IEP’s are the main focus here in the DLP this time of
year. Of the 7 students in my class, 5
of them have IEP meetings coming up within the next 4 weeks. My teacher has been working all day on
writing various goals for the students and fulfilling all the requirements in
“Easy IEP.” Outside of this, I have been
continuing to teach the students about Lewis and Clark, have experimented with
ways to teach them about the upcoming Veteran’s day, and have experienced
Halloween learning and partying in a new way.
While this week was very busy for me, I was really hoping I would be
able to find a way to slip out of the classroom with my teacher to experience
an IEP meeting firsthand.
So on
Thursday I was given the opportunity to attend my first IEP meeting. This was also an eligibility meeting, so I
was able to see the whole process happen.
My teacher and I left as soon as the substitute arrived and headed to
Spalding Elementary for the meeting. The
student’s father was attending along with the speech therapist, occupational
therapist, psychologist, principal, and special education coordinator for the
district. During this meeting I was able
to spend much time listening and comparing what I was hearing about this student
to what I have learned about him from my time teaching him. In previous classes we have spent many hours
talking about the IEP process. While I
have learned much of what I just experienced in the classroom as well, I feel
like my participation in this meeting has gotten me thinking about everything
again. First I think about the
parents. Much of the talk from the
psychologist at the beginning was almost over my head, yet the father just went
on shaking his head as if he was too overwhelmed to object. Then I jump and think about the psychologist. After talking with my teacher after the
meeting, she mentioned that he had only met with this student for 20 minutes of
testing prior to this meeting. Now
during the meeting, I observed that much of the talk was about random testing
scores and comparing these scores to the norm.
I understand the frustration coming from a teacher’s perspective. Much of these child’s goals/eligibility are a
result of these psychological test, and these tests are administered and read
by someone who doesn’t understand anything about the child. Overall, the tone
of the meeting was very positive and open, honest and encouraging. The meeting was shorter than I had expected
and altogether less of a “big deal” than I had anticipated.
The
idea of the IEP is great. It keeps
teachers and schools accountable to working with the students and providing
them with what they need to continue to grow and learn in the best way possible
for them. However, I am coming to
understand the frustrations that can come with an IEP as well. One of the big stumbling blocks that I have
observed many times is that people end up teaching a child based solely on the
goals in their IEP. The time comes for
me to choose a topic for a Social Studies unit, and there is nothing to go off
of and no priority put in this subject matter because there is nothing in any
IEP about social studies. When it comes
to writing, only two students have writing goals, so the other student don’t
even get exposed to writing. Because a
student does not have something written in their IEP does not mean that they do
not need to be exposed to such learning topics or life skills. I worry that students are losing the idea of
a “well rounded” education because they are seen as disabled, able and needing
only to learn what is dictated in their annually reviewed IEP.
Overall,
this week brought many positive experiences for me. I am amazed that four weeks have already
elapsed in this placement, and I truly feel that I am part of the classroom
now. I was able to make a bulletin board with my students, start different
units with them and try many different teaching styles with them as well. This week, we cut open pumpkins of different
sizes, experimented with them, and predicted and counted the amount of seeds
inside. We took a field trip to Spalding
to have a Halloween dance with other members of the DLP, baked brownies
together, did quite a bit of reading, and spent time doing many hands on
activities. I feel very comfortable experimenting with different styles of
lessons and am not afraid to fail here.
It is a wonderful place to learn and grow as a teacher, and I’m very
thankful for that.
Kelly,
ReplyDeleteGood post this week.
I'm glad that you had the experience of being in an IEP meeting. I'm sure that it brought together a lot about what you had been learning in your classes. It was a great perspective that the school psychologist was making fairly important decisions and observations from a 20 minute assessment.
Great job reflecting. I have a question for you. How does your faith impact what you do in the classroom? Give that some thought. Maybe you can put that in this week's post.
Have a great week.
Dr. Meyer