This is a post I’ve been meaning
to write for ages – about everything I’ve learnt since joining my new school
last autumn. I’ve learnt so much and
there’s so much that I’m still learning that there’s going to be more than
enough for one blog.
One of the best things about the
career-pause I took and the unexpected decision I made to take my career in a
different direction – into the world of special education – has been the
opportunity to learn and broaden my horizons.
As a teacher, I’ve always been a learner too, but the intensity of my
learning in this new role has been refreshing and exciting. Pretty much from day one, it was surprising
and shocking to me that I apparently knew so little about autism, Asperger’s,
other conditions and what it takes to teach children with SEN well. Suddenly, there were terms like
mind-blindness, the triad of impairments, joint attention, PDA and shoebox task
that it seemed ought to have some meaning to me but didn’t.
Like any mainstream teacher,
every class I’ve ever taught has included children with special educational
needs – often a diagnosis of autism or Asperger’s, sometimes a sense on our
part that he or she could well be ‘on the spectrum’. ‘We’re all teachers of SEN’ is a common
mantra of mainstream teachers everywhere, and it’s true. It’s only now though, after fifteen years of
teaching, that I realise how inadequately I have fulfilled that role and how
poor my training has been. There comes a
point in most of my days when I think of a child I have known in mainstream
teaching and wish I knew then what I know now.
When I think of two particular
young people – one boy, one girl – it saddens me that what characterised them
most was frustration, anxiety and anger.
More often than not, they were on edge and frequently their anxiety
would grow and they would scream, shout, cry, run, pinch, scratch, hit, kick
and throw things. I dread now to think
about the state of their emotional well-being.
We talked about the five-point scale and de-escalating anxiety but we
didn’t really have the strategies or the resources to achieve it and too often, our responses were reactive and reflected our own frustration (and, for some
people, annoyance) rather than being proactive and taking proper account of the
antecedents.
The children I teach now get
frustrated, anxious and angry too. They
also get excited and it’s sometimes hard to know the difference! First and foremost, it’s okay for them to
feel that way. Sometimes, despite our
best efforts, we don’t pre-empt whatever it was that made them worried,
sometimes things happen beyond our control and sometimes those things happen
before they even arrived at school. Sometimes,
we have no option but to pick up the pieces, even if it takes hours, and
there’s nothing to be gained from getting frustrated or annoyed ourselves;
indeed, it can make matters worse. All
good teachers have patience but teaching children with special needs takes the
meaning of patience to a whole new level!
It can mean hours of sitting with a child, doing and saying nothing –
just being there for her and usually feeling a little sad too. It tests your own emotions. It also takes a special sort of wisdom. When do you intervene? When do you say something? What do you say? Time it wrong and the child you thought was
coming down from that angry, anxious high goes straight back up to it. I’ve learnt this the hard way: thinking a
young man was calm enough to discuss a problem only to find myself pinned
against a wall and strangled to the point I couldn’t breathe.
‘Calm down!’ If I had a pound
for every time I’ve heard a teacher, teaching assistant or headteacher say that
to a child … (If I had a pound for every
time I’ve said it myself …) Now I
realise what nonsense it is to simply ask that of someone over whom a thick red
mist has descended. Even if he could
hear me (and he probably can’t), he has no idea what I mean or what to do. Now I say nothing. If he needs to go outside and run around,
that’s fine. If he needs to kick a
football against a wall, that’s fine. If
he needs to sit in a quiet place on his own, that’s fine. If he needs to draw and colour, that’s
fine. I have a weighted blanket I can
offer him, and a squidgy ball he can hold in his hands, and a peanut ball he
can sit on or lie under, and thick putty with marbles in for him to manipulate,
and a body-sock he can wrap around himself, and much more besides. What a difference it would have made to that boy
and girl in my mainstream school if I and my colleagues had had that
understanding and had been able to give them whatever it was they needed to
feel better. They both had one-to-one
support so I can’t think of a reason why, when they needed it, they couldn’t
have been supported to run around outside, kick a ball, draw and colour or
simply find somewhere to be still and quiet.
They didn’t have access to the sensory objects I’ve described, but they
ought to have and buying them would be a sensible, worthwhile and – frankly –
necessary investment by any school.
That’s why these children don’t
belong in mainstream schools, I’ve been told – special schools can provide for
them better and they would do so much better there. I’m not sure I agree. They have the right to inclusion alongside
their peers and often, they can benefit from the rich curriculum and the social
opportunities mainstream schools offer that special schools can’t. The issue isn’t always theirs; it’s the
school’s and how much it is prepared to accept them for who they are, celebrate
their personalities and adapt to the children rather than expect the children
to adapt to the school.
Training is an essential
investment schools ought to make. If we
accept the notion of inclusion, it should be seen as the right of SEN children
to have properly trained staff. If we
expect school staff to support SEN children and confront the challenges that
come with that role, it should be seen as their right to be properly
trained. I have the utmost respect and
admiration for teaching assistants, but considering the responsibility they
often have for some of the most challenging children in our classrooms, their
training is dreadfully inadequate. So,
as I have discovered now, is the training of many teachers, and I doubt my
experience is any worse than most. An
hour’s INSET here and there throughout a school year will never suffice, not
even if it is delivered by the most dedicated and experienced of SENDCOs, and –
like telling an enraged autistic child to calm down – endlessly demanding that
teachers differentiate is pointless if they don’t really understand the nature
of the children they are teaching.
The biggest issue for SEN
children in some mainstream schools is the culture of those schools. I don’t doubt that there are excellent
schools with well-trained headteachers and Governors who are properly committed
to inclusion and to providing for the needs of their SEN children. I know there are also headteachers whose
understanding is woeful and who lead a culture where SEN children are somehow
expected to adapt to everyone else in order to fit in because it’s apparently
too hard for the school to adapt to them.
For the best training, everyone
working with SEN children should spend a decent amount of time in a school like
mine, and we should start with the headteachers.
Great post. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThis is bloody amazing coming from a teacher! I also learnt a lot myself in just one blog post on how to work with my 5 yr old son, thank you x
ReplyDeleteExcellent blog, thanks for sharing. As the parent of a child with SEN which has been present since a traumatic premature birth, we are only now, with him being 14, getting an EHCP. Sadly the damage is done. I totally agree with your thoughts around inclusion and specialist schools but it’s too late for my son. That’s the option we are now fighting for to get him at least a few happy and productive years of education. I would also add that as well as giving all teachers more training, LAs and schools also need to do a lot more to educate parents who judge when they know nothing other than gossip, hearsay and inaccurate “facts”. My son has been labelled as naughty, disruptive and out of control for years by other parents - they are naive and couldn’t be more wrong.
ReplyDelete