How to support children with special educational needs as they return to school
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Children and parents have struggled to adjust to homeschooling. Now, some have to cope with returning to schools which will seem very different to those they left at the beginning of lockdown. One group of children, though, are facing challenges beyond those experienced by the majority.
Children with special educational needs (SEN) make up around 15% of all pupils in mainstream education. Developmental dyslexia is the most common condition in this group, estimated to affect between . Autism is much rarer, affecting .
Our research suggests that children with these conditions might find it especially difficult to adapt to changes in their education. We need to recognise the extra challenges homeschooling and online learning have posed for many children 鈥 and take this into account as schools reopen.
Extra challenges
Many people think of dyslexia as a language disorder, but and people鈥檚 ability to verbalise ideas and to pay attention. Even in the best of learning environments, struggles in school are likely to lead to for dyslexic children.
Dyslexia can affect many aspects of a child鈥檚 life.
These difficulties are also experienced by autistic children, who may perceive the sensory world differently. Sounds can be magnified, for example, making it hard for a child working at the kitchen table to drag their attention away from the ticking of a clock or the dripping of a tap. Their experience of 鈥渘ot fitting in鈥 also affects their self-esteem.
Another aspect of autism is concrete, black and white thinking. Some autistic children because they think school is for work and home is for play. Routine and predictability is crucial for these children. The move to home education has been another change for them in a sea of turmoil caused by the pandemic.
In school, autistic and dyslexic children would often have in place to help them with these problems. Without this kind of support, problems with attention and self-esteem may make learning at home very difficult.
It鈥檚 also important to recognise that dyslexia and autism are often inherited. Educational and emotional support at home may be limited, further disadvantaging the child and reinforcing the parent鈥檚 own . Children with SEN are also more likely to come from , an additional layer of inequality.
Positive impacts
has found that while many children with SEN (and their parents) are indeed more anxious and sad than usual, some families actually report minimal or even positive impacts of distance learning under lockdown. For some children, lockdown is a respite. For , it means they are not the child who is taken out of typical lessons to catch up on other work.
Some parents of children with SEN have reported positive outcomes from home learning.
For autistic children, it may be an escape from the bullying which is in this group. Many autistic children, including those with a type of autism called , are simply too anxious .
Remote online education may offer children a greater opportunity for personalised learning at their own pace. For these reasons, many parents of SEN children their children even under normal circumstances. They argue that home-schooling allows teaching to be built upon the child鈥檚 interests, while removing them from rigid standardised testing which is focused on the majority of learners and may set children with conditions like autism or dyslexia up to fail.
Back to school
As schools begin to reopen, advice is already emerging around how best to protect and support children. It鈥檚 important to make children feel as we emerge from the coronavirus pandemic.
Experts suggest that emotional and social development should take precedence over school work. Some children may need special help with this. Autistic children, for instance, may need to be , and may need to make friends.
Learning in small groups may benefit children with SEN.
Before the coronavirus pandemic, teachers were advised to set up small circles of friends for vulnerable children. As such, the current advice, which recommends that children should stay in , may be well suited to those with special educational needs. However, teachers will also need to actively adopt to foster social bonds between the child and their peers.
As always, it will be important for parents and teachers to collaborate closely to ensure as much consistency as possible. There are things that teachers and parents can do to help children . Children might also be dealing with . The involvement of other child specialists, like psychologists and social workers, might therefore be beneficial.
To help build a , we need to do more to help children with special educational needs succeed in school, respecting their own pace and learning styles. As this situation evolves, we must be mindful of its impact on the already entrenched inequality that hampers these learners. However, the situation also forces us to come face-to-face with the cracks in our previous systems and come up with new ways of doing things which might, in the long term, reap surprising benefits.
, Senior Lecturer in Psychology, and , Senior Lecturer in Psychology,
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