Self esteem and motivation can be a big issue for students
who have spent years struggling to keep up with classwork. Teachers seldom
recognise how much effort is going into surviving each day. Positive feedback
becomes less and less as teachers focus on the shortfalls. These students become more self-aware and
know that many of their peers regard them as not being clever.
Every lesson has its pitfalls. To start with have you
remembered all the equipment for the lesson? Then during the lesson, you might
miss a key instruction, find the pace too fast, not process the visual
information from the board, not be able to read a word in a text, mishear a
word or not understand new vocabulary.
These children often have challenges with working memory, auditory
processing or visual processing. They may also have difficulties with
organization, vocabulary, slow processing and the physical process of writing. How
can we level the playing field and offer discrete support in Senior School ?
Google classroom is an excellent way to discretely
supporting students with dyslexia, ADHD and other learning difficulties. Working memory difficulties, slow processing
and auditory processing can be supported by pre-teaching via Google
classroom. Students can be given access
to key texts or information to read prior to the lesson. Relevant video clips can also be posted. This means that when they come to the lesson
they are already aware of the content which makes it much easier to tune in and
follow what is being said. During the
lesson they can also have access to bullet points or visual prompts in front of
them that can guide them through the lesson and keep them on track if they lose
focus or miss a teaching point.
Having parts or the whole of the teaching slides in front of
them on their own laptop also helps those with visual processing
difficulties. The font or the colour of
the text can be altered to make it easier to read. In a classroom situation if all the children
are using their own laptop, Google classroom makes it is possible to personalise what each child sees
without it being obvious that the child has something different. It is possible to set up scaffolded worksheets with sentence starters or
word lists for those who find written tasks challenging. Charts, labelling pictures and fill in the blanks texts are great ways for students to show their understanding while reducing the amount writing required.
Less discrete but helpful are text readers where the
computer reads the text. This is
particularly useful for longer texts or texts with a lot of technical language
where fatigue may mean that a dyslexic student loses the meaning of what they
are reading as all their energy in decoding. Headphones could be used here or
it could be used only for homework tasks.
Voice to text could also be used for longer writing tasks
that would be very laborious for a dyslexic learner or those with handwriting difficulties. This allows the student to focus more on the
content of their writing than the physical process of writing and spelling. Studies
have shown that speed and efficiency of handwriting can make the biggest difference to the quality of content and composition of written work.
For students with ADHD, access to pre-teaching can greatly
improve their focus and engagement during lessons. In addition, questions that
the teacher intends to ask them could be posted on their laptop prior to the
lesson or at the beginning of the lesson.
This way the student can listen out for key information that will help
answer the question. This again helps focus during lessons.
Another area of potential source of embarrassment for older
students can be feedback from the teacher. Often this is done very publicly
within the classroom. The teacher may comment on spelling errors or lack of
punctuation. They may mention that the
student hasn’t written enough or there is not sufficient detail. With Google classroom teachers can give
feedback through comment boxes alongside the work and other students need not
be aware of personal feedback given to each student. The teacher can highlight
where a sentence needs to be edited or improved and give hints to guide the
student. They can use different colours
for different types of editing – spelling, punctuation, better vocabulary
choices. For children with learning differences it is best to just focus on one
aspect within each piece of work. Not only
is this type of feedback more discrete but most students respond better to this
type of constructive advice. They can act on the advice and he end result should a piece of work they are proud of
which could then be shared with the class, improving self esteem.
Google Classroom and Google Docs are versatile tools which benefit all students but can make a tremendous difference to those with learning differences.
www.achievenow.org.uk has lots of practical advice and videos to help set up accessibility functions within different computer systems.
www.achievenow.org.uk has lots of practical advice and videos to help set up accessibility functions within different computer systems.
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