Special education is the education of students with special needs in a way that addresses the students' individual differences and needs. Ideally, this process involves the individually planned and systematically monitored arrangement of teaching procedures, adapted equipment and materials, accessible settings, and other interventions designed to help learners with special needs achieve a higher level of personal self-sufficiency and success in school and community than would be available if the student were only given access to a typical classroom education.
Common special needs include learning difficulties, communication challenges, emotional and behavioral disorders, physical disabilities, and developmental disorders.[1] Students with these kinds of special needs are likely to benefit from additional educational services, different approaches to teaching, access to a resource room and use of technology.
Intellectual giftedness is a difference in learning and can also benefit from specialized teaching techniques or different educational programs, but the term "special education" is generally used to specifically indicate instruction of students whose special needs reduce their ability to learn independently or in a classroom, and gifted education is handled separately.
The opposite of special education is general education. General education is the standard curriculum presented with standard teaching methods and without additional supports.
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Special education is not a location, but the act of educating students in a way that is "special", or different from the usual methods. A special education program should be customized to address each individual student's unique needs. Special educators provide a continuum of services, in which students with special needs receive services in varying degrees based on their individual needs.
The provision of education to people with special needs or learning differences differs across countries and (in the US, Canada, Germany, and other federally organized countries) across states. The ability of a student to access a particular resource depends on the availability of services, location, family choice, and government policy. For example, in some poor countries, students with special needs simply cannot attend school.
In most countries, educators are being challenged to modify teaching methods and environments so that the maximum number of students are served in typical educational environments. In the US, the President's National Council on Disability has called for special education to be regarded less as a "place" and more as "a service, available in every school."[2][3][4][5][6] Inclusion reduces social stigmas and improves academic achievement for many students.
Additionally, improved teaching methods and early intervention programs such as response to intervention are being implemented by general education teachers to reduce the need for special education through prevention.
Special education programs need to be individualized so that they address the unique combination of needs in a given student.[7]
Students with special needs are assessed to determine their specific strengths and weaknesses.[7] Placement, resources, and goals are determined on the basis of the student's needs. Modifications to the regular program may include changes in curriculum, supplementary aides or equipment, and the provision of specialized physical adaptations that allow students to participate in the educational environment to the fullest extent possible.[8] Students may need this help to access subject matter, to physically gain access to the school, or to meet their emotional needs. For example, if the assessment determines that the student cannot write by hand because of a physical disability, then the school might provide a computer for typing assignments, or allow the student to answer questions orally instead. If the school determines that the student is severely distracted by the normal activities in a large, busy classroom, then the student might be placed in a smaller classroom.
The education of students with developmental disorders, who require more time to learn the same material, frequently requires changes to the curriculum.[9] Successful special education programs for students with development disorders focus on "only what is necessary for them to know and what they are capable of learning," so that all of the child's time is spent learning high-priority skills, and so that the child is not inappropriately frustrated by advanced subjects that are beyond their capabilities.[9] By contrast, most students with a specific learning difficulty primarily need changes to the method of instruction, rather than to the skills and information being taught.
Support can be provided for short periods or long term, and the kinds of support may change over time. For example, a child that required a one-on-one instructional aide for safety reasons while very young might outgrow this need when older.
In England, the Special Educational Needs Parent Partnership Services help parents with the planning and delivery of their child's educational provision.
In England and Wales the acronym SEN for Special Educational Needs denotes the condition of having special educational needs, the services which provide the support and the programmes and staff which implement the education.[10] In England SEN PPS refers to the Special Educational Needs Parent Partnership Service. SENAS is the special educational needs assessment service, which is part of the Local Authority. SENCO refers to a special educational needs coordinator, who usually works with schools and the children within schools who have special educational needs. The Department for Children, Schools and Families oversees special education in England.
