13/09/13

My first lesson as an on line teacher

To be honest my first time went pretty well. I could manage to do everything what I planned and I could interact quite smoothly with the people who were in Nivala. In Haapajärvi the mics didn´t work, they could hear me but I couldn´t hear them.They were anyway using the chat (which is also good tool).We reviewed verbs with the help of the music and some videos. I used Prezi but not the dynamic way (AnyMeeting won´t allowed me): share the screen will make the system too slow. I used normal word documents and shared the screen.
I used some polls too. 3 people on 15 said that it was difficult. 12 said it was fun.
Let´s keep this on positive way. Receiving good feedback is stimulating to continue and do better. I knew the students before hand. All of them studied italian with me from the past 3-5 years and their level it´s different. However I think that this new contest made them quite egual: all of them were experience the online learning. The course was longer than usual: 3 hours. Technologies take time. I tried to cover different kind of learners and I hope the learning went through.



31/08/13

My blended course starts next week: thoughts

Here we go again. Next week, little by little, all the courses will start. And with them challenging. I am full of enthusiasm and I am ready to begin. The real new adventure will be this on line Italian course: we will use "AnyMeeting" as platform. I don´t know the program but it´s cheaper than Adobe Connect. I though that I could use Google hangouts (as my colleague suggested) but I have at the moment over 16 students so it´s not the best solution.I spoke a lot in this blog about the e-learning and the advantages that e-learning can give to the students. However me and the principal we decided don´t take away the social part of the learning.The students will be in the same room and once in a month I am going to visit them. I will then understand the deeply meaning of evaluation: how to evaluate myself at first and how to evaluate the learning. It will be interesting.
I will try to use all the tools what I learnt from my path in OAMK but I am also looking forward the feedback from the students at the end and during the course.
How evaluation in e-learning can be done? by evaluation I don´t mean numbers, but I mean "how can I know that students are learning". And also: using the computer is going to be (for some of them) distracting from learning the language? with Adobe Connect at the beginning I had the feeling that I was learning something new and not related strictly with my field of work (education). At the end I realized that I can use the IT competences also in my classes. Not only books, teachers material form teacher guide.  I started to use programs as Prezi and Popplet also during my classes. Why not try on line course?
My work situation is changing so I have to change according with it. This is only the first step.
this picture is from:
http://virtualschooling.wordpress.com/2010/02/21/webinar-recording-blended-learning-make-it-work-for-your-district/

27/05/13

Teaching internationally - My experience



MY FINNISH EXPERIENCE

I decided to take part to Civil Service Program after my Erasmus project in France.
The Civil Service Abroad projects was establish when Italy was chair country in European Commission back on 2003/2004. Finland was my second choice but Municipality of Ranua (Lapland) was faster comparing to Municipality of Murcia (Spain). It was the 27th April 2004 when I landed for my very first time in Finland. 

