thinking processes, behavior, and performance -How and when to use strategies Stimuli from External Environment Senses Attention/ Recognition Sensory Memory Very limited capacity, Visual.5 seconds, Auditory 3 seconds Working Memory Temporary holdings 7 units, 10-20 seconds Long Term Memory Encoding and retrieval Storage Retrieval Strategies -Multiple means of presentations -Focus queues - Repetition -Sub-vocalization -Chunking -Distributive Practice -Scaffolding -Multiple means of presentation - Rehearsal - Elaboration - Graphic Organizers - Comprehension Monitoring

5 Executive Processes Stimuli from External Environment Senses Sensory Memory Working Memory Long Term Memory Storage Retrieval Affective Network Recognition Networks Strategic Networks

6 From Nolet & McLauglin – 1 st Edition (Lack of fluency interferes)

7 Activity Using figure 3.1 in Nolet and McLaughlin, consider the relevance of this model and the concept of access to the curriculum for the following children for in-class discussion:  A third grader with significant emotional disturbance with grade level skills.  A tenth grader who is blind, a Braille reader with grade level skills.  A sixth grader with dyslexia who reads independently at the third grade level  An eleventh grade student with mild mental retardation and forth grade level skills  An eighth grader who is deaf, fluent in ASL, reading English with comprehension at the fourth grade level.

8 From Nolet & McLauglin – Chapter 3  Organize the information you want your students to learn before you teach it.  Provide direct assistance to help students activate prior knowledge already stored in long-term memory.  Help students make links between old and new information.  Incorporate elaboration tactics into your instruction.

9 From Nolet & McLauglin – Chapter 3 Classroom Strategies to Improve Transfer  Provide opportunities for students to practice skills and apply knowledge in a variety of contexts.  Systematically vary types of examples from near to far transfer.  Model strategies that show how previously learned information can be used in a new situation.  Provide cues in situations where students are required to transfer previously learned information.

10 Accommodations & Modifications “A dyslexic needs extra time the same way a diabetic needs insulin” (Shaywitz 2003) Accommodations:  Alternative acquisition modes  Alternative response modes  Content enhancements Modifications:

11 Universal Design (Classroom Level)  Multiple means of representation  Multiple means of expression  Flexible means of engagement

12 The School Level

13 Towards Ending Ableism in Education The Promise of Universal Design  Universal Design and reading  Universally designed preschool and kindergarten options  Universally designed early reading programs and disability identification  Universal Design and learning  Universally designed support for positive behavior  Universal Design and school organization

14 Students with Disabilities and Standards-Based Reform  Start early  Curriculum modification should be a last resort  Accommodations on tests should mirror instructional accommodations  Time devoted to learning may need to be lengthened  Restructure high school options through effective transition planning

15 The Importance of Beliefs  Unconditional acceptance should be every child’s right  People support one another through community  Participation is an essential part of acceptance  People should not have to pass a test or prove themselves in order to be included in everyday life (Biklen, p. 118)

16 Principles of (Full) Inclusion The 100% Club (Biklen, Jorgensen)  School leaders set direction and climate  Students attend school they would attend if not disabled  Close school/family relations  Natural proportions  Natural supports  Removal from regular class minimized or non-existent  Services are brought to children  Teachers work collaboratively or in teams  De-tracked, heterogeneous grouping, instructional organization follows mission (block scheduling)  Deemphasize specialization and intervention  Disability as diversity  Aligned with general education “reform”  All kids benefit  Inclusion as a vehicle for social change

17 River Bend School  Naturally occurring population  Balancing needs for intervention with accommodation  Addressing the harmful effects of pull-outs  Universal Design, de-stigmatization  RRT open to all who need support  SBT problem solving mechanism available to all needing support  Efficiency  Curriculum coordination  Increased opportunities for inclusion

18 Teacher Working Conditions  Contact teacher 4-5 classrooms  Regular teacher 1 contact  SBT availability  RRT availability for any student

19 Importance of Structural Change  Immersion blocks  SBT  Sped 50% instructional

20 O’Hearn School  In class support (2 teachers)  Non-naturally occurring population (large number of students with significant disabilities allows for greater financial support)  Standards oriented (U.S. context)  Very strong family involvement and support (parents as co-producers)  Strong emphasis on accommodations

21 Continuing Issues and Dilemmas  Is special ed. support deluded?  ELL model?  Teacher collaboration time?


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