Thursday, October 25, 2007
Classroom Reflection
The thing that bothers me the most is the level of motivation a great deal of my students possess. I'm an adaptive physical education teacher and when working with special education students I've come to realize that a teacher can do more harm than good with these students if they continue to allow inappropriate behavior because of a students disability. I teach all grade levels throughout the week so I've had the opportunity to watch students grow and progress throughout the educational system. What I see in many cases is that teachers are allowing special needs students more slack than general education students when it comes to behavior and participation. A great deal of my students think it's okay to quit when they find things to difficult and then feel it's okay to just sit there and not participate. What kind of lessons are we teaching by allowing this kind of behavior in school. Most of my students enter a choice program at 18 to work towards finding a job. If they are pron to quit every time they don't feel like doing something or when someone tells them to do it better are we helping them become productive members of society or are we setting them up for failure. In a national survey of American prisons 63% of inmates surveyed said they had received special education services at one time or another. This is really scary considering that the average population of special education students in a school district in Washington is around 12%. We as teachers need to hold all students accountable for their actions and promote that never quit attitude in our students. An individual who is ready to quit when things get tough is an individual who is likely to have a hard time once their out of school.
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2 comments:
Hi Troy, At our school some of the sped students are allowed to get away with behaviors that another student would be suspended for. I wonder what will happen to these kids when out in the real world and they hit someone, etc. They will end up in jail. I have a very high needs student and I try hard to make her do the things everyone else in class is doing. She will need those skills when she is out of school. So hopefully she is getting the training she will need.
It is so true that we need to hold our students accountable. I use alot of rubrics with my students. This works well because they help me write the expectations for each level and then they understand what is expected of them. It is exciting to see them reflecting about where they are and where they need to be to be at grade level.
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