Before coming here in Finland I knew only few facts about this country: Santa Claus, sauna and coldness. I didn´t imagine how difficult is the language, I didn´t know how social service, schools, hospitals and many other public things work. I didn´t know the Finnish passion for berries and how well are used in the food. I didn´t know anything about Finnish music and for sure I wasn´t aware of Kaleva mythology. I have never tasted salmiakki, or ruisleipä, kalakukko or swam in avanto. The Northern countries are in general very unknown in Italy: when we study history or literature we focuse our attention on Central Europe area and also with the country with same family language. For me the geography position of Finland and the costs for travelling and living here  it didn´t help to get to know the country  a bit further.  Also the prejudice about the weather and the people stopped me to visit Norther countries until I decided to apply for Civil Service Abroad.
My first project included 3 months of working in a sending organization that has got similarities with the hosting one, 8 months in the hosting organization abroad and one month return to the sending organization, bringing what the volunteer learnt from the abroad experience[i]. The match between sending and host organization is not always easy but in my case I was lucky: I could work helping organizing events for local communities in Rome and in Ranua. In Rome I was a member of R.E.P.L.A.Y (Resources for European Projects and Learning Activities for Youth) organizing with them the trainings for the volunteers coming to Italy as EVS.
Right after it I decided to apply in the same municipality for the EVS – European Voluntary Service Program. This project lasted 1 year from 1st of February 2005 until 31st January 2006.  The EVS is one large part of the current YOUTH programme  Action II – and it aims to encourage individual/community development and intercultural understanding through the placement of individual volunteers abroad.
My projects goal was “teaching internationally”: it provided opportunities
for the locals to experience internationality, cultural diversity and new experiences in local level.
The main motive for hosting a volunteer was (and still is) to get new perspectives for the work done in the office. This is a good way to learn how similar kind of activities are organized in other countries and to get new ideas. My Ranua experience lasted 2 years and my Finnish experience is still going on.
I joined Ranua municipality's youth and sports department office and became a part of the working team. I gave my ideas and helped organizing new and old events and contributed  with my  knowledge to help and develop activities. At the same time I became a part of the small community.  I shared knowledge of my country, culture and life, and helped to make international issues a part of the lives of the locals.
Finland was  my third abroad experience: before coming (and decided to stay here) I lived 3 months in London (on my own, without projects) and four months in France as an Erasmus student. Despite the trips around Europe during my childhood and teenage, during my school carrier I didn´t have so much opportunities to go abroad and experience the country with locals. We didn´t either have a culture exchange with students of same age and classroom. The experiences in London and in France were so short that I didn´t have time to realize what was going on and what kind of challenging and changes they brought with them.
Finland ´s experience was stronger, full of surprises and learning.
The  Pre Departure Training with the other volunteers helped me in many issues including to avoid the “culture shock”, especially after realizing that I was going to Ranua and not to Rauma (I discover it 3 weeks before the departure).
I worked at the beginning mostly in the Youth House. To start to keep contact with the youngsters I decided to organize an Italian evening where they could taste some food, play some Italian games and also meet a native! The older ones took contact immediately (at least those who felt confidence with their English skills), the younger ones looked at me from far away and smile. Organizing events on my own it wasn´t easy at the beginning. In Italy we have completely different approach: most of the time we have to ask to the big boss for every single changes. In Finland things were going much smoothier. For the first time I felt I had freedom to do things without walking on other people toes!
Surely the different size of the 2 communities (Ranua and Rome) was an aspect that we should consider in this issue. It was easier in Ranua to find materials needed comparing to Rome, but in other hand in Rome there was much more choices if it was necessary to order some services.  In addition, it seemed for me that the number of the human resources used in Italy were too few for the amount of the work required. In Ranua also one good aspect was the different tasks that people had in organizing the same activities: this made the work smoothly and faster.

Meals timetable was also an other issue for me: how this people can actually have lunch at 11? I thought at the beginning. In Italy we do have lunch around 13, possibly at home and then go back to work at 15. In Finland I had to change this habit and start to eat at 11 if I wanted to have a proper meal during the day. At 13 it was coffee break (20´).
The time and the concept of to be on time surely I learnt here: there is not such a thing of fashionably late when you attend to a meeting or if you go for a date. Finns will start without you or – if on a date – when you will arrive nobody will be there for you anymore!
I also noticed the different concept of distances: in Finland (at least in Lapland) they would say that 80 km is NOT a long distance. In Rome 80 km means 2 hours and half in the car (depends on traffic!). I learnt here that distances are measure by km (like it should be) and  not by the time that you are spending sitting in the car.
The concept of distance I sometimes forget when I speak with my Italian family: if I say (for instance) that I will go to cottage to Siikajoki (50 km from my home) the first reaction will be:  so far away!!!

My approach to Finnish culture was with an open minded attitude: during my Pre Departure Training we worked on themes such as Inclusion, Communication, Racisms and Conflict Management. All these themes and the reflections what we did together helped me to avoid the culture shock.  The relationship with my co-workers and my boss - but most of it with the local community - was very good. Communication was a key word.  
I didn´t speak any Finnish when I arrived and my English skills weren´t that good either.
The Finnish culture at the beginning was very strange for me: taking away shoes when you go somewhere and not physical contact if you don´t know very well the person. “In Finland we have an area in front of us that we don´t cross with stranger people. So don´t hug or kiss like you do in Italy” said me my boss during my first week in here.  You should have seen my face when they invited me to take sauna….naked! For South Europe mentality this was one of the strangest issue about the culture and intimacy. Nowadays I laugh for my relatives and Italian friends when they come here and they are ashamed to go sauna naked with my husband… ;)
I worked also in schools during my project as helper in the English classroom in Ranua´s elementary schools. I remember how delighted I was when I went to Impiö´s school first time: red old building in the middle of nowhere surrounded by the snow….like in a fair tales! the teaching method in the school it was quite similar to the teaching method in my elementary school. The classroom was settled in the traditional way:  all the desk towards teacher direction, a blackboard and a earth ball on the teacher desk.  I noticed though one different: there was a piano in the classroom. The music is important and a part of education system in here. We had in my elementary school a piano: it was on the ground floor and only the music teacher could touch it. Instead in here every body could actually sit and play. 

