How to teach students with moderate and severe intellectual disabilities in inclusive and special education settings: Teachers’ perspectives on skills, knowledge and attitudes

2018 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 837-856 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sabine Weiss ◽  
Reinhard Markowetz ◽  
Ewald Kiel

The present study investigated the requirements for teaching students with moderate and severe intellectual disabilities in inclusive and special education settings, emphasising the skills, knowledge and attitudes that teachers need. Drawing on investigative group discussions with teachers and principals, qualitative content analysis was used to categorise these skills, knowledge and attitudes. Key requirements in teaching this student population include skills to implement individualised and differentiated teaching, as well as creating individually adapted learning materials. Leadership and counselling abilities are also required in order to ensure successful collaboration between different actors by clarifying roles and hierarchies and negotiating work distribution and expectations. The teacher–student relationship should be characterised by an attitude of appreciation, openness and, in particular, a focus on the positive, regardless of the student’s behaviour, requiring a balance between closeness to the student and an appropriate distance. Finally, it is important when teaching this student population to care for one’s own mental and physical health over the longer term. The article concludes by discussing target-oriented strategies and measures for teachers’ work practices and further education to strengthen the requisite skills, knowledge and attitudes, particularly with a view to inclusion.

Author(s):  
Ilga Prudnikova ◽  
Emilija Cernova

In the article, the cooperation topicality is justified as well as teachers’ and parents’ of pupils with moderate and severe intellectual disabilities cooperation role within pedagogic process. The authors of the article define the approach in the base of which there is teachers’ and pupils parents’ cooperation in development of individual education programs. Thanks to which the abilities of the pupils of for pupils with moderate and severe intellectual disabilities are discovered and used as well as the need of these pupils to learn to act themselves is promoted . In the result of the empiric research, it is established that, in the evaluation of all the respondents, the indices over the research have changed with positive dynamics. This certifies that the society influences positively the pupils activities who are involved into the research.


Author(s):  
Lou Brown ◽  
Elise Long ◽  
Alice Udvari-Solner ◽  
Patrick Schwarz ◽  
Pat VanDeventer ◽  
...  

All students with severe intellectual disabilities should attend the schools they would attend if they were not disabled; that is, their home schools. In a home school, each student must have an individualized educational program (IEP) that requires individualized instruction in chronological age-appropriate regular education classrooms; individual instruction on school grounds, but not in regular education classrooms; and individualized instruction in a wide variety of integrated nonschool environments that will actually be used during nonschool days and hours. The resources necessary to develop, maintain, and enhance an array of social relationships with nondisabled peers and others over long periods of time and individually appropriate therapy services are also considered critical components of each IEP. The focus here is whether students with severe intellectual disabilities should be based in special education classrooms or in chronological age-appropriate regular education classrooms in home schools. Ten challenging issues related to these two options are addressed.


2020 ◽  
pp. 117-142
Author(s):  
Jonas Aspelin ◽  
Daniel Östlund

Research shows that the quality of the teacher-student relationship is crucial to students’ learning and development, especially for students in need of special support. In Scandinavia, the concept of relational competence is increasingly used to define a teacher’s ability to build supportive relationships. In this article, relational competence is discussed in the context of special education. The article investigastes how relational competence is described in the curriculum for special education teacher training. Syllabuses (n = 142) at all Swedish universities that have programs in special education (n = 11) are included in the analysis, with a focus on the learning goals (n = 857). Content analysis provides both an overall and a more in-depth picture. The first study shows that there are relatively few learning goals relevant to relational competence. For example, the key concepts “relation,” “participation,” and “empathy” are very rarely used, and “care” and “trust” are completely absent. The second study shows, among other findings, that relevant content mainly concerns the special educator as a qualified interlocutor vis-a-vis colleagues. Hardly any goals include teacher–student or teacher–parent relationships. On the whole, the results indicate that relational competence is a neglected topic in this discourse, which also has a fairly narrow focus. The implications of this lack are discussed, and suggestions for improvement are added.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (98) ◽  
pp. 115-124
Author(s):  
ANDREI N. VESELOV ◽  
OLGA A. DENISOVA

In the article, the authors consider the strategic changes in the students’ educational process from the perspective of the development of professional integral methodological competencies among teachers in basic school. A special emphasis is placed on the description of the technology for the development of the integral methodological competencies in special education teachers who train children with intellectual disabilities in basic school.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document