Inclusion: A Tale of Two Teachers
Valentina White-Rideaux, Ed.S
Supporting teachers and school leaders in leveraging inclusive instructional practices to improve learning outcomes for students with disabilities.| Instructional Coach | Speaker | Author | Researcher
Inclusion: A Tale of Two Teachers
A Tale of Two Teachers
Creating an authentic inclusive learning environment is essential for students with disabilities to make progress and meet grade level expectations in the general education classroom. Inclusion classrooms have two professional educators with diverse skills, knowledge, and expertise to serve the learning needs of diverse students in the inclusion classroom. Students benefit significantly from both teachers' commitment to providing them with equitable educational experiences. How can general education teachers use inclusive teaching practices in their learning environment to support students with diverse learning needs? How can special education teachers use IEP goals to foster access to and progress in the general education curriculum? When should they integrate special instruction into the general education classroom setting to meet the needs of diverse learners? Let's get into it.
No Child Left Behind (NCLB, 2001) and the reauthorization of IDEA (2004)
I will not bore you with the details but the passage of these laws required students with disabilities to be included in systems of accountability in K-12 education. Students must now take the same standards-based assessments as students without disabilities. Equitable access to the general education curriculum for students with disabilities is becoming the norm due to this legislation. Our students with disabilities are finally becoming a priority and it has been a game changer. Teachers are starting to be held accountable for their student’s progress or lack thereof more than before.
Equality,Equity, and Inclusion
Equality means all students have the same or equal opportunities to learn content standards and have meaningful participation in general education settings. When students with disabilities are placed in the general education classroom setting with their peers, that is equality because they have access to the same learning material, teacher, assessments, activities etc. There are many general education teachers who feel equality is sufficient. They will accept students with disabilities into their classroom but usually won't play a significant role in their education.
Providing equity is when all students have the support and resources they need to benefit from equal opportunities to learn and participate in all aspects of school. Inclusive educators keep equity and access at the forefront of everything they do, always seeking new ways to improve teaching and learning for all students.?
Effective inclusion educators reflect on mitigating barriers to access and progress in the general education classroom and school campus at large. Special education researchers believe an equity framework such as inclusive teaching partnerships is the key to achieving an equitable education for students with diverse learning needs while also closing the achievement gap.
The solution: Inclusive Teaching and Learning Instructional Strategies
In an inclusive learning environment students are learning with their peers and feel a sense of belonging derived from positive social interactions from those around them.? Learning opportunities and outcomes are the same for students with disabilities and those without.?
Inclusive teaching is about what teachers do to make the learning environment conducive to social, academic, and personal growth by creating conditions that make all students feel like they belong. When teachers are intentional about fostering trust, relevance, empowerment and community within the classroom environment, learning at the highest level is possible. It is important for there to be parity and equality between the two teachers in an inclusion classroom. Normalizing that the inclusion classroom belongs to both teachers as well as the students is a great first step to building an authentic inclusive classroom. Teachers who need complete ownership of the classroom setting and are unwilling to share, please be honest about it. For inclusion to work, both teachers need to be “all in” and there is no getting around that.
Inclusion requires you to be reflective in your practice because it does involve adapting to changes that may be uncomfortable to you at first.? The results of your teaching efforts will ensure access, remove barriers, and support all students in making adequate progress in the general education curriculum. You must consider the full range of diversity in your student population such as language, culture, race, gender and the like. Personal biases (we all have them) toward student behavior, engagement, communication styles, work ethic and organization must be recognized, acknowledged and dealt with. You may take the Staffordshire Evaluation of Teaching Styles by clicking here.?
The Tale of Two Teachers
General education teachers and special education teachers both play a critical role in creating an inclusive learning environment for students. Implementing inclusive practices with fidelity would be impossible without the contribution of both teachers and the support of school leaders. Yes, both teachers are different and are responsible for different aspects of student learning experiences and while they can be competent separately, they are dynamic together.