Impiö, Asmunti and Ruona´s schools made me feel welcome in their learning environment and during this time I had chance to see a school daily routine from inside. I discovered also that in Finland special needs students are in the same class with the others.  I met a very special down syndrome child in Impiö, a mentally retired child in Asmunti and Ruona. The fact that these special needs students are in the same class with the others (are having the own teacher) I find very good: in this way whole class could learn the deep meaning of word INCLUSION. This approach requires some basics and practical elements that nowdays I could see but I couldn´t back then. It´s extremely important the existence of a  strong community behind that support the teacher work : municipality, health care, school and single family.
Finnish experience changed also my idea of family. I grown up in an nuclear and extended family with my cousins and uncles and aunts. Here mostly families are considered as a nuclear families and very seldom there is a contact with uncles and aunts. I met also for my first time big family (here we go again: what is big? what is small?) 16 members!

The people in Ranua were very kind with me and they surely welcome me as their very best. 9 years have past and I still have good memories. When I moved to Oulu I had anyway the “culture shock”: people didn´t have really time for me (who still didn´t speak finnish).  I remembered my first day as a cleaner here: early morning and 8 hours with my “talkative” colleague who said me “Huomenta” and “Nähdään huomenna” in the whole day.
In Ranua I took part also in summer camps as a youth leader. I had opportunities to work with older children and most of it youngsters. I discovered how important is to understand a language if you want to be part of a community.  People won´t always translate for you and translate jokes is not always the best. Learning Finnish wasn´t easy at all: my very first Finnish teacher didn´t speak a word of English so from that course I learn…nothing. I decided to learn it by myself  so I went to the local library to ask if they have a book where I can study Finnish. They didn´t. And here it comes an other aspect of Finnish culture: they gave me the money to buy the book. Me, a perfect stranger!!!! How often people find theirselves in such situation? I guess it is in the Finnish culture to trust people: it is clear to me that this people they live in such a contest where criminality is very low and honest is rewarded.
During my Pre- Departure Training we spoke about the “iceberg theory”: what I experienced in Ranua was something that were in superficial level (exactly those things that you can see easily). Nowadays I figured out so many other things that contributed to confuse me on my identity and culture belonging: nature of friendships, way how to raise children, perceptions, approaches to problem solving, gender roles, religious beliefs are only few examples. I feel sometimes that I don´t belong anymore to the Italian culture but in other hand I don´t belong either on this one. I am in a sort of limbo.
The gender roles and hierarchies are in my culture fixed stuffs: I find ridiculous for instance that we have a Ministry of Equal Opportunities in Italy. Before coming here it was just normal thing for me that in Parliament are some women that won´t be EVER prime minister or president. It was normal that a woman is not working in the construction business, it´s normal that is the man who owns the better job with better salary.
The gender roles and hierarchies are in my actual job considered as equal stuffs: I don´t have “to be on my knees” when I speak with my boss but still I have to respect him or her.
I think that in both countries (Finland and Italy) some people confuse the words respect and equality: if there is respect not necessary there is equality (in gender roles, see Italy in a common work community) and if there is equality not always there is respect.
The Finnish experience and the Italian background contribute to make my awareness to my identity as a challenging.  As a teacher I could find in my opinion the strength from both culture and use them.
In my job basically every student is a “foreigner ”especially when they come for their very first time to my class. I learnt that everybody has his own background even inside Finland there are regional differences.  
The international experiences are fundamental for the growing of  a person: from the teacher point of view I truly believe that the activities and programs that involve students from other culture are giving them the flexibility in the world of work. At least for me it was like that.
I think that every teacher has got awareness of global activities but to put strategies in act with foreigner students give them deeper meaning of the word “international”. During my experience in Ranua, for instance I figure out that the people were curious of me as much I was with them. I noticed how Finns are shy in an international contests and afraid to speak the language (English for example) but after breaking the ice