What Is Special Education
What Is Special Education
What Is Special Education
implemented, and carefully evaluated instruction to help exceptional children achieve the
greatest possible personal self-sufficiency and success is present and future environments
(Howard,2003).
Individually planned Instruction- the law on Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
requires that an individualized education program (IEP) be developed and Implemented for every
The basic requirements of IDEA for all IEPs include statements of: (1) the child’s present level
(2) annual goals describing the educational performance to be achieved by the end of each school
year.
(3) sort-term instructional objectives present in measurable, intermediate steps between the present
(4) specific educational services; and (5) needed transition services from age 16 or earlier before
Systematically implemented and evaluated instructions. Each type of children with special
education needs requires particular educational services, curriculum goals, competencies and
skills, educational approaches, strategies and procedures in the evaluation of learning and skills.
Personal self-sufficiency. An important goal of special education is to help the child become
independent from the assistance of adults in personal maintenance and development, homemaking,
Present Environment. Refers to the current conditions in the life of the child with disability. The
present environment includes the family, the school, the community where he/she lives, the
institutions in the society that extend assistance and support to children and youth with special
education needs such as the government, non-government organizations, socio civic organizations
Future Environment. Is a forecast of how the child with a disability can move on the next level
of education, from elementary to secondary school and on to college or vocational program, and
Special Education includes learning disabilities such as dyslexia, communication disorders (such
Students with these kinds of disabilities are likely to benefit from additional educational services
such as different approaches to teaching, the use of technology, a specifically adapted teaching
Who Are Exceptional Children or Children and Youth with Special Needs?
The term exceptional children and youth covers those with mental retardness, giftedness and talent,
3. Special education is teaching children with special needs in the least restrictive environment.
Developmental disability refers to a serve, chronic disability of a child five years of age older that
is:
impairments.
4. Results in substantial functional limitations in three or more of the areas of major life activities
such as self-care, language, learning, mobility, self-direction, capacity for independent living and
services that are lifelong or of extended duration and are individually planned and coordinated.
body or organ. A person may have disabilities such as blindness or low vision, deafness or hard of
hearing condition, mental retardation, learning disabilities, communication disorders, physical and
health impairments and severe disabilities. These disabilities or impairments limit or restrict the
normal functions of a particular organ of the body. In case of the sensory disabilities-blindness and
deafness- vision or sight and audition or hearing do not function normally and restrict the person’s
seeing and hearing. The speech mechanism is impaired in communication disorders and causes the
person to have problems, improper rhythm and timing in speech and even stuttering. The skeletal
and nervous systems are impaired in cases of physical and health impairments and severe
interacting with people, events and the physical aspects of the environment. For example, a child
with low vision or blindness cannot read the regular print of textbooks. The child either read books
that are published in large print or transcribed into braille. A child who is hard of hearing aid and
reads the lips of the speaker. A child who has a physical disability such as a crippling condition
cannot walk normally and uses a wheelchair, braces or artificial limbs. However, it must be
remembered that a disability may pose a handicap in one environment but not in another . A
wheelchair-bound child with a physical disability may not be able to compete with his classmates
in the Physical Education class, but may excel in Mathematics, Science and the other academic
subjects.
AT RISK • Refers to children who have greater chances than other children to develop a disability.
environmental factors if early intervention services are not provided. Down syndrome occurs
during the early phase of pregnancy when one parental chromosome fails to separate at conception
resulting in the child’s having forty-seven chromosomes instead of the normal forty-six or twenty-
three pairs. At birth, the infant has abnormal physical characteristics and mental retardation. The
fetus in the womb of a woman who consumes alcohol heavily and chain-smokes, or takes
prohibited drugs is at risk for brain injury that causes disabilities. If a disability runs in the family,
the fetus may inherit it and the infant will be born with a disability. Children may meet accidents,
suffer from certain disease, malnutrition and other environmental deprivations that can lead to
disabilities
two or more of the following applicable adaptive skill areas: communication, self care, home
living, social skills, community use, self direction, health and safety, functional academics, leisure
-Giftedness and Talent- refers high performance in intellectual, creative and artistic areas,
unusual leadership capacity, and excellence in specific academic field (us government). Giftedness
refers to the traits of above average general abilities, high level task commitment and creativity
(renzulli, 1978). Giftedness emphasizes talent as the primary defining characteristics (Feldhusen
1992). Giftedness shows in superior memory, observational powers, curiosity, creativity, and
-Specific learning disability- means a disorder in one or more of the basic psychological
processes involved in understanding or in using language, spoken or written, which may manifest
itself in an imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or to do mathematical
calculations. The term includes such conditions as perceptual handicaps, brain injury, minimal
brain dysfunction, dyslexia, and development aphasia. The term does not include the children who
have learning problems which are primarily the result of visual, hearing or motor handicaps, of
-The term emotional and behavioral disorders- means a condition exhibiting one or more of the
following characteristics over a long period of time and to a marked degree, which adversely
affects educational performance: (a) an inability to learn which cannot be explained by intellectual,
(b) an inability to build or maintain satisfactory interpersonal relationships with peers and teachers;
(e) a tendency to develop physical symptoms or fear associated with personal or school problems.
