This article is an introduction to special education in Irish secondary
schools. The past then years have witnessed a sea change in special
education provision in Ireland. The Department of Education and Science
has issued numerous directives and guidelines in relation to policy,
provision, structure and supports. Since 1998 there have been ten pieces
of legislation passed through the Daily that relate, one way or another
to children and special education needs The National Council for
Special Education (NCSA) has been established along with the Special
Education Support Service (SES). Both these organizations oversee and
coordinate all special education initiatives nationwide. Ireland's
primary schools have pioneered these new directives. Special education
provision at primary level is developing at a rapid pace and great
strides are being made. The next horizon for improvement is secondary
school.
Ireland's secondary schools are driven by an
exam-oriented curriculum. Subject area specialists teach all of the
curricular content. The supports available to children with special
needs are not extensive or as tested as those at primary level. In what
follows we will look at the needs and entitlements of children entering
secondary school who have identified special education needs and those
who are entering and later discovered to have a special education need.
My child has been receiving extra help in primary school. What should I look for in a secondary school?
You
should look for a school with a special education teacher in place on a
full-time basis to support all children with special needs in the
school. It is important to also be sure the school has a commitment to
supporting and educating children with special needs. The school should
have on its staff teachers who have had some training in how to
differentiate their methodology and curriculum for children with special
needs. There should be an accepting attitude on the part of all staff.
Remember, your child is entitled to enter fully into the life of the
school and avail of all it has to offer. How do you find out these
things? Talk to the school principal and ask questions about the topics
listed above. Remember, your child may be eligible for special
consideration at the time of Junior Cert and Leaving Cert but this will
have to be determined about a year before these exams will be taken.
What is s/he entitled to?
A
child who has been receiving special education resources or support in
primary school is eligible for continued support at secondary level so
long as they continue to have a special education need. It is possible
that a primary school child, after receiving several years of support,
could no longer be deemed to have a special education need but this is
the exception not the rule.
Your child will be entitled to the
same general provision he or she received in primary school. Typically
this takes the form of specialist teaching from a Learning Support or
Special Education Resource teacher (both are now often being referred to
simply as Special Education teachers. This support is to be determined
based on need with the number of hours of support being determined by
the Individual Education Plan (IEP) drawn up in the last year of primary
school. In addition to the IEP there should have been a Transition Plan
completed during the last year of primary school The Transition Plan
will devise the structure of transition to secondary school and may
alter the IEP for a short period of time. If this happens there should
be a team meeting in about six months or less to write the secondary
school IEP. In general students in secondary school are eligible for the
same supports as in primary school. This may include a Special Needs
Assistant (SÃO).
How do I go about making sure they get that?
Generally
speaking your child's Individual Education Plan is the map which
documents exactly what services your child will receive, when he or she
will receive them and from whom. The IEP is your best protection against
a child not receiving the services they need. IEP's will eventually
become legally binding documents on all parties and a school must
provide the services outlined in the IEP. An IEP cannot be changed or
implemented without your consent. Remember that upon entering secondary
school a Transition Plan may be in place that slightly alters the
previous IEP. This will have to be reviewed within a short span of time
to be sure the child receives appropriate support services. Don't be
afraid to talk to the school principal because he or she is ultimately
responsible to see to it that children receive the services they are
entitled to receive.
What are my options if we run into difficulties?
Should
problems arise you should first speak to the Year Head and address your
concerns. The Special Needs Organizer (SEO) assigned to the school
should be alerted as well as the appropriate special education
teacher(s). A team meeting, of which you are entitled to be a member,
can be convened within a reasonable time frame and your concerns will be
discussed. If this meeting does not satisfy you or not result in the
child receiving the services you may contact the National Council for
Special Education for further information and support.
It is
important to take things one step at a time. Speak to your child's
special education teacher first and be clear about your concerns. Be
assertive and not aggressive. Remember, generally speaking everyone is
doing the best they can. Do have your child's IEP in front of you when
you are speaking to the teacher or other staff member. Be aware of your
rights to appeal as outlined in the NCSA and SES websites. Don't rush to
judgment, try and work things out amicably before you make threats to
appeal. The next most important port of call will be the Special Needs
Organizer assigned to the school.
Hidden Disabilities
Not
all children who have special education needs come to the attention of
parents or educators in primary school. The human brain is an organ that
tries to meet the demands placed upon it at any given time. As anyone
who has gone to school knows, the demands of the curriculum get greater
and greater each year of schooling. In secondary school the curriculum
subjects become incredibly complex each year. The fact that a student is
being educated by many different teachers each year further complicates
matters. There are students who have had no difficulty suggestive of a
special education need at primary school who suddenly seem to have a lot
of difficulties in secondary school. Unfortunately they are often
perceived as "lazy" or "unmotivated" and sometimes as "difficult"
students.
If these labels stick and no thought or concern
raised about a possible learning difficulty being present the student
can become trapped in a cycle of failure and rejection by teachers. The
result could be early school leaving, behavior difficulties to hide the
learning problem, lowered self-esteem, loss of self-confidence and
trouble at home. It is important to recognize that some students, no
matter how well they performed in primary school, may have a special
education need that doesn't appear until secondary school.
What are the warning signs?
