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Co-Teaching The Power of Two... The Reality…Following the Philosophy
26

Inclusion

May 27, 2015

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Education

bfuhrer

This is a presentation that was given at the Ohio Middle School Association conference.
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Page 1: Inclusion

Co-TeachingThe Power of Two...

The Reality…Following the Philosophy

Page 2: Inclusion

PRESENTERS

• Robin Frederick: 7th grade intervention specialist/DH

• Loretta Fansler: 7th grade intervention specialist/LD

• Brad Fuhrer: 7th grade social studies & all around nice guy

Page 3: Inclusion

Tiffin, Ohio

Tiffin

“The Education Community”

Page 4: Inclusion

Tiffin Middle School• 6th,7th & 8th grades• 2 teams, each grade• Total population- 734• Special needs

students- 115• Programs: LD, DH,

& SBH• Cross-categorical:

TBI, HI, OHI, tourettes, autism, etc,...

Page 5: Inclusion

History of Co-teaching at TMS• 1993- Reorganized to a Middle School• 1993- Inclusion of DH students in Ohio

History & Health (LD students mainstreamed)

• 1994- Inclusion of LD students in Civics• 1996-Block scheduling which allowed

common planning time• 1996- Inclusion of LD students in Math• 1998- Inclusion of DH students in Science• 2002- Lack of funds, schedule flexibility...

Page 6: Inclusion

History Continued...

• 2003- no team planning• 2004- still no team planning, damn it!• 2005- inclusion in:

– social studies– science– math

“Our fearless leader”

Page 7: Inclusion

I can’t takeit anymore!

We love our jobs!

Co-Teaching Before After

Page 8: Inclusion

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QuickTime™ and aPhoto - JPEG decompressor

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Before AfterCo-Teaching

Page 9: Inclusion

InclusionTraditional & Co-Teaching

• LD mainstreamed,

serviced in Resource

room

• No modified tests &

worksheets

• More discipline problems

• More classroom

management problems

• Lower success rate

• Students serviced in the

classroom

• Modified tests &

worksheets

• Fewer discipline problems

• Fewer classroom

management problems

• Higher success rates for all

students

Page 10: Inclusion

Inclusion Philosophy Vs. Reality

• All students should have

the opportunity to learn

in the mainstream with

specialized services

provided

• Inclusion: meeting needs

of all students in the

classroom with in class

support

• Can they? Not without a lot

of work! Modify, adapt,

modify, adapt and then do it

some more!

• Yes, two heads are better

than one!

Page 11: Inclusion

Inclusion Philosophy Vs. Reality

• Collaboration: teachers, students, parents, administrators

• Belief that students with disabilities should be integrated into the mainstream whether or not they can meet traditional curricular standards

• Ha! Ha!

• Not all staff members

will support inclusion or

team teaching

Page 12: Inclusion

Inclusion Philosophy Vs. Reality

• Teacher planning, collaboration, and training is necessary for success

• Just do it!

Page 13: Inclusion

Volunteers Needed:

• General Education Teachers• Special Education Teachers

Page 14: Inclusion

Qualifications

• Risk taker• Open to suggestions• Open to criticism• Student advocate• Flexible

Page 15: Inclusion

Types of Teaching

• Reverse Inclusion• One teach, One drift• Diversified study time• Classroom consistency• Preparation on demand• Interactive teaching• Humor in the classroom• Break away

Page 16: Inclusion

Strategies & Ideas• Whip around• Fact of the day• Technology (smartboard, powerpoint, phonic

ear)• Folders• Study guides• Adapted/modified tests, worksheets• Community/school projects (friendly

competitions between homerooms)• Incentive programs (TEAM TMS, Blue Crew

Bucks, Stamps, Lunch Bunch, Student of the Month , the Month of Manners, bug roll)

Page 17: Inclusion

More Strategies & Ideas

• Think write• Happy grams• Case managing• Skim & Shift• Books on tape• Class room starters• Question of the week

Page 18: Inclusion

Even More Strategies & Ideas

• Tag Team reading• Word of the Day• Lame Games• Color Overlays• Slantboards

Page 19: Inclusion

Are Two Heads Better Than One?

Let’s Ask the Experts

Page 20: Inclusion

Survey says...

• Do you get more help when there are 2 teachers in the room?

• Do you behave differently when there are 2 teachers in the room?

• Do you ask more questions when there are 2 teachers in the room?

• Do you get better grades in the inclusion classes than the other classes?

Yes No

89% 11%

34% 66%

44% 56%

74% 26%

Page 21: Inclusion

More Survey Results...

• Do you do a better job on your homework in your inclusion classes?

• Do you answer more questions in your inclusion classes?

• Do you pay closer attention to the teacher in your inclusion classes?

• Do you wish all of your classes could be inclusion classes?

Yes No

77% 23%

49% 51%

72% 28%

70% 30%

Page 22: Inclusion

Student Benefits

• Increased homework completion rate• More opportunity for teacher contact throughout

the day• Opportunity to respond increases• More students get assistance• Seeking assistance is commonplace• Helps students build relationships with teachers

Page 23: Inclusion

More Student Benefits

• Learning modes are more easily accommodated• Opportunity for individual, small group or large

group instruction• Daily work habits are reinforced and monitored

(KST)• Social acceptance• Conducive to parent support

Page 24: Inclusion

Teacher Benefits

• Not isolated (no man is an island)• Fun• Brainstorming• Parent conferences are more effective• Share and learn expertise and strategies• More innovation (Ruts-R-Us no more!)• Fewer discipline problems• Incidental collaboration

Page 25: Inclusion

More Teaching Benefits

• Teacher chores are shared• Shared accountability• Change of routine due to teacher absence is kept

to a minimum

Page 26: Inclusion

In conclusion...

Teaching is the profession that makes all other professions possible.

Thank you for attending our presentation.