The Problem
In our rapidly moving culture, special education students,
diagnosed with ADD or ADHD (Attention Deficit Disorder or Attention
Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) are an ever-increasing challenge for
teachers. Having taught in some capacity for nearly 40 years and being a
parent of an active little boy, I have studied these conditions with
immediate personal interest.
Holding Their Attention
Early in my work with the attentionally challenged, I observed that
if the learning activity were engaging enough, many of these students
could hold attention for long periods. Special Education students
diagnosed with ADD or ADHD often have the ability to attend for long
periods working with computers or video games. I wondered, could the
problem lie more in the pace of the learning activity?
Give Them What They Need
Subsequently, I began to provide activities in my classroom that
had some of the same qualities of the immediate response achieved in
those computerized attention-holders. One of the most successful of
these was the excavation of fossils.
The Setup
Fossil excavation was a 6-week class - more of a club, really ? in
which students excavated a real fossil fish from a soft rock matrix.
This time the class was made up of many special education students with
various learning challenges, especially ADHD. The outcome of the class
was remarkable.
Getting Their Interest and Attention
We started with a sort of guessing game involving fossils hidden in
velvet bags and moved quickly into individual excavation of the
fossils. Within minutes, my work was done; the students worked
independently for the remainder of the two-hour class. My hardest work
that day was to enforce clean-up-the students simply didn?t? t want to
stop working.
Tools And Supplies
The only tools needed for this activity were small screw
drivers-the sort that are available from any hardware store in a set of
increasing sizes beginning with an eye-glass tool . I also provided
magnifiers of varying types. The most sought after were the dissecting
microscopes, which gave the individual the best view of the fragile
fossil. However, much of the work could be easily accomplished using the
naked eye or a magnifier in a stand, just to leave the hands free.
And Then There Are the Behavioral Challenges
I was presented with a new challenge about halfway into the second
class: a behaviorally disruptive student who had been removed from
another class. I did what I could to introduce him to our work and bring
him up to speed. His initial work was little more than digging a hole
through his rock, paying little attention to the fossil it contained.
Success!
Then a wonderful thing happened. Another boy, a challenging special
education student who generally had little academic success, began to
teach. You see, this boy was enthralled with digging out the fossil and
he was having incredible success. He single-handedly took over and my
work was done.
Deepa Singh
Business Developer
Web Site:-http://www.gyapti.com
Blog:- http://gyapti.blogspot.com
Email Id:-deepa.singh@soarlogic.com
Business Developer
Web Site:-http://www.gyapti.com
Blog:- http://gyapti.blogspot.com
Email Id:-deepa.singh@soarlogic.com
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