It
is not possible to list the many warning signs of a hidden disability
but generally speaking one should be considered any time a student with a
previously successfully record in primary school begins to exhibit
difficulties in secondary school. There are a variety of causes to
school failure at second level but a hidden disability can often be
reasonably suspected when one or more of the following difficulties
become noticeable:
memory problems
organizational difficulties
refusal to go to school
problems with written language expression
difficulty organizing thoughts into speech
inability to recall facts from yesterday's lesson even if they seemed retained the night before
unusual spelling problems
unusual difficulty with more advanced mathematical problems
pronounced difficulty in foreign language class
behavioral difficulties not present in primary school
nonfood swings or sudden mood changes that last several hours
reluctance to engage with parents about school difficulties
Although
a partial list it is a good guide for parents and teachers to
thoughtfully consider the presence of a hidden learning disability.
I think my child may have a problem. Where do I go from here?
First
speak with your child's teachers. Ask for the facts: what does teacher
think the problem might be? How often is this occurring? When? Is it
serious? Present your own perception to the teacher(s) clearly and
succinctly. If you have done some Internet homework on your own be clear
about it and raise it as a query needing to be resolved. Try and get
some samples from homework you have seen and ask for some samples of the
child's work in class if it is appropriate to do so. Speak to the Year
Head and ask him or her to get some information about your concerns from
all teachers. See if you can spot a pattern that validates your
concern.
If you become more concerned then you have a right to
ask for an assessment. Sometimes the special education teacher, with
your permission, can perform some individually administered tests to
discover if the child is seriously behind in reading or math achievement
age. It is possible to discover if there are significant written
language deficits in some cases. If this assessment leads to more
significant concerns then you should request a psychological assessment.
These can be provided free by the National Educational Psychological
Service (EPS) but be mindful that a lengthy waiting list may be in
place.
The most important thing is to be persistent and to talk
to the right people. Begin with teachers, speak to Year Head, go to
Principal if necessary and don't forget the Special Education Needs
Organizer (SEO). If an assessment is carried out there will be a team
meeting to discuss the results and to begin the process of writing an
IEP.
In the case of a diagnosis, where do we go from here?
If
your child is found to have a special education need an IEP should be
written. This is, as stated previously, a road map to your child's
education plan. It should be reviewed annually but can be reviewed more
frequently if it is decided to do so. The special education team, often
referred to as a multidisciplinary team, will be responsible for writing
the IEP. You are a member of that team. Your child is also entitled to
be a member of the team and it is particularly important for secondary
school students to participate in this stage of planning. This gives
them a sense of ownership and control over their educational life.
Be
sure that the plan covers all the areas of concern that have been
discovered in the assessment process. Plans for children with social and
behavioral difficulties that address only academic issues are useless
and doomed to fail. Special education planning is a thoughtful and
time-consuming process when it is done correctly. Don't feel rushed into
accepting a plan you don't think will work. Take it away and ask if you
can return in a week to revise it with the team. This may not make you
the most popular parent in the school but it is responsible parenting.
Possible Panels:
Autism/Paperers' in Secondary School
There
are large numbers of children with an Autistic Spectrum Disorder that
are having considerable difficulty finding a secondary school to enroll
them. The problem revolves around the lack of supports at second level
and the lack of teacher training in this specialty area. Unfortunately
there is little that can be done if a school refuses to enroll a child
on the autistic spectrum. What is needed is the development of resource
support. By that I mean resource rooms where these children can get
services by a specialist teacher. Availability to the teachers of
advanced training. Availability of print and video resources teachers
can access to learn more about the spectrum. Along with this there
should be a whole-school commitment to inclusion for children on the
spectrum so they are not isolated from same-age peers.
The
education of children on the spectrum is not that difficult once
educators get the knowledge about how to do it and have the proper
attitude towards these children and their families. Of course they
present us with challenges but the good news is that once we get it
reasonably right for them we begin to improve the education of all
children. There are considerable challenges in the future to our
secondary schools in education these children and it is time to get it
right. Those schools which stubbornly refuse to enroll children on the
spectrum are in the stone age of education. There is a clear choice for
secondary schools in relation to these children: be in the forefront of
change and development or be left behind forever. Parents will not
forgive or forget. It's time to get it right once and for all.
ADHD
Attention
Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder affects about 5% of all children and
adults. Unlike other special education conditions, children and
adolescents with ADHD are frequently blamed for having the condition,
perceived as hostile or unmotivated, lazy or cheeky. When ADHD goes
untreated it becomes a serious condition affecting self-esteem,
motivation, behavior, self-confidence and relationships with adults and
peers. ADHD is a high-stakes condition and it needs to be recognized
that students who have it didn't choose to be the way they are.
ADHD
is a condition that is caused by brain chemistry and activity. It is a
exobiological condition. People with ADHD often have difficulty paying
attention and concentrating, especially on things that require sustained
attention and concentration. The can have problems controlling their
emotions and impulses, can rush to finish things or have considerable
difficulty waiting their turn. They often ask questions without thinking
them through and sometimes make unfortunate comments in front of
others.
ADHD is a life-long condition. One never grows out of
it but the symptom picture changes over time. Often the impulsivity and
high level of activity, if they were initially present, disappear in the
teen years. The learning problems associated with ADHD do not go away
easily and it is vitally important for them to be addressed in school.
As in the case of children on the autistic spectrum, once educators and
schools get it correct for children with ADHD they have improved the
educational provision of all children.
Understanding is
critically important. Adolescents with significant ADHD do not chose to
be in trouble with and in conflict with adults. Constant rejection and
criticism, constant punishment, and in severe cases expulsion from
school is not the answer. Corrective teaching is the answer and
appropriate support from specialist teachers is vital.
David J. Carey, Psy.D.
297 Beech wood Court
Still organ
Dublin, Ireland
http://www.davidjcarey.com
Special Education in Ireland's Secondary Schools
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