In Scotland the Additional Support Needs Act places an obligation on education authorities to meet the needs of all students in consultation with other agencies and parents. In Scotland the term Special Educational Needs (SEN), and its variants are not official terminology although the very recent implementation of the Additional Support for Learning Act means that both SEN and ASN (Additional Support Needs) are used interchangeably in current common practice.
Most German special needs kids attend a school called Förderschule or Sonderschule (special school) that serves only special need children. There are several types of special schools in Germany such as:
Only one in 21 German students attends a special school. Teachers at those schools are qualified professionals, who have specialized in "special needs education" while in college. Special schools often have a very favorable student teacher-ratio and facilities other schools do not have. Special schools have been criticised. It is argued that special education separates and discriminates against those who are disabled or different. Some special needs children in Germany do not attend special school, but are mainstreamed into a Hauptschule or Gesamtschule (compehensive school)
In Denmark, 99% of students with learning difficulties are placed in regular classrooms full time.[11]
In North America, special education is commonly abbreviated as special ed, SpecEd, SPED, or SpEd in a professional context.
In the United States, all special-needs students receive an Individualized Education Program (IEP) that outlines how the school will provide the student with a Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE) while keeping the student in the least restrictive environment (LRE) that is appropriate for the student's needs and goals. Conversely, there is the setting, the most restrictive environment, is typically in separate institutions. [12] The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) requires that students with special needs be included in regular education activities when appropriate.
Special education has been provided in one, or a combination, of the following settings:
Beginning in 1952, Civitans were the first to provide widespread training for teachers of children with developmental disorders in the United States.[20]
In the United States of America, students with special needs were frequently not allowed to enroll in regular public schools until the passage of the federal Education for All Handicapped Children Act in 1975 which was reauthorized in 1990 and 1997, the law was renamed the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and spawned the delivery of services to millions of students previously denied access to an appropriate education. According to the Department of Education, approximately 6 million children (roughly 10 percent of all school-aged children) receive special education services.[21]
Special education students are more likely to drop out of school than their peers. This trend holds true for students with all types of special needs. Arguably, students with specific learning difficulties have lesser degrees of disability than some of the other exceptionalities. Despite this, students with LDs still have a high rate of drop outs. Further, the problem appears to be seen among students in many countries. Parts of Canada report that as many as 60% of students with learning or behavior disorders do not complete school. In the United States, the National Center on Secondary Education and Transition reports that special education students are twice as likely to drop out as regular education students.
The cost of the high drop out rate is incalculably high with profound social and economic implications for the students, their families, and society. Drop outs have high rates of unemployment, make less money, are more likely to need public assistance, and are more likely to become involved with the criminal justice system.
Researchers theorize that high special education dropout rates are correlated with multiple factors such as:
Beyond characteristics that place a child at-risk for dropping out, researchers are finding that the school itself may be a strong determining factor as well. Schools that have overall low achievement, a less experienced teaching staff, higher numbers of students per teacher, and less spending per student tend to have higher dropout rates. Schools with dropout rates higher than 60% are sometimes referred to as dropout factories. Successful transition from high school to college, vocational program, or employment is also a factor that correlates to dropout rates, suggesting that preparing students in advance for success after high school may influence student motivation to complete high school.[26]
Under construction by the Educational & Counseling Psychology Department at Andrews University
Some children are disabled, or they have learning difficulties. Special education is about teaching these children. Some of them can be educated with other children of the same age who are not disabled. Others must go to special schools. If the disability is too bad they can not get an education. Students who have emotional problems and act poorly are sometimes expelled from school.
Special needs include speech or hearing difficulties, emotional and behavioral disorders, physical disabilities, and developmental disorders.[1] Students with these special needs often get more educational services. This may mean different approaches to teaching, access to a resource room and use of technology.
Some students are very smart. These students are called gifted. They also have certain needs so they can succeed. These students do better with special teaching styles or different educational programs. The word 'special education' is used for students whose special needs stop them from learning the way normal people learn. Gifted education is handled separately.
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]] Education researchers, particularly in United States, have described different kinds of services in special education.
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