Pauline Hanson found herself in more trouble than Brick
Bradford recently when she said that autistic children should be removed from
mainstream classes. Dear Reader, if you do not know that Brick Bradford was a
space age comic book hero of the 1940s, then you probably are not old enough to
know that The Perils of Pauline refers to a movie heroine of the 1920s, which was
even before my time. Check it out on Google.
In the meantime, back to the perils of Ms Hanson. I do not often
agree with the leader of the One Nation Party, however, on this occasion, her
crudely put comments were not entirely off the mark. Unfortunately, Ms Hanson
has such a poor grasp of English communication skills that, if she was an
asylum-seeking refugee, Peter ‘Lock ‘em All Up’ Dutton” would immediately
deport her. She did not express herself very well, but she raised a very
interesting point.
Pauline Hanson is a populist and as such she does go out
among the people to see what is annoying them. Her comments about excluding
autistic children from the mainstream obviously stemmed from conversations she
has had with parents whose children are in classes where some autistic children
do cause distractions and do interrupt the learning programme of other
children.
What needs to be said is that Autism is a broad spectrum
disorder. I have observed autistic children who differed only slightly from the
mainstream. I have also been in a pre-primary classroom where I observed a five
year old autistic boy who was mute. His only form of communication was to pull
the hair of his classmates and to throw his pencils, books and sometimes his
desk, across the room. This was generally brought on by a low level of
frustration to the sounds and activities of his classroom environment. These
were the common sounds and activities of any mainstream class.
On these occasions, his teacher and his full-time aide
quickly removed him from the class and placed him in an enclosed ‘cubby house’
at the back of the room. Here, in tranquil seclusion, his aide would read him
stories and help him happily colour in and play with blocks and other objects. When he had calmed
down, he resumed his place in the classroom where he worked on his own
individual education programme. At recess and lunch times he sometimes played
in the yard with his classmates, but usually he only played with his aide or
the class teacher.
As a practice supervisor for a Perth university, I visited
this classroom on five occasions, observing and mentoring a student teacher who
had been placed in the class for a term. I had deep admiration for the class teacher,
her aide and the student teacher, for the caring way that they tried to help and
assist this boy. I also marvelled at the way the children adapted to, and
accepted, the sometimes emotionally charged and tense education environment
they were in.
One thing Pauline Hanson, the class teacher and I all agree
on is that this boy be quickly removed when he is frustrated and causing
a huge distraction in the classroom. Any child who is
disrupting the learning programme, for whatever reason, must be removed from
that environment so that the other 25 children may continue their learning
journey. They have some rights to an education, too!
I started teaching in the late 1950s. At that time children
with significant learning difficulties, generally caused by intellectual,
physical, psychological or emotional problems, were usually lumped together in
a Special Class. This class was usually referred to by other children, and some
teachers and headmasters, as “The Ducks' Class”. Children with major learning
needs were usually placed in separate Special Education Centres.
In the 1980s, education departments,
for whatever reason, decided to include children with special needs in
mainstream classes. Initially, they did not always provide the poor old
classroom teacher with any adequate resources, human or material, to provide the
appropriate learning opportunities that were required.
It could be argued that children
with special needs were inserted in to main stream classes because it was quite
noble and humane to have a policy of inclusion for all. On the other hand, it
may have been seen as the cheaper option!
Over the years, education
departments have been dragged, kicking and screaming by teachers, their unions
and principals’ associations, into providing teacher aides and other resources
to the poor old overworked, under resourced, classroom teachers.
When I was teaching at Mt Lawley Primary
School in 1971 I became a specialist science teacher, teaching science to all
grades. At the time, special needs children at Mt Lawley were put into a Ducks'
Class. There were about ten children in it, varying in age from 8 to 12.
(How I became a specialist science
teacher in a primary school is another long story which you can read about
in, “Gough Whitlam And How He Led Me To The Principalship”, written in
September, 2012. The link is: -
One day, the kindly teacher who
taught this special class asked if I could take her children for science. This
would have given her some respite, which we later called DOTT... Duties Other
Than Teaching...which was basically the reason why people like me were taking
on specialised primary teaching roles. It was the policy of the newly elected Tonkin
Labor government to provide supernumerary teachers to provide DOTT to primary
teachers.
At first, I was quite reluctant to take
on this teacher's special needs children because my science lessons were child centred,
activity based, problem solving sessions which involved a lot of manipulating,
measuring and recording. I did not think her children would be up to it and, in
fact, I feared that they could quite possibly injure themselves or others.
However, I knew that she had a
point. She was entitled to DOTT time , too. So, I agreed to take her children in with my very best Year 7 class. The
year seven children were given a few pointers in peer tutoring and then buddied
up with a special needs child. My lessons generally consisted of six different
activities around the room, with a group of five or six children working at
each activity. Each week the group would move on to a new activity. It was a six-week
programme developing science concepts and skills of inquiry. I put a few of the
special needs children into each of these activity groups.
Well, it was just terrific. Not only
did these intellectually deprived, physically and emotionally challenged
children participate with enthusiasm and delight in the activities, but the
year seven students, for the first time in their school days, became aware that
these much maligned, indeed shunned and ridiculed members of The Ducks' Class, were
actually human beings who had feelings, who could express delight, wonder
and appreciation at the interesting experiences in which they were all sharing.
In my t movements around the playground
on Yard Duty , I noticed that some of the year sevens were now including some of
their ducks’ class science buddies in their play activities. I felt gratified by the whole
experience and realised that including these children with special needs had
improved their social skills. Perhaps, more importantly, it had also had a
socially beneficial impact on the years sevens.