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We must reimagine relationships between special education teachers and general education teachers. They are both committed professional educators seeking to improve teaching and learning for all students. One teacher is not better, more competent, superior, or inferior to the other. Closing the achievement gap cannot happen through the efforts of one teacher. We need an army of educators, family members, school leaders, community members, and other school stakeholders to support inclusive practices. We begin with a strong professional partnership between general education teachers and the special education teachers that is grounded in interdependence on each other’s strengths. Inclusion teachers must understand that they need each other and their contributions are of equal importance; only then can they prepare all students for meaningful participation in school and in life.?
The General Education Teacher
Special Education Teachers
Implementing Inclusive Practices
Many general education teachers state that inclusion can be disruptive when more than one teacher is in the classroom. For sure, if there is no collaboration or coplanning, it won’t be as effective as it could be especially if the teachers have just started working together. The lesson will not teach itself, my teacher-friends and you must bring your A-game. Teachers can collaborate and plan to embed instruction that addresses individualized goals with instructional content.
This is accomplished by first focusing on the content or standard being taught then includes instruction that is tailored to specific IEP goals. The general education teacher and the special education teacher will use their expertise to balance academic progress with student support needs within the pace of classroom instruction. Flexible instructional delivery is the shared responsibility of everyone in the inclusive classroom including paraeducators and related personnel.
When coming together for lesson planning...
General Education teacher must: Provide the learning standard, lesson objectives, Assessments, Activities (using UDL and DI)
Special Education teacher must: Provide student learning profiles that contain the relevant IEP goals for each student, SDI, learning strategies, intervention plans, accommodations and modifications, Specialized Aids and Services (SAS).
Implementing Embedded Instruction
Students who are a part of an inclusive school culture have a sense of belonging and feel welcomed in the classroom setting.? The curriculum is adapted as appropriate to meet their individual needs and there is connection to family and community. The teachers are culturally responsive and they value the unique strengths of students and understand how learner variability influences the learning process. Teachers practice “presumed competence” by not making assumptions about what a student with a disability is capable of learning and accomplishing.
Just so we are clear, both the special education teacher as well as the general education teacher must commit to an inclusive partnership where they learn to become interdependent on each other’s skill, knowledge and expertise. The general education teacher is the architect of core instruction using elements of both UDL and DI to design learning experiences for all students. The special education teacher uses SDI, intensive interventions, learning strategies, resources, and practices to provide students with instruction beyond what is provided to by the general education teacher to give students with disabilities opportunities for meaningful participation and progress in the general education classroom.
Inclusion can’t exist without both teachers working in concert with each other to improve teaching and learning. Placing students with disabilities in a classroom does not equal inclusion. Special education teachers who are not doing their part as stated above can’t say they practice inclusion. A fully inclusive classroom involves a 50% contribution from the general education teacher and a 50% contribution from the special education teacher. It really is like a marriage in that it takes commitment, compromise, trust, and an open mind. Inclusion requires a lot especially in the beginning but if you build a strong inclusive learning environment grounded in acceptance and celebration of each others differences; your students will thrive academically, socially, and behaviorally.
It only takes two badasses who aren’t ego-tripping and can see the big picture. They will change the lives of children who need a champion to advocate for them and their right for an equitable education. The other teachers will continue to do the same things they’ve always done and things will stay exactly the same. If you are up for the challenge and want to do special education the right way with achievement for students with disabilities shooting through the roof, sign up for my professional learning community, "The Guru Collective," where you will learn everything they didn't teach you in college about special education through a monthly subscription of lessons, strategies, resources, mini lessons, templates, cheatsheet, teaching practices, group coaching and most importantly a community of like minded professionals to exchange ideas and build community. For more information click here
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1 年Great article! I appreciate the in-depth breakdown of how SpEd teachers and general education teachers need to work together to determine how to support diverse groups of learners in meeting the same achievements.