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Schools and Education General Discussion
Reply to "Why more focus on ELL than special education?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Another dyslexia mom here- I am part of Decoding Dyslexia and we have managed to get a lot of universal screening legislation passed. Our local dyslexia advocacy group has some teachers but even they say their colleagues are very close-minded about the science of reading. I don't know of one single teacher who is close minded against the science of reading. Not one. Perhaps where you are though you are seeing teachers who cannot support this one tiny piece of reading science because their districts don't support it? In any case, the gen ed teacher won't ever be the one to deliver OG instruction. That's a special education need and you need to work with the sped office. GL. [/quote] Actually it is really critical that all teachers in elementary schools are familiar with dyslexia (prevalence, signs, age it can be identified) so they can refer students for evaluation. And regular teachers can absolutely teach reading in a universally effective way with systematic phonics as in the Wilson Fundations curriculum which works for all learners. Dyslexic kids will definitely need additional support through special education resources. But with knowledge teachers can better support/ accommodate their dyslexic kids as they catch up.[/quote] I can agree with some of what you are saying. Yes, as a gen ed teacher who really cares about my work, I do want to support all my students. Currently I am in a school with ZERO reading curriculum. Fortunately, I have a lot of reading training and have put in a lot of hours over the past number of years essentially creating my own curriculum. I do spend a LOT of time on phonics, balanced with heavy reading comprehension, fluency and more. That is what the Fountas and Pinnell tests require. I rarely end up with a kid who doesn't have the phonics piece of it down pat. And by rarely, I can think of 3-4 kids over the past 10 years. Two were kids who came in with no English whatsoever and were overwhelmed, one had 50 absences in a year and another had some kind of learning disability. Yes, I provided appropriate RTI. Yes, I documented everything. And yes, I referred the child for a sped evaluation based on him not responding to RTI over 18 weeks of additional support. But I do reject this idea that teachers in general are not using research and science based methods in their teaching. Maybe a handful of teachers aren't, but all the ones I know are. And hey, if you can convince districts to purchase curriculum, more power to you. The teachers in my district beg every year, but really it comes down to money. I have no idea where they are spending it, but it isn't on curriculum. They did buy it for one subject area, but it was the cheapest one they could find. Fundations, if I recall, is expensive. Perhaps a wealthier district will buy it for their students?[/quote]
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