Bass-Ackward
Remediation
by
Linda
Schrock Taylor
by Linda Schrock Taylor
It
is interesting to note how quickly I remediate reading and math
delays in the students I see at my clinic, as opposed to how slowly
those same problems are corrected in my classroom. I have spent
many years and thousands of dollars to become adept at instruction
and remediation, so approach both situations with equal skill. The
difference in the outcomes for the two populations comes down to
the fact that a teacher can provide instruction more effectively
on a one-to-one basis, than to a group of students with varying
needs. It is time that we reassess the model, and the methods, used
for remediation of children faced with academic delays.
Many
of my classroom students, after a year or two of instruction, do
get out of special education, or at least out of the reading portion
where I, myself, set the goals, choose the most effective methods,
and specifically focus on "remediation and release." For too many
children, skilled intervention comes too late after the academic
and emotional damage done to the child has been too severe. For
those children, "special ed" becomes a life sentence.
The
dubious term Provide Academic Support is too often
a euphemism for dumbing down assignments; allowing children to use
notes and open books for non-open book tests; for the practice of
plastering academic Band-Aids anywhere and everywhere in hopes of
fooling parents and children into believing that: a.) the child
is so stupid that he cannot function without academic crutches,
and b.) this is an honorable way to get through school. The academic
community, as a whole, should be held severely accountable for the
real outcome of mis-education that fewer than 10% of special
education students with normal intelligence, normal hearing and
normal sight, ever escape those placements.
At
my clinic, the remediation students (as opposed to those who seek
on-going tutoring for something like Algebra) are seen, on average,
for twelve one-hour appointments, before they return to their schools
ready for grade-level work. Often, second- and third-grade girls
can be released after five (5) working appointments! Most anyone,
using well-structured materials like Phyllis Schlafly's Turbo
Reader, can teach a motivated child to read in about thirty
hours of one-on-one instruction. Yet our schools allow our LD students
to spend five, ten, twelve years accomplishing little-to-nothing
in expensive special classrooms. These students miss opportunities
to learn core knowledge the aspect of an education that teams
with a skilled usage of the Code in which English is written (i.e.,
Print) to bring about full, and fulfilling, reading comprehension.
These students then "graduate" from high school still
unable to read.
Motivation
is not the problem with most children and adults, especially when
they realize that the teacher is skilled, committed, and will truly
be teaching them to read, instead of playing worksheet wonderland.
Ask any small child why he or she wants to go to school, and you
will hear, "I want to learn to read!" Every year millions of enthusiastic,
hopeful, eager children lose that sparkle of anticipation, and quickly
come to hate reading classes where they learn to see themselves
as failures, rather than developing into readers.
I
cannot understand how their teachers can live with themselves while
observing, as they surely must, such deep hurt develop in the eyes
of innocent children. I could not sleep well not during the
school year; not during any summer; not during any year for the
rest of my life. The children who are the victims of such inferior
teaching have been given a serial death sentence: the death of spirit;
the death of self-worth; the death of hope; the death of intellectual
interest and challenge; the death of most chances for ultimately
finding a rewarding job; the death of plans to support a future
family with wisdom, leadership, and financial stability.
Sometimes
special ed students are considered the reason that a general ed
class may be held back, or "dumbed down." In the special education
classrooms that same dynamic is taking place. Those children who
are extremely delayed are causing the other children to slow their
pace of learning. The needs of all the children go unmet for too
long; often forever.
Idealistically,
special education classrooms are to provide for students on an individual
basis, in following with the Individual Education Plan, as drawn
up by the team of professionals at the annual IEP meetings. It sounds
so good; so unique; so effective. It sounds as if it would be the
way to meet the needs of each student. The fact is that these plans
do not work not even in the hands of highly trained, and extremely
motivated teachers.
I
suspect that few teachers believe as strongly as I do, in the need
to remediate and release special education students at the absolutely
earliest moment. Yet, even my skills and my drive for success, cannot
do for my students in a classroom, what I can do for my students
at my clinic. It is impossible for one teacher, working with several
students at any one time, to do diagnostic and prescriptive teaching
for each as an individual. It is no wonder that so many teachers,
in utter frustration, turn to using a multitude of worksheets rather
than fail at trying to be all things to all children. And so the
years pass, and the gains for each child are measured in months
(if any gains occur, at all), rather than in the "years"
needed in order for each child to catch up to the level of their
same-age peers and exit from the "black hole of special education."
Special
education is based on a flawed plan; an ineffective model that has
failed children since the initial development of such classrooms.
Still the model dominates all special education organization and
administration! Furthermore, Title-I programs are also failing to
meet the needs of the population they are to serve those
children who fall through the cracks while failing to qualify for
special placements, although unable to handle the work in regular
classes. One can almost hear the echoes from the past… "Let them
eat cake!"
We
need a system that will diagnose delays at the earliest possible
moment and arrange for services in a clinic-like setting where skilled,
trained teachers work one-on-one with children. Such teachers should
be held strictly accountable for successful diagnostic and prescriptive
teaching; for remediating and releasing children in the most efficient
manner and in the fastest timeframe possible. No child should languish
for years in special non-education classrooms, becoming more discouraged
and disillusioned with each boring year, then leaving with a diploma
that they are incapable of reading.
One
has to wonder about the underlying rationale behind such obvious
and purposeful malpractice. Have the All-Powerful State, the Departments
of Education, and the individual school districts finally agreed
upon a price for the $oul$ of these children? Does this not remind
one of The
Child Buyer? These possibilities are too vile to consider;
but too likely to ignore.
The
time has come is far overdue, actually for parents and communities
to force districts to diagnose, remediate and release delayed students
at the earliest possible age, and that process is best done with
straightforward one-on-one instruction. Any other model is unethical,
inexcusable, and bass-ackwards, all to the detriment of our more
needy children. Mature adults have a responsibility to awake from
their stupors, knock the poison from the hand of the State; the
forced feedings from the ineffective, if not downright devious,
teacher training programs and get down to the real business of saving
children from lives without hope.
First
step? Give the gift of literacy to every child before they complete
second grade.
March
1, 2004
Linda Schrock Taylor [send
her mail] lives in Michigan.
She is a free-lance writer and the owner of "The Learning Clinic,"
where real reading, and real math, are taught effectively and efficiently.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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