Helpful Tips For Working With Student Teachers in Special Education Classes
Working with a student teacher can be a lot of fun but also a lot of work. If you’re working with a student teacher, here is some advice I’ve learned along the way.
Working with a student teacher can be a lot of fun but also a lot of work. If you’re working with a student teacher, here is some advice I’ve learned along the way.
Helping our students make progress is a job that special educators do every day. Using a life skills assessment to monitor student progress can help throughout the school year. I use a life skills assessment each year with my students.
What I hope you take away from sharing these intimate details as an undiagnosed autistic child is to check in with all of your students, but also your student that has a reputation of “being quiet” or is viewed as a “model student”. It’s important to look beyond what is physically in front of you, and to learn how to support needs that are expressed invisibly.
Teachers are moving towards digital resources to accommodate their students’ needs whether it’s at home or in the classroom.
I’m excited to introduce this week’s guest blogger, Juliana from CollaboratEd! She is here to talk about math instructional strategies! She is passionate about students who struggle with math. Juliana is a General Ed math teacher. She also has been a co-teacher, and have always taught the high school math intervention classes.
Community based instruction planning can be nerve wracking! Believe me, nothing scares teachers more than taking my students out of their familiar classroom! However, there are so many skills and goals you can work on in alternative environments! Here are a couple of tips to get you started!
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