So, there are varying levels of
educational need and Pauline Hanson does have a point. Some children, with
severe learning disabilities do cause serious disruptions to the learning
programme of whole classes of children. In reality, their needs are not being
met. However, just as importantly, neither are the needs of the rest of the class. For at least part of each
day childre with very special needs need to be placed in intensive specialist care, with expert teachers,
teacher assistants, nurses, doctors and suitable other resources.
Of course, Ms Hanson’s all-encompassing comments for
exclusion caused an avalanche of comment. Some from some parents of autistic
children, as well as many others in the community who favour the inclusion of
Special Needs children in mainstream education. To balance that view, there
were some teachers and administrators who agreed that, on some occasions, it was indeed
important to isolate any child, not only those with severe autism, who were
being disruptive to the learning of others.
However, what disturbed me was that some education academics
went so far as to say that every classroom teacher should be able to teach any
child with Special Needs. Dr Kate de Bruin, Education Faculty at Monash University and
Dr Ilektra Spandagou, School of Education, Sydney University, quickly produced
a paper stating that all classroom teachers can teach any child with special
needs.
Really?
Their paper states “The
Standards make clear that all
classroom teachers are qualified to teach students with disability and/or
additional needs. To be accredited, university teacher education courses must
also cover four key focus areas that directly relate to students with
disability: (i) differentiating teaching to meet the specific learning needs of
students across the full range of abilities, (ii) supporting learning of
students with disability, (iii) supporting student participation and
engagement, and (iv) managing challenging behaviour.
Every
graduating teacher must provide evidence that they meet each Standard to
achieve registration to teach. To maintain their annual registration, existing
teachers must provide evidence that they have engaged in professional learning
relating to the Standards.
Clearly,
there is a framework to ensure that registered classroom teachers are qualified
to teach students with disabilities and/or additional needs, and for
universities to prepare their graduates to do so. The benefits are seen in
numerous schools and classrooms across the country, but there is scope for both
teacher preparation programs and schools to embrace inclusive teaching
practices.”
I
often wonder how many years some of these researchers actually spent teaching
in classrooms of 25 or 30, which included one or more children with very
special needs, requiring constant attention from a full-time carer (if one is
available) and the teacher. Remember, too, that Dr Fiona Stanley, a respected researcher and teacher in health, said in 2002 that 20% of people, including children have some form of mental illness. @0% of children! That is about 5 children in each class, not counting the children will Special Needs.
I
would hope that every classroom teacher would have the good training, and the common
sense, to know when to seek specialist help for a child in need of specialised
care and attention. Clearly, there are children with special needs and children
with very, very special needs.
To
say that all teachers are equipped to teach all children with special needs is a
breathtaking generalisation worthy of a Pauline Hanson. It is unreasonable and as
absurd as saying all doctors are equipped to treat all sick people, no matter
whether they have a cut finger, bronchitis, broken ankle, breast cancer, lung
cancer, kidney failure, pulmonary thrombosis or tumours on the brain.
The
equal treatment of unequals is the greatest form of discrimination. Everyone
should be treated according to their specific needs. I have taught children in
mainstream classes who were intellectually disabled and physically disabled. I
noted the positive effect that inclusion had on those children and on their
classmates. I have also observed classroom teachers who struggled heroically
with autistic and ADHD children who constantly disrupted lessons and needed to be excluded.
The
excluded child must be accompanied by a trained adult. As a school principal,
on several occasions, I was summoned to a classroom by a harried teacher
because a child was obstinately aggressive and defiant or had physically
assaulted her or another child.
I used to remove the disruptive child and just
sit quietly with them on the verandah. After five or ten minutes of silence, I
would try to start up a conversation. "Would you like to get a drink of
water?" or some other non-threatening, unrelated comment.
After some more general conversation, I would then
ask the child if they knew why I had removed them from the room. They always
answered truthfully. When I asked them how they felt about their behaviour,
they would say it was not right. I would ask them if they would try to improve
their behaviour. Then, I would ask them if they wanted to go back to their
desk. When they said that they did, I would then ask, "What are you going
to say to Mrs Brown when you go back inside.
"Sorry",
was always the reply.
These
children had very low levels of frustration and were a constant source of
anxiety for their teachers, who all worked very hard to include them in the
mainstream. However, many of the more disruptive students would have been better off working on their individual education programmes in smaller, quieter
groups, with very specialised teachers for heavy duty subjects such as maths
and language. They could be included in the mainstream for more passive
subjects and for Phys. Ed., recess and lunch breaks. After all, play is an important and fundamental learning experience.
The
dynamic nature of the larger mainstream classes clearly does not meet the
special needs of these easily frustrated children. No doubt some educational researchers
will produce a great amount of research findings to contradict my thoughts, which
are based on many years of practical classroom experiences.
Some children, with severe learning
disabilities need to be placed in intensive specialist care with expert
teachers, nurses, doctors and suitable other resources. There should always be
opportunities for even these severely disabled children to participate and
socialise with the mainstream at other times of the day.
On the other hand, given appropriate
human and material resources, many children with special learning needs can be
accommodated in mainstream classes, with benefits to all concerned.
The BIG question is the provision of
appropriate resources to cater for the special needs child, the needs of his or
her teacher and the needs of the other 25 children in the class. Sadly, it is usually the
class teachers’ needs that are so often overlooked.
That question is being addressed. However, I am sure many
stressed out teachers would argue that much more must be done. I think parents
also need to be realistic in their expectations of having a special needs child
placed in a mainstream class. I have known
parents who placed their child in a mainstream class, firmly believing that
they would produce mainstream outcomes. That rarely happens.
I
wonder, also, how many of those education researchers of academe, who boldly state that all classroom
teachers can successfully teach all special needs children, will insist on being
treated by a GP when diagnosed with a health condition like pancreatic cancer requiring the expertise
of a medical specialist?