Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Special education is often just good teaching practices. Many children with disabilities can have their IEPs implemented with universal design, a method in which all students in the class benefits from what is legally required on another child’s IEP. For example, one child may need class notes from the teacher as an accommodation. The teacher then provides the entire class copies of notes because all students can benefit from the notes.
Teaching is not a zero sum game - this child gets more so this child gets less.
The thing that is hard to comprehend if you’re not dealing with it is the shear number of these accommodations that you just want teachers to implement. For example, you give the notes accommodation as one that is easy to implement. I have 3 different preps that I need to provide notes for. Fine. It takes time but I upload each of the 3 slides show daily. But last week I received an email from a parent that the slides aren’t enough. Her child needs the notes that go along with the slides or they’re not helpful. I’m not sure what she wants- a full recording of the class? Annotated slides? Whatever it is, it will be x3. And that’s one of 20 different accommodations.
Anonymous wrote:Special education is often just good teaching practices. Many children with disabilities can have their IEPs implemented with universal design, a method in which all students in the class benefits from what is legally required on another child’s IEP. For example, one child may need class notes from the teacher as an accommodation. The teacher then provides the entire class copies of notes because all students can benefit from the notes.
Teaching is not a zero sum game - this child gets more so this child gets less.
Anonymous wrote:Special education is often just good teaching practices. Many children with disabilities can have their IEPs implemented with universal design, a method in which all students in the class benefits from what is legally required on another child’s IEP. For example, one child may need class notes from the teacher as an accommodation. The teacher then provides the entire class copies of notes because all students can benefit from the notes.
Teaching is not a zero sum game - this child gets more so this child gets less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Special education is often just good teaching practices. Many children with disabilities can have their IEPs implemented with universal design, a method in which all students in the class benefits from what is legally required on another child’s IEP. For example, one child may need class notes from the teacher as an accommodation. The teacher then provides the entire class copies of notes because all students can benefit from the notes.
Teaching is not a zero sum game - this child gets more so this child gets less.
+1000
And effective reading instruction helps everyone and is essential for kids with dyslexia (most common learning disability).
Anonymous wrote:Special education is often just good teaching practices. Many children with disabilities can have their IEPs implemented with universal design, a method in which all students in the class benefits from what is legally required on another child’s IEP. For example, one child may need class notes from the teacher as an accommodation. The teacher then provides the entire class copies of notes because all students can benefit from the notes.
Teaching is not a zero sum game - this child gets more so this child gets less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to the staff directory at my MCPS high school it looks like we have 61 SPED staff and 93 regular teachers. I'm not sure how much more can/should be done! More than half the teaching staff is SPED.
Right there. You can't count. Hence the need for better teaching. There is no school that has 61 sped teachers to 92 regular teachers unless a special education program is also housed there. Name your school or correct your post.
PP said special Ed staff. PP did not say teachers.
PP said teaching staff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to the staff directory at my MCPS high school it looks like we have 61 SPED staff and 93 regular teachers. I'm not sure how much more can/should be done! More than half the teaching staff is SPED.
Right there. You can't count. Hence the need for better teaching. There is no school that has 61 sped teachers to 92 regular teachers unless a special education program is also housed there. Name your school or correct your post.
PP said special Ed staff. PP did not say teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to the staff directory at my MCPS high school it looks like we have 61 SPED staff and 93 regular teachers. I'm not sure how much more can/should be done! More than half the teaching staff is SPED.
Right there. You can't count. Hence the need for better teaching. There is no school that has 61 sped teachers to 92 regular teachers unless a special education program is also housed there. Name your school or correct your post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to the staff directory at my MCPS high school it looks like we have 61 SPED staff and 93 regular teachers. I'm not sure how much more can/should be done! More than half the teaching staff is SPED.
More and more children are diagnosed with these issues daily. At some point in the not too distant future I expect everyone will have a 504/IEP given our current trajectory.
This is what I don’t understand. Half the kids at my school seem to have an IEP or 504 or a flash pass or something.
Don’t get me started on the flash passes. They are completely misused.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was there an announcement for the new Acting Associate Superintendent? This is the second Acting Associate Superintendent in two years and Ty get new Acting Superintendent was the Resolution and Compliance Director hired by MCPS last October. So who is now the Director for Resolution and Compliance?
And what about all the vacancies for Special Education Teachers and Para Educators at the school level? Did MCPS just give up on finding employees for those positions as well?
I don't believe MCPS has given up on finding special education teachers or paras. The problem is that people just don't want the jobs. Special Ed jobs are hard-besides the mounds of paperwork and meetings to attend, add to that being verbally and physically assaulted in some cases, would you want that job? I know special educators in the county that literally had to go on disability because of physical incidents in their classrooms. On top of all of that, they aren't paid enough at all.
As for paras, similar issue, except the money is REALLY bad and they are treated as less than professionals in a lot of schools. Take a look at the job listings on the MCPS website-the majority of para jobs open are the ones with no benefits. I think most of the para jobs start at $18-19 an hour. There are lot easier jobs out there for that kind of money and no benefits.
Just a little food for thought...
And meanwhile no one will talk about the elephant in the room …what he hell is going on that our children need so much special education anyway? Something is really really wrong . And it’s not just “better diagnosing “. There is an epidemic afoot not to mention the sometimes ridiculous expectations of parents that will bankrupt the country at some point. It’s just not sustainable to do education this way
Agree. Maybe we aren't teaching them properly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:According to the staff directory at my MCPS high school it looks like we have 61 SPED staff and 93 regular teachers. I'm not sure how much more can/should be done! More than half the teaching staff is SPED.
More and more children are diagnosed with these issues daily. At some point in the not too distant future I expect everyone will have a 504/IEP given our current trajectory.
Anonymous wrote:According to the staff directory at my MCPS high school it looks like we have 61 SPED staff and 93 regular teachers. I'm not sure how much more can/should be done! More than half the teaching staff is SPED.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was there an announcement for the new Acting Associate Superintendent? This is the second Acting Associate Superintendent in two years and Ty get new Acting Superintendent was the Resolution and Compliance Director hired by MCPS last October. So who is now the Director for Resolution and Compliance?
And what about all the vacancies for Special Education Teachers and Para Educators at the school level? Did MCPS just give up on finding employees for those positions as well?
I don't believe MCPS has given up on finding special education teachers or paras. The problem is that people just don't want the jobs. Special Ed jobs are hard-besides the mounds of paperwork and meetings to attend, add to that being verbally and physically assaulted in some cases, would you want that job? I know special educators in the county that literally had to go on disability because of physical incidents in their classrooms. On top of all of that, they aren't paid enough at all.
As for paras, similar issue, except the money is REALLY bad and they are treated as less than professionals in a lot of schools. Take a look at the job listings on the MCPS website-the majority of para jobs open are the ones with no benefits. I think most of the para jobs start at $18-19 an hour. There are lot easier jobs out there for that kind of money and no benefits.
Just a little food for thought...
And meanwhile no one will talk about the elephant in the room …what he hell is going on that our children need so much special education anyway? Something is really really wrong . And it’s not just “better diagnosing “. There is an epidemic afoot not to mention the sometimes ridiculous expectations of parents that will bankrupt the country at some point. It’s just not sustainable to do education this way