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Strategies to Strategies to Support Diverse Support Diverse Needs in the Needs in the Classroom Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010 Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

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Page 1: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Strategies to Support Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Diverse Needs in the

ClassroomClassroom

Strategies to Support Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Diverse Needs in the

ClassroomClassroomPresented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Page 2: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Agenda

• Adaptive Dimension & Differentiated Instruction• Modifications to Programming & PPP’s• Inclusion• Co-teaching and Collaboration• Roles of Team Members• Effective Use of an EA to support Students in Class• Other ways to support students/various adaptations

Page 3: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

The Adaptive Dimension or Differentiated Instruction…

• Is best teaching practices• Is making adjustments to accommodate

diversity in student learning needs• Is the adaptations we make to give all

students an equal opportunity to learn and succeed in our classrooms

• Includes the practices teachers undertake to make curriculum, instruction, and the learning environment meaningful and appropriate for all learners.

Page 4: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

The Adaptive Dimension and Differentiated Instruction…

• Is giving students what they need• Gives you the right and responsibility to

meet the needs of your students and help them achieve curricular outcomes

• Begins with knowing your students and their strengths, interests, learning styles and areas of need – the ‘whole’ child

Page 5: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Diversity should be…

• respected

• expected

• planned for

• honored

• valued

• Normal is just a setting on your dryer!

Page 6: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Differentiated Instruction

•Same Content *Diff erent Conceptual Level

•Same Content *Diff erent Method to Show Learning

•Same Curriculum *Less To Be Learned

•Same Curriculum *Slower Rate of Learned

•Same Curriculum *Functional Application

•Same Curriculum *Less Complex

Page 7: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Adaptations to consider…

• Adapting the Teacher’s Presentation• Adapting the Evaluation• Utilizing Assistive Technology• Adapting the Materials• Adapting the Page Set-Up• Adapting the Environment• Adapting Assistance

Page 8: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Modified Course of Study

• Are courses at the Gr. 10, 11 or 12 level that contain 50% of the Foundational Objectives from provincial curriculums and 50% locally developed and approved foundational objectives.

Page 9: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Prior to Grade 10• The Ministry of Education does not

recognize modified or alternate programs prior to Grade 10

• K – 9 students who, despite full application of the adaptive dimension, still require modifications to curriculum must have a Personal Program Plan

Page 10: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

A PPP is developed for a student who is…

is working toward learning objectives that are different from the foundational objectives of the curriculum

requires additional individual supports and services to benefit from the educational program

May also be identified as a Student requiring Intensive Support, depending on the levels of support required

Page 11: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

A Personal Program Plan is…

individualized a collaborative written report gathering perspectives on priorities a focus on inclusion an outline of student strengths and needs priority goals & objectives an intervention plan a transition plan the basis for reporting progress evergreen part of that student’s curriculum

Page 12: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Ensuring a holistic program…

Encompasses all aspects of the student’s life Areas of Development to focus on in the PPP:

Cognitive ability or learning capacity Current learning achievement Communication Independence/Problem Solving/Work habits Motor Skills/Sensory Safety Personal and Social Well-being Physical Health/Medical/Personal Care Transition

Page 13: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

In an Inclusive Environment, all

Students…• Belong and are valued and contributing members of

the learning community• Are acknowledged as having unique abilities and needs • Are provided with the opportunity to develop their

potential and become life long learners in age-appropriate classrooms

• Are supported in developing a deep appreciation of individual differences and the importance of community

• Are nurtured to become caring and respectful citizens concerned for the well-being of others, and able to take responsibility for the rights of and needs of themselves and others.

Page 14: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Inclusion is…• Providing the planning, support and services

necessary for meaningful and successful participation of students with disabilities in regular programs.

• A focus on ability rather than the disability• Teaching all students to understand and

accept individual differences• Encouraging and implementing activities that

promote the development of friendships and relationships between students with and without disabilities.

Page 15: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Inclusion is…• The development and implementation of

individual PPP goals through participation in typical activities in the classroom, school, and community

• Allowing students who are not able to fully participate to partially participate rather than being excluded entirely.

• Each member of educational team having thorough knowledge of the student’s PPP in order to maximize learning.

Page 16: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Inclusion is not…• ‘dumping’ students with

disabilities into regular programs without preparation or support.

• Just physically placing a student in the regular classroom while they complete work that does not relate to the rest of the class.

