A typical day for a special education teacher is hard to
define because the job description varies widely, unlike that of a classroom
teacher. What all special education teachers do have in common, though, include
a case load of students who have an IEP (Individualized Education Plan) based
on some diagnosed disability, the responsibility of preparing lesson plans,
recording data on student’s progress towards individual goals and participating
in IEP meetings. This may oversimplify the job of the special educator, so
let’s take a moment and look at these things a little more closely.
Preparing Lesson
Plans Based on an IEP
A Special educator may have any number of students on her
case load, and one of her primary responsibilities is to teach those students
the state curriculum with any modifications necessary to meet the student’s
specified goals and objectives. Each student has an Individual Education Plan
(IEP) that the parents, special education teacher and any other professionals
involved in the student’s testing and education agreed upon based on the
student’s needs and testing outcomes.
The difference that these lesson plans have compared to a
regular education teacher’s lesson plans is that for a caseload of 10 students,
the special educator may need to write 10 individual lesson plans, while the
regular educator can write one lesson plan for an entire class of students.
This ensures that each student receives appropriate individualized instruction.
The planning is the easy part though, because then the
lessons must be taught--and often at the same time and in the same room as the
regular education teacher who is teaching her lesson! This highlights the
importance of the special educator’s need to be well prepared for every lesson!
Data Collection and
Special Education Meetings
In order to determine whether a student is progressing, data
must be collected. In a typical classroom this means a teacher must assign
tests and papers, grade them, record them in some type of grade keeper, average
them, and include a final grade on each student’s report card. For a special
education teacher, the job is a bit more complicated. Students with an IEP must
have demonstrable proof of progress towards specific goals, often requiring
many more "grades" recorded for an individual student.
This means that special education teachers will often need
to have a method of collecting data informally at every lesson to gauge the
student’s understanding and progress towards goals. This also means that each
and every lesson needs to be as specific to the individual student’s goals as
possible, again pointing to the importance of careful planning.
The data collected each week must be recorded carefully so
that on the next meeting to discuss the student’s IEP, there is ample data as
to which goals are being met, which goals need more work and which goals, if
any, need to be added to the student’s plan along with any updates to
curriculum modifications for the student.
These meetings happen before, during and after school hours,
and must always include the student’s parent. Usually the parents listen
carefully to the updates given and basically say ok to anything that is
suggested. They are encouraged to ask questions, but in general, they do not
challenge any suggestions made. Every once in a while there will be a parent
who is not satisfied with what he or she hears and will demand more from the
school, but this shouldn’t happen if the child’s needs are being adequately
met.
Other aspects of the special educator’s job include testing
students to see if they qualify for special education services, retesting those
in the special education program to see if they still qualify and work with any
number of additional school and educational professionals to meet the needs of
the students who have an IEP. While this can be a very time consuming and
difficult job, it can also be very rewarding for the teacher who gets the
chance to champion those students who would be left behind otherwise. The most
important thing that guides a special educator’s day is the fact that all
students can learn--some just learn differently than others.