No one can do everything, but everyone can do
something
Carys Tew, Hospital and Home Tutor and
Primary Languages Trainer at York St. John University
What is the point of children with learning
difficulties trying to learn a new language? Shouldn’t they be
doing something more useful like numeracy or literacy?
Learning a language is not a case of memorising lots of
grammatical rules so that you can regurgitate a few phrases when
you go abroad on holiday. It is a multi-sensory experience of
culture, music, enjoyment, awareness of others and distant places,
and the magic of being able to communicate in many different ways.
As such, it is the right of all children to be able to take
part.
In a mixed-ability class, how can we fully involve the SEN
children, so that they are not merely passive observers and so that
their self-esteem is not affected because they can’t keep up with
their peers?
Firstly, we must be aware of some of the
difficulties they encounter, such as:
- - poor memory
- - poor concentration
- - restricted vocabulary
- - difficulty in writing, planning or organising
their work
- - poor audio discrimination
Reinforcing
In order to support children in language lessons,
we should constantly reinforce what has been taught, use a variety
of short activities, give more support to individuals in writing
frames, drawn outlines and text/flash cards, be aware of our own
use of language when giving instructions or teaching new
structures, have a very expressive face and hands, and above all,
use lots of multi-sensory aids.
Gesture
Hands can talk with a combination of Makaton and
British Sign Language, and nearly all children can use a form of
total physical response, or a combination of verbal and physical
communication in games such as ‘What’s the time, Mr Wolf?’.
Music
Music, whether traditional or contemporary in the
form of rhyme, rhythm and rap should be age-appropriate, suit poor
reading skills and be memorable, active and physical.
Games
Games should be chosen which include the whole
class in active participation, such as chanting in different voices
when an object is being hunted, passing on a hidden ring round the
elastic to a traditional song, using mixed ability teams, and
parachute games.
Stories
Well-known stories can delight and surprise, with
the use of props, multi-purpose cloths and large audio-visual
screens.
Multi-sensory
Many children with special needs are very limited
in what they have tasted and experienced, especially when it comes
to eating, and even if they can’t physically eat the new food, they
can share in the experience by smelling and handling it.
Interactive whiteboard
The interactive whiteboard can include learning
with physical movement and bold audio-visual effects. There are a
number of excellent programmes that encourage children of all
abilities to write simple sentences and produce colourful,
professional-looking printouts.
Resources
Differentiated activity sheets can be proudly
collected in the Junior European
Language Portfolio and Communicate in Print2
(formerly Words With Symbols) helps to make reading simple stories
in the new language more accessible. Children can make their own
shape poems at different levels, and even if they can’t hold or use
a pen, they can press a computer key or switch many times to
create, for example, a butterfly or a thunder cloud in the
language.
Group activities
Self-checking Stile trays can be adapted for
different levels of ability, and nearly all children can enjoy
mixed group activities, such as Twister and town play mats. The
wheelchair–bound with learning difficulties can still join in role
play activities and, for example, explore the physical nature of
travelling to the new country, with movement, transport cards,
flags and national hats.
Activity boxes
Sometimes it is not possible to include a pupil
with special needs in everything in the class, and for these
occasions, the teacher can prepare a box of activities, including,
for example, a European jigsaw puzzle, dressing-up clothes, and
story-tapes for the Teaching Assistant to use with the individual
child.
Intercultural understanding
Intercultural Understanding can be enhanced for
the children with special needs through carefully chosen background
music, painting in the style of the overseas painter, looking for
the (hidden?) familiar object in pictures of unfamiliar scenes,
making a collage using pictures from travel brochures and using
real objects from the country to, for example, weigh out different
amounts of water in a maths lesson.
Rewards and feedback
Rewards and feedback should be accessible to all.
Rather than having knock-out games, such as ‘Simon Says’, which
favour the quicker, livelier pupils, maybe the teacher should think
of rewarding the ones that s/he sees beginning to respond
to a classroom instruction, as well as to the pupils who can react
straight away. Stickers and certificates should always emphasize
what the pupil can do, for example, sign a greeting in response to
Bonjour, or find the capital of Germany.
Display
Displays should be interactive, simple and
accessible to all – including the wheelchair users.
Performing
Nearly all children love performing, and should
have opportunities to do so, regardless of their
disability. They will grow in confidence and self-esteem, the
more they are praised for what they can do.
None of the above is unusual for a good teacher
of a modern language in any group or class of children.
The only factor which distinguishes one child from another is the
rate at which they progress. Sometimes the progress is barely
visible from one month to the next, but that should not discourage
any teacher from providing an exciting experience of a country, its
people and language to every child in the class.
“I can, is a
100 times more important than IQ” Caroline Coyle
1995