The importance of schedules and routines cannot be expressed enough. There is a reason for this; it leads directly to the ability to provide systematic instruction within the classroom setting. This gets to the heart of access for children with disabilities and challenging behavior.
ALL children in the classroom need explicit instruction in ANY skill that they are expected to learn. Their past experiences are limited. We have to build their library of knowledge by giving them learning experiences. However, even with solid instruction that reaches most children, there will inevitably be a few children who need something more. They need specially designed experiences and multiple exposures to grasp and retain the same knowledge that other children grasped quickly.
In Systematic Instruction, you will explore ways to provide extra support/time/experiences for those children who need it. This should not be "in addition to" your daily activities. These practices should organically fit into the daily schedules and routines that are currently in place. Not extra, and yet, still more. Great teachers make this process like a fluid work of art. Becoming an expert in this key practice will ensure that you have the skills to be an educational artist as well. Enjoy!
~The ECSE Team
Read the indicated pages in the IEPm. The classroom team (special education and general education) should brainstorm how these practices might be implemented in the classroom to provide more opportunities for children to practice skills.
Print or save the slides linked under the video. Watch the presentation and take notes. The team should discuss with the coach how to implement this best within the existing classroom schedule.
Please read these handouts and note the differences between the approaches. Special Education Instruction within the classroom setting does not always look exactly the same. There are different approaches that can be used alone or in conjunction with one another. Pay attention to the similarities and differences. Have a discussion as an instructional team about how to use these best to support certain students.
As an instructional team, plan and set up a time for your coach to observe the classroom when the special educator is in the room and the team is practicing a type of systematic instruction. Be sure to use the checklist at the right to ensure that multiple components can be observed as possible.
Set up a time for the team to meet with the coach to discuss the observation. Consider next steps to improving your practice.
As these are strategies teachers are using, it is not necessary to send a handout home to create transfer. However, the above handouts may also be used during IEP conferences to explain how these practices will be used in the classroom to provide services for their children. Information from the Importance of Belonging page can also be used.