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Your role as teacher is to create an environment
in which all students can participate to the best of their
abilities. One of your greatest challenges is to provide a
positive learning environment for the students in your classroom.
Because each student has his or her own unique set of physical
and intellectual abilities, perceptions, and needs, the learning
styles of your students may vary widely.
Once you determine the special needs of
your students, you can identify the areas of the curriculum
that may present barriers to them. In order to eliminate those
barriers, you may need to modify your teaching strategies.
The following information will help you identify students
with special needs. It also offers strategies for you to tailor
your lessons and presentations so that all students have a
more equal opportunity to experience success.
Gifted
Second Language Learners
Students With Behavioral Disorders
Students With Learning Disabilities
Students With Physical Impairments
Students With Visual Impairments
Students With Hearing Impairments
Students With Speech Impairments
Gifted
Overview
Although no formal definition exists,
gifted students can be described as having above average ability,
task commitment, and creativity. They rank in the top 5 percent
of their classes. They are usually capable of divergent thinking.
Students in your class who consistently finish work more quickly
than others and who have above average ability, task commitment,
and creativity may be considered gifted.
Teaching Strategies
- Emphasize concepts, theories, relationships, ideas, and
generalizations.
- Let students express themselves in a variety of ways,
including drawing, creative writing, or acting.
- Make arrangements for gifted students to work on independent
projects.
- Make arrangements for gifted students to take selected
subjects early.
- Encourage gifted students to take on a wide variety of
enrichment and independent practice activities that will
put them in contact with people in the "real world"
and allow them to observe the daily practices that lead
to success.
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Second Language Learners
Overview
Some students speak English as a second
language, or not at all. The customs and behavior of people
in the majority culture may be confusing for some of these
students. Cultural values may inhibit some of these students
from full participation in the classroom.
Teaching Strategies
- Remember that students' ability to speak English does
not reflect their academic ability.
- Try to incorporate students' cultural experiences into
your instruction. The help of a bilingual aide may be effective.
- Include information about different cultures in your curriculum
to help build students' self-image.
- Avoid cultural stereotypes.
- Encourage students to share their cultures in the classroom.
- If your class includes any second language learners, provide
outlines of lecture notes or planned classroom discussion
topics in advance to give second language learners the opportunity
to review materials later at a slower pace or to look up
unfamiliar vocabulary.
- When discussing numbers, speak slowly and clearly and
write the numbers under discussion on the board along with
the signs indicating the operations being performed.
- In regular classroom activities, allow sufficient time
for second language learners to answer verbal questions.
- Pair second language learners with native speakers for
verbal exercises when appropriate.
- Give extra attention to second language learners when
discussing telephone skills and interviewing techniques,
as these topics can be intimidating for students who feel
uncertain about using English.
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Students With Behavioral Disorders
Overview
Students with behavior disorders deviate
from standards or expectations of behavior and impair the
functioning of others and themselves. These children may also
be gifted or have a learning disability.
Teaching Strategies
- Work for long-term improvement; do not expect immediate
success.
- Talk with students about their strengths and weaknesses,
and clearly outline objectives.
- Structure schedules, rules, room arrangement, and safety
for a conducive learning environment.
- Experiment to determine the best learning modality for
each student, and structure activities accordingly.
- Model appropriate behavior for students and reinforce
proper behavior.
- Use enrichment materials that capitalize on their interests.
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Students with Learning Disabilities
Overview
All students with learning disabilities
have problems in one or more areas, such as academic learning,
language, perception, social-emotional adjustment, memory,
or ability to pay attention. In general, students with learning
disabilities require more support and structure and benefit
from a classroom that incorporates a wide variety of learning
modalities (visual, auditory, tactile, and kinesthetic).
Teaching Strategies
- Clearly define rules, assignments, and duties.
- Distribute outlines of material presented in class.
- Allow for pair interaction during class time; utilize
peer helpers.
- Allow extra time to complete tests and assignments.
- Make chapter audio tapes so students who find the written
text difficult to use can listen and read simultaneously.
- Advise students who have problems with verbal processing
to read materials before class discussion.
- Allow students with learning disabilities to read notes
taken in class by other students to ensure that they are
not missing any valuable information.
