S
Smber2c
Guest
Quick disclaimer: it seems that Politically correctness may vary by region for this topic. Everything I say I intend with the utmost respect for these ‘mentally challenged’ individuals as people with full rights, respect, and value. (example would be my Aunt worked in Louisiana where it was ‘correct’ to say “Mentally Handicapped Students”, my girlfriend’s school district in Montana tells teachers do say “Mentally Retarded”, while my sister-in-law was told at her clinic to say “special”. )
My question concerns schooling. I’ve heard many ways to educate and include varieties of students in the same classroom, but I have to question the reason behind pushing mentally challenged children through grades and classes with all the kids their age.
Arguments in support I’ve heard:
The first seems partially true. But mentally challenged children of course will have a wide spectrum of abilities and limitations - and getting their surroundings to match their level of redyness seems more logical. (Do we teach sex ed to a boy who will always be 5 years old inside?) For those who will not mentally develop past the equivalent of 6 or 7 or 8 year olds, it seems that they will soon be unable to keep up with class work and will slow the class’ learning down. For those who are higher functioning than the class, it seems they are being held back by the class, and should be afforded whatever accelerated classes available that would allow for their actually learning, while doing whatever possible to maintain some community.
The second point though is where I see a problem. The idea of having a child who’s brain can only function as a 7 year old in a 8th grade classroom seems like having a deaf child taking a music class. Yes, there is some benefit, but there seems there are more beneficial things the child could be doing.
I’ve heard putting kids in special ed classes called bigoted. I think however that really it is simply honest. Why pretending that a child is being included in a High School Geometry class while they are really doing a 2nd grade addition worksheet with an aid in the corner?
We’ve been lead to believe that it is inclusive. I have some minor feelings of discrimination right now, while suggesting they shouldn’t be in that classroom. But the more I consider it, the more I realize it is pretending that they are ‘just like everyone else’ that makes mentally challenged kids seem second class.
They are different. Fine. Good. God crafted every one of us and we all have inestimable worth. So George won’t ever be an accountant, so what! But pretending like he might be isn’t respecting who he is, it’s respecting who we wish he was…and that thought makes me very sad.
This wishing, even pretending, children were something else, something more “normal”, strikes me as a hidden and even unintentional motivation for inclusion.
Is this reasonable? Is this notion discussed among educators? Just a worry of mine.
My question concerns schooling. I’ve heard many ways to educate and include varieties of students in the same classroom, but I have to question the reason behind pushing mentally challenged children through grades and classes with all the kids their age.
Arguments in support I’ve heard:
- it helps them learn social skills.
- it keeps them from being treated as 2nd class people.
- it benefits the other students by having all sorts of children in the classroom.
The first seems partially true. But mentally challenged children of course will have a wide spectrum of abilities and limitations - and getting their surroundings to match their level of redyness seems more logical. (Do we teach sex ed to a boy who will always be 5 years old inside?) For those who will not mentally develop past the equivalent of 6 or 7 or 8 year olds, it seems that they will soon be unable to keep up with class work and will slow the class’ learning down. For those who are higher functioning than the class, it seems they are being held back by the class, and should be afforded whatever accelerated classes available that would allow for their actually learning, while doing whatever possible to maintain some community.
The second point though is where I see a problem. The idea of having a child who’s brain can only function as a 7 year old in a 8th grade classroom seems like having a deaf child taking a music class. Yes, there is some benefit, but there seems there are more beneficial things the child could be doing.
I’ve heard putting kids in special ed classes called bigoted. I think however that really it is simply honest. Why pretending that a child is being included in a High School Geometry class while they are really doing a 2nd grade addition worksheet with an aid in the corner?
We’ve been lead to believe that it is inclusive. I have some minor feelings of discrimination right now, while suggesting they shouldn’t be in that classroom. But the more I consider it, the more I realize it is pretending that they are ‘just like everyone else’ that makes mentally challenged kids seem second class.
They are different. Fine. Good. God crafted every one of us and we all have inestimable worth. So George won’t ever be an accountant, so what! But pretending like he might be isn’t respecting who he is, it’s respecting who we wish he was…and that thought makes me very sad.
This wishing, even pretending, children were something else, something more “normal”, strikes me as a hidden and even unintentional motivation for inclusion.
Is this reasonable? Is this notion discussed among educators? Just a worry of mine.