Thursday, February 15, 2007
By Tim Grant, Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette
Although more schools are enrolling children who have
disabilities in regular classrooms, an expert in special education made the
radical suggestion yesterday that they be "separated from the general school
population and given intensive, relentless instruction."
Dr. Naomi Zigmond, a professor of special
education at the University of Pittsburgh, discussed her uncommon views with
members of the Learning Disabilities Association of America in a keynote address that kicked off its
44th annual international conference at the Westin Convention
Center hotel.
"Because of the pressures for state testing and
accountability and a desire to make kids feel normal and to expose them to what
everyone else gets, we have been forgetting that special education is supposed
to be special," said Dr. Zigmond, who has studied special education for 41
years.
"It's time for unconventional thinking," she said. "Because those
things have taken precedence over what special education was invented for and
that is to force the education system to provide something special to students
with special needs."
Few issues in education generate more debate than the highly emotional
question of whether to include special education children in mainstream
classrooms.
Federal laws have long supported the idea that all pupils,
including those with severe and profound disabilities, should be included and
educated in classrooms with nondisabled peers, preferably in schools that they
would attend if they weren't disabled.
Dr. Zigmond's views did not
necessarily reflect those of her audience.
"I don't believe plunking a
learning-disabled kid in a classroom with a teacher who can't meet their needs
is beneficial to a student," said Sheila Clark-Edmands, an education consultant
from Kennebunk, Maine. "But putting them in a self-contained
class with a special ed teacher who's not informed isn't beneficial either."
The annual convention, which ends Saturday, is expected to draw 1,500
people from across the United
States and eight other countries to network and
explore the many facets of learning disorders through a variety of workshops led
by some of the most notable figures in the field.
The most common
learning disabilities are dyslexia and dyscalculia (serious trouble with math).
Learning disabilities happen because
of the way a person's brain takes in and processes information.
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is sometimes thought of
as a learning disability, but it's not usually considered one because most kids
with ADHD can learn in school without special assistance, even though they might
be easily distracted and can't sit still in class.
Many of the attendees
are teachers and parents of children with learning disorders.
"This event is an opportunity for us to
enlighten people who are already in the learning disability field," said Sheila
Buckley, executive director of LDA in Pittsburgh. "But it's also an opportunity to
bring the issue of learning disabilities to the forefront so there's greater
awareness and advocacy for those affected by it."
The LDA
convention was set for the David L.
Lawrence Convention Center. But the building has
been off limits to the public since Feb. 5, when a section of flooring in the
second-floor loading dock area collapsed.
Connie Parr, a vice president
of LDA and pediatric nurse practitioner, traveled to the event from Oswego, Ill. She has a 35-year-old daughter with
severe learning disabilities.
"Parents go through a grieving process
when they learn their child has a learning disability," she said. "Then they
begin to accept the child they have and that's when their learning begins.
That's the day they take the bull by the
horns and they learn everything they need to help their child be the best they
can be."
Sharyn Denhan of Harrisburg is an executive board member of LDA
and parent of a son with a learning disability. Her son was taught in regular
public school classrooms, but benefited from support services.
Now 29, he has a degree in civil engineering from Drexel University.
"My son is basically a
success story and I'm very proud of his accomplishment," Ms. Denhan said.
"The problem with learning disabilities is it's this huge broad
spectrum. It's not one size fits all. It's a very hard issue to deal with and
very unique to the child."