- Clearly specify the scope of assignments and review the
work of students with learning disabilities on a regular
basis throughout the course of projects.
- Break up complex tasks into self-contained steps and provide
additional assistance as needed.
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Students With Physical Impairments
Overview
Students with physical impairments
fall into two categories those with orthopedic impairments
(use of one or more limbs severely restricted) and those with
other health impairments.
Teaching Strategies
- With the student, determine when you should offer aid.
- Help other students and adults understand and accept physically
disabled students.
- Learn about special devices or procedures and whether
special safety precautions are needed.
- Allow students to participate in all activities, including
field trips, special events, and projects.
- To ensure their full participation in the class, make
sure they have full access to the classroom; be aware of
common items that can be barriers, such as a narrow walkway
or a heavy door.
- Keep in mind that some students in wheelchairs have full
use of their hands and others do not.
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Students With Visual Impairments
Overview
Students with visual impairments have
partial or total loss of sight. Individuals with visual impairments
are not significantly different from their sighted peers in
ability range or personality. However, blindness may affect
cognitive, motor, and social development. Often, listening
skills are enhanced when visual impairment is present.
Teaching Strategies
- To help students with visual impairments cope with the
volume of printed material in class, use a combination of
resources, such as readers, books in Braille, and recorded
books and class lectures.
- Modify assignments as needed to help students become independent.
- Teach classmates how to serve as guides for students with
visual impairments.
- Encourage students with visual impairments to use their
sense of touch; provide tactile models whenever possible.
- Verbally describe people and events as they occur in the
classroom for the students with visual impairments.
- Avoid standing with your back to the window or light source.
- Some students benefit from working with a peer "visual
translator" who is able to verbally describe visual
images, such as the photos in the textbook to the student.
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Students With Hearing Impairments
Overview
Students with hearing impairments
have partial or total loss of hearing. They are not significantly
different from their peers in ability range or personality.
However, the chronic condition of deafness may affect cognitive,
motor, social, and speech development. Many students with
hearing impairments, ranging from complete loss to moderate
loss, communicate mainly by sign language.
Teaching Strategies
- Provide favorable seating arrangements for hearing-impaired
students so they can see speakers and read their lips (or
interpreters can assist); avoid visual distractions.
- To encourage their maximum participation, look at students
with hearing impairments when you speak; this allows students
the option of viewing you and your lip movements directly.
- Limit unnecessary noise in the classroom, as students
who wear hearing aids can be easily distracted by background
noise. Because each hearing aid has its own limited range
of use, you will need to learn how close to stand so the
student can hear you. Keep in mind that comments made in
the back of the room may be inaudible.
- Write out all instructions on paper or on the board; overhead
projectors enable you to maintain eye contact while writing.
- Pair students with hearing impairments with hearing partners;
this will benefit not only the students with hearing impairments,
but also the hearing students who will gain knowledge about
how students with hearing impairments compensate for their
challenge.
- If class materials involve technical terminology, supply
a list of these words in advance to students with hearing
impairments and their interpreters. Unfamiliar words can
be difficult to lip-read or sign without prior exposure.
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Students With Speech Impairments
Overview
Students with speech impairments may
have impediments ranging from problems with articulation or
voice strength to being unable to speak. These impairments
can include stuttering, chronic hoarseness, or difficulty
in expressing an appropriate word or phrase. Typically, such
students refrain as much as possible from class participation.
Teaching Strategies
- When speaking with a student with a speech impairment,
use normal communication patterns and refrain from completing
words or phrases for the student.
- Some students use electronic speaking machines or are
adept at using body language to communicate.
- Allow students with speech impairments or difficulty with
oral expression the opportunity to submit written questions
about material that they find challenging.
- Students with speech impairments often do not feel comfortable
participating in exercises devoted to interpersonal skills
because the physical difficulties they experience can make
the exercises uncomfortable for them. Even so, these students
can benefit from watching others and participating at a
level they select as comfortable.
- Students with speech impairments benefit from an opportunity
to make a contribution to the class in ways other than in-class
discussion. For example, students might prepare a bulletin
board display or a report on a topic that could be distributed
to all students.
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