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Successful Inclusion through Effective Collaborative Teaching

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A qualitative and quantitative study analyzing teacher responses to survey questions. ... Target students learning styles and teach to them ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Successful Inclusion through Effective Collaborative Teaching


1
Successful Inclusion through Effective
Collaborative Teaching
  • By
  • Debbie Archer

2

The Issue
  • Under IDEA, FAPE for all students in the LRE.
  • Inclusion- Instruction of all students (G.E.
    S.E) in the G.E. classroom.
  • Two teachers in the classroom-(G.E S.E)
  • Co-teacher frustrations in how to teach, plan,
    and manage classroom duties and students.
  • Direction, guidance, and roles, and strategies
    are being questioned.

3
Purpose of the Study
  • To examine the perceptions that collaborative
    teachers (in the inclusionary classroom) have of
    themselves, their co-teachers, and their success
    or failures of their collaborative teaching
    practices.

4
Research Questions
  • How do co-teachers perceive their current
    experience in the classroom?
  • What teaching practices do collaborative
    educators find effective?
  • What concerns do co-teachers have?
  • What school-based supports are essential to
    collaborative teaching?

5
Method
  • Survey of all middle school co-teachers in Warren
    County, New Jersey. (Northwest N.J.)
  • Survey consisted of 3 parts
  • Demographic data- short answer.
  • Co-teacher perceptions-Likert Scale rating
  • Short answer questions.
  • Surveys were dispersed either through Directors
    of the S.S. Department or Child Study Team
    Supervisors.

6
Data Collection Procedure/Research Design
  • A qualitative and quantitative study analyzing
    teacher responses to survey questions.
  • Demographic info. used comparatively (charts,
    s)
  • Comparison of G.E. S.E. co-teachers survey
    questions (s, tables, and graphs.)

7
Results and Findings
  • Question1
  • How do co-teachers perceive their current
    experience?
  • -46 of teachers agreed that the G.E. co-teacher
    did
  • the most in the classroom.
  • -Consensus that both populations worked well
    together,
  • positive experience, co-teaching contrib.
    academically.
  • -65 of S.E. teachers- their role was defined in
    classroom
  • -85 of G.E. teachers- their role was defined.

8
Question 1 continued
  • -55 of S.E. teachers and 56 of G.E. did not
    think that either groups of teachers shared
    instructional duties
  • Both groups agreed that students were
    academically and socially benefiting from the
    inclusive classroom.
  • 40 of S.E. and 32 of G.E. felt that their
    school district was following a specific
    collaborative teaching model.

9
Discussion- Question1
  • 45 of teachers had at least an MA yet only 20.5
    of G.E and 45 of S.E recently took course work
    in inclusion. Points to lack of training in
    collaborative techniques.
  • A majority of co-teachers did not volunteer for
    co-teaching. Concerns and frustrations that
    teachers share could be attributed to this.
    Teachers attitudes toward inclusion can effect
    the implementation of inclusion.
  • A low percentage of teachers felt their school
    district was
  • following a specific collaborative teaching
    model. The teachers were feeling that there is
    not a definitive format that they should be
    following in their teaching practices- leaves
    teachers feeling unsupported and without
    direction.

10
Question 2 What are some concerns? -More
planning time amongst themselves. -Support was
greatly needed from the S.E. perspective -G.E.
felt that there were too many S.E. students in
the class, they always had to reinforce to the
students that the S.E teacher was not an aide,
they felt like they did most of the work, their
co-teachers were seldom with them the next year
so there was a feeling of re-training of S.E.
co-teachers, and difficulties in differentiating
instruction.
11
Discussion- Question 2
  • -Concerns were numerous and accentuates the
    points that a school based inclusion model needs
    to be defined along with administrative support
    that will help to provide workshops and
    pre-service instruction in collaborative
    teaching.
  • -Despite concerns both groups remained optimistic
    and believed it contributed positively to
    students academic development.

12
Question 3- School Based Supports that
facilitate collaborative teaching. -Majority
felt not enough planning time (75 S.E, 73.5
G.E.) -Many felt not enough workshops offered on
inclusion or collaborative teaching (65 S.E.,
58 G.E.) -50 of G.E. felt they had access to
many supports, practices, and preparations
concerning collaborative teaching while 80 of
S.E. felt they had support accesses.
13
Discussion- Question 3
  • - School-based supports are lacking- only half of
    G.E. felt that they had support when needed .
    S.E. may be relying on their S.E. background when
    trying to fill in the holes and gaps in the
    class.
  • - Administrators need to help guide their staff
    with sufficient course work and in developing
    their own inclusion (teaming) model. Without a
    solid framework and background many of the
    co-teaching teams will become frustrated and
    unsupportive concerning the education of special
    needs students in the classroom.

14
  • Question 4
  • What teaching practices are effective in the
  • collaborative classroom?
  • Too numerous to list all- the most prominent were
    chosen.
  • Mutual planning time with co-teachers
  • Collaborative teaching (with training)
  • Modifications made jointly
  • Collaboratively, create alternate assignments
  • Mutual respect
  • Keep communication open at all times
  • Target students learning styles and teach to them
  • Use of visual, kinesthetic, auditory, and tactile
    learning styles
  • Differentiated instruction
  • Cooperative learning/hands-on activities

15
Discussion- Question 4
  • Despite the teachers lack of co-teaching
    expertise, training and supports they have
    developed a sizeable list of effective practices.
    The teachers now need the instructional tools and
    school based supports to help facilitate the
    inclusionary process.

16
Implications/Recommendations
  • Offering feedback, sharing classroom management,
    providing daily mutual planning time using
    cooperative learning techniques were perceived as
    important co-teaching practices.
  • Teacher preparation programs relevant to
    collaborative teaching were essential.

17
Implications/Recommendations
  • Commitment of administration, faculty, staff, and
    parents is critical for inclusion to work.
  • Further research needed in inclusive
    effectiveness based on students test scores
    report cards.
  • School districts should provide proper training,
    practices, and supports to prepare teachers.

18
The End
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