The term includes children who are schizophrenic. The term does not include children who are
socially maladjusted unless it is determined that they are seriously emotionally disturbed.
-speech and language disorders or communication disorders- exist when the impact that a
communication pattern has on a person’s life meets any one of the following criteria: the
disadvantage: the person is placed at a learning disadvantage; the problem causes physical damage
-Hearing impairment-is a generic term includes hearing disabilities ranging from mild to
profound. Thus encompassing children who are deaf and those who are hard hearing. A person
who is deaf is not able to use hearing to understand speech, although he or she may perceive some
sounds. Even with a hearing aid, the hearing loss is too great to allow deaf person to understand
speech through the ears alone, a person who is hard hearing has a significant hearing loss that
-students with visual impairment- display a wide range visual disabilities – from total blindness
or relatively good residual vision. There is visual restriction of sufficient severity that t interferes
with normal progress in a regular educational program without modifications (scholl, 1986, cited
in heward, 2003). A child who is blind is totally without sight or has so little vision that he or she
learns primarily through the other senses, such as touch to read braille. A child with low vision is
able to learn through the visual channel and generally learns to read print.
-physical impairments- may be orthopedic impairments that involved the skeletal system – the
bones, joints, limbs, and associated muscles. Or, they maybe neurological impairments that involve
the nervous system affecting the ability to move, use, feel, or control certain parts of the body.
Health impairments include chronic illnesses, that is, they’re present over long periods and tend
-The term severe disabilities generally encompass individuals with severe and profound
disabilities in intellectual, physical and social functioning. Because of their intensity of their
specialized educational, social, psychological and medical services beyond those which are
traditionally offered by regular special education programs in order to maximize their potential for
useful and meaningful participation in society and for self-fulfillment. Children and youth with
severe disabilities include those who are seriously emotional disturbed, schizophrenic, autistic, and
profoundly and severely mentally retarded, deaf blind, mentally retarded blind, and cerebral
palsied-deaf.
There are two points of view regarding the use of labels to describe children youth with disabilities
– The First point of view frowns on labeling these children as mentally retarded, learning
– The Second and less popular point of view is that is necessary to use workable disability
category labels in order to describe the exceptional learning needs for a systematic
Labeling may lead to “protective” response in which children are more accepting of the
atypical behavior by a peer with disabilities than they would be if that same behavior were
Labeling helps professionals communicate with one another and classify and assess
research findings.
exceptionality.
Labels enable disability-specific advocacy groups to promote specific programs and to spur
legislative action.
Labeling helps make exceptional children’s special needs more visible to the public.
Because labels usually focus on disability, impairment, and performance deficits, some
people may think only in terms of what the individual cannot do instead of what he or she
Labels may cause others to hold low expectations for and to differentially treat a child on
the basis of the label, which may result to a “self-fulfilling prophecy”. For example, in
one study, student teachers gave a child labeled “autistic” more praise and rewards and less
verbal correction for incorrect responses than they gave a child labeled “normal”.
Labels that describe a child’s performance deficit often mistakenly acquire the role of
explanatory construct. For example, “Sherry acts that way because she is emotionally
disturbed.
Labels suggest that learning problems are primarily the result of something wrong within
the child, thereby reducing the systematic examination of and accountability for
Special education labels have a certain permanence; once labeled, it is difficult for a child
to ever again achieve the status of simply being ‘just another kid’
Labels often provide a basis for keeping children out of the regular classroom.
A disproportionate number of children from diverse cultural, ethnic and linguistic groups
have been inaccurately labeled as disabled, especially under the category mild mental
retardation.
and professional and student time that could better be spent in planning and delivering
instruction.
The Individuals with Disabilities Act of America
Public Law 94-142, the Individual with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) has changed the
1. Zero reject- Schools must enroll every child, regardless of the nature or severity of his or
her disabilities: no child with disabilities may be excluded from a public educating.
to determine whether a child has a disability and, if so, whether special education is needed.
program (IEP) for each student with a disability. The IEP must be individually designed to meet
4. Least restrictive environment- schools must educate students with disabilities, with children
5. Due process- schools must provide safeguards to protect the right of children with
disabilities and their parents by ensuring due process, confidentiality of records, and parental
6. Parents participation- schools must collaborate with the parents of students with disabilities in
the design and implementation of specia