Page 17: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Why Collaborate? to create positive opportunities for the student to safeguard against working in isolation to foster inclusion through creative, caring

and supportive “school communities” to gain an enhanced perspective of the “whole

student” to encourage positive relationships with

professional colleagues

Page 18: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

What is Co-teaching?• Involves two or more professionals,

typically a general educator and a student support teacher

• Instruction within the same physical space

• A sharing of teaching responsibilities

• Instruction provided to a heterogeneous group of students

Page 19: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Coteaching…• Coteaching arrangements … are

one promising option for meeting the learning needs of the many students who once spent a large part of the school day with special educators in separate classrooms.”

Friend, 2007, p. 48

Page 20: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Benefits of Co-teaching to Students…

• Access to general education curriculum and classroom teacher

• Reduces social stigma associated with the “pull-out” model

• Positive effects on self-esteem

• Enhances academic performance

• Stronger peer relationships

• Increases individualized instruction

Page 21: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Benefits of Co-teaching to Teachers…

• Opportunity for professional growth• Increases job satisfaction• Sharing of knowledge, skills, and resources• Reduces student-teacher ratio• Special educators increase their understanding

of general education curriculum and classroom expectations

• General educators increase their ability to adapt/modify lessons

• Improves communication between special and general education teachers

Page 22: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Working Collaboratively

• If you can listen to what they tell you, and accept how it seems to them, then it is likely that you can work with them.

Anita DeBoer

Page 23: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

GSSD Continuum of Student Support and Intervention

• Classroom Teacher• Student Support Teacher• Student Services Professional Service

Providers – Occupational Therapists – Speech and Language Pathologists – Educational Psychologists– School Counsellors

Page 24: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Building and Maintaining Positive Relationships either in Co-teaching or the Teacher/EA

relationship…

• Trust and respect• Commitment to team goals• Effective interpersonal, collaborative,

and conflict resolution skills• Understanding of self and partner• Continuous investment of time

Page 25: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Accepting Responsibility…

• All team members respect the input and strengths contributed by their colleagues

• All team members are equally responsible for student outcomes – whether negative or positive

• The classroom teacher is responsible for the well-being and education of every student is his/her class

• It is provincially mandated that Educational Assistants must work under the direction of a teacher

• Communication of the student’s progress or concerns is the responsibility of the teacher or administrator

Page 26: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Teacher/EA Collaboration

• Of all the members of the collaborative team, it is the teacher-paraprofessional interaction that occurs most frequently and requires the most collaborative planning and decision making.

Larry McGuire Creating Opportunities, 2002

Page 27: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Awareness of Individual Responsibility to Support

Inclusion and Success in the Classroom

• The Administrator• The Classroom Teacher• The Student Support Teacher• The Paraprofessional or Educational Assistant• The Family

Page 28: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

The Administrator…holds the determining role and

subsequent influence for promoting collaboration within a school

• demonstrate a commitment to the ideals of inclusion• support educational teams• enhance teacher expectations and attitudes• Creative planning to maximize time as a team to

meet/plan/evaluate goals • encourage visitations, observations, and sharing• facilitates relationship among and between regular and

special educators

Page 29: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

The Classroom Teacher…

Holds the primary role model and is essential to effective inclusion.

• demonstrate commitment to the ideals of inclusion• accept responsibility as primary educator for all

students (they are your student first – not the EA’s, not the SST’s)

• share successful methods and experiences• determine realistic expectations for each student• collaborate• accept assistance• learn methods for accommodating diversity• advocate for the student

Page 30: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

The Student Support Teacher…

...offers specific knowledge regarding diversity and act as a coordinating link among team members.

• Develop practical and theoretical expertise regarding diversity, programming, resources and instructional strategies

• coordinate development and writing of PPP• support classroom teacher• support paraprofessionals• invite participation and support of parents as part of

the educational team

Page 31: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

The SST cont’d…• team teach with classroom teacher• provide individual or small group tutorial as

required (directly teach skills that will assist students in becoming more independent)

• coordinate community-based education and work education

• ensure transition plans are developed and carried out effectively

• liaise with outside support agencies and personnel

• advocate for students

Page 32: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

The Educational Assistant…

….supports the teacher in enhancing inclusive educational opportunities and independence.

• Supports ideals of inclusion• provides input during planning phase as well as

feedback• communicates with teacher• provides instructional support under direction of teacher• prepares and adapts learning environment in

collaboration with a supervising teacher• Enhances the independence of students

Page 33: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

The Family…Family involvement is extremely important to

the ultimate success of their child’s program.• Establishes program foundation by stating desired adult

outcomes• supports collaboration• reinforces skills • informs team about student’s life outside of school• encourages a visible community presence for their

child• ensures transition is carried out effectively• communicates with school• is an advocate for their child

Page 34: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Necessity for Family Involvement

• Families are integral team members. Their involvement is critical in the development, implementation and evaluation of educational programs.

• Parents have the greatest impact over the child’s interactions at home and in the community.

• Families are good sources of information because they know the student better than anyone else.

• Parents represent long term advocacy and support for their child.

• Families are the key to continuity.

Page 35: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Effective Family Partnerships

• Recognize that everyone around the table has different expertise, emotional involvement and long term goals.

• Ensure opportunities for meaningful participation.• Realize the reciprocal benefits of home-school communication• Engage the family in effective communication – talk with

families, not at them.• Be sensitive and respectful.• Recognize the needs of siblings.• Understand the priorities and concerns of the parents.• Celebrate successes and focus on what is needed to be

successful, not what is wrong.

Page 36: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Effective Utilization of EAs in the Classroom

• Do assign EAs to classes to support ALL learners.

• Don’t instruct the EA to routinely sit with one or two students.

• Do spend time with the student as the classroom teacher; don’t expect the EA to be the only one to interact with the child requiring assistance

Page 37: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Effective Utilization of EAs (cont’d)

Whenever possible, students should remain in the classroom with their peers. Whenever they leave to work on things with an EA, they miss out on important peer learning and interaction.

All learners should have the opportunity to hear and experience everything that other students do, they just may not be able to articulate or demonstrate their learning in the same manner.

Page 38: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Effective Utilization of EAs (cont’d)

• Don’t allow your students with diverse needs become reliant on an EA. When we place an EA right beside them, we encourage them to become reliant. They expect the EA will remind them of information the teacher is sharing.

• Students usually take more ownership when they feel like they are responsible/accountable, however the task must be manageable; if it’s too hard or difficult to understand, they become frustrated and give up.

Page 39: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Effective Utilization of EAs (cont’d)

Do let your EA know your expectations for the class. If you’d like them to circulate while students work, let them know the type of feedback you’d like them to provide students with.

A Role Perception Activity would further facilitate this communication. Better communication between the EA and teacher will make the most effective use of time and the best use of the EA’s skills.

Page 40: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Independence and Success…

If teachers are differentiating and modifying appropriately, students should be able to complete some of their work independently, rather than needing an EA to help them with every part of an assignment.

‘Success is like a vitamin, if you don’t get enough, you suffer a serious deficiency.”

Page 41: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Rethinking the Role of the EA….

An EA can work with other groups of students as well or circulate through the class while the teacher spends some time with those who require adaptations or modifications.

Think of ways to make your students independent of an EA.

Page 42: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Rethinking the Role of the EA (cont’d)…

If an EA leaves the student you’ve assigned them to work with and wanders around the class to see how the others are doing, there may be a very good reason.

Remember… Never do for a child what they can do for themselves.

Page 43: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Rethinking the Role of the EA (cont’d)…

When doing group work activities, EA’s can join various groups or rotate among them to facilitate and guide learning similar to the way the teacher might, rather than always being assigned to the group that has the students with higher needs.

Page 44: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Consider Peer/Technology Support…

Rather than the EA reading something aloud to a student, can you pair students for reading instead?

Can the student use software such as WYNN or Word Q if you have the text available in electronic form?

Ask Three before Me – encourage students to ask each other before you or the EA.

Page 45: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

Our Goal…. is to prepare our students with diverse needs

for the real world. They need to learn to be advocates for themselves and the

supports they may require. They need to learn to take responsibility and not rely on an

EA to remind them of what they need to know or what they need to do.

They need to be taught skills and strategies to help them cope with their disability, as well how to use tools/technology to support them (calculators, day planners, software that supports reading/writing etc.).

They need to develop positive self-esteem and self-worth and we can support this by making them feel like a meaningful part of our classes and providing them with opportunities for success.

Page 46: Strategies to Support Diverse Needs in the Classroom Presented by: Tracy Huckell, January 2010

The End!!

• Additional Resources• Questions?