Perhaps the greatest
challenge to an educator is a child who is a slow learner. These
children do not fall into the category of special education, do well
outside the classroom, and show no evidence of having a medical problem.
They simply do not do well in school or a particular subject. In the
days before formal schooling these students would carry on productive
lives working and doing tasks that did not require extensive reading,
writing, or math operations. However, today the emphasis is less on
occupational learning and more on academic preparation. Thus there is a
growing need for help to re-mediate these children to provide them the
best possible opportunities in a changing world.
Having successfully
taught for nearly 30 years in several states and countries two
commonalities emerge when dealing with slow learners. The first is that
they need extra time to complete tasks. This means that the parents must
be willing to augment what happens at school regardless of how
fruitless it might appear at times. Secondly, the child must be offered
incentives that are appropriate. Depending on the child the best
incentives are those where the family works together on a project such
as building a model or attending a concert or game. The incentives
should require delayed gratification so that the child learns patience
and the importance of waiting to be rewarded.
The next area is proper
nutrition. A child needs to have a breakfast. Period. Every study done
points out that a quality breakfast and proper sleep are the two best
ways to improve student performance.
With those two factors
in mind, the next step for a teacher or parent is to search for lessons
and other resources that make it easier to differentiate the curriculum
and make learning more vital and relevant. To this end the special
education sites on the Internet have some great ideas. It
must be noted that this column is not dealing with those students that
qualify for special education classes. However, the concepts that
teachers use when dealing with these students are ideal for helping a
slow learner once the student’s weaknesses have been diagnosed. In any
one of my classes I have about ten percent who are slow learners so
having a slow learning child is not unusual.where you can find a wide range of helpful sites.
Characteristics
Here are some general characteristics of slow
learners. Students may display some or all of these depending on their
age and degree of problems acquiring knowledge at school. First,
they are frequently immature in their relations with others and do
poorly in school. Secondly, they cannot do complex problems and work
very slowly. They lose track of time and cannot transfer
what they have learned from one task to another well. They do not easily
master skills that are academic in nature such as the times tables or
spelling rules. Perhaps the most frustrating trait is their inability to
have long-term goals. They live in the present and so have significant
problems with time management probably due to a short attention span and
poor concentration skills capabilities.
It should be pointed out that just because
a child is not doing well in one class does not make that student a
slow learner. Very few children excel in all subject areas unless there
is great deal of grade inflation at that school. That is
why it is essential that standardized tests scores be examined in depth
by the parent or teacher to look for trends. Also there is a difference
between a slow learner and a reluctant learner. A slow learner initially
wants to learn, but just has a problem with the process. A reluctant
learner is not motivated and can also be passive aggressive creating
even more of a problem for teachers and parents through a ploy that
involves non-cooperation. There is seldom anything wrong with the
learning ability of reluctant learners.
To help slow learners here are some proven ideas for educators
Have a quiet place to work where the child can be easily observed and motivated.
Keep the homework sessions short
Provide activity times before and during the homework
Add a variety of tasks to the learning even if it is not assigned such as painting a picture of a reading assignment.
Allow for success
Ask questions of the child while they are working about the assignment
Go over the homework before they go to bed and before they go to school
Teach them how to use a calendar to keep track of assignments
Read to the child
Use
my “Three Transfer” form of learning in which the student must take
information and do three things with it besides reading. For example,
read it, explain it to someone else, draw a picture of it, and take
notes on it.
Be patient but consistent.
Do not reward unfinished tasks
Challenge the child
Have the child do the assignments that are
the most difficult first and leave the easier ones to later. Call it
the dessert principle.
Don’t be overprotective. Students who have
parents that frequently intercede in their child’s education are
teaching that student that the parent does not respect their abilities.
If you do call a teacher make sure you are seeking a positive outcome.
Remember that most teachers have dealt with numerous slow learners and
have a vast amount of experience. However, sharing your child’s
strengths and weaknesses could make the school year more beneficial for
all concerned.
Contact
the teacher if there is a concern. Calling an administrator solves
nothing as the teacher is the sole legal judge of academic success.
Take you child to exciting places where they can see where academic success
is important. A trip to a local university or community college, a walking tour
of city hall, a visit to the fire station or a behind the scenes tour of a zoo are
highly motivating.
Examples of interventions for slow learners
Environment: Reduce distractions, change seating to promote attentiveness, have a peer student teacher, and allow more breaks.
Assignments:
Shorter and with more variation, repeat work in various forms, have a
contract, give more hands on work, have assignments copied by student,
have students use three transfer method where they have to show the work
three different ways.
Assessment: Shorter tests, oral testing, redoing tests, short feedback times, don’t make students compete
What to avoid:
Cooperative learning that isolates the student and places him or her in
a no win situation. Using a standardized test. Ignoring the problem.
What to
encourage: Grouping with a patient partner. Learning about the child’s
interests. Placing the student in charge. Mapping, graphic organizers,
and hands-on work. Using Bloom’s taxonomy of tasks to make the
assignments more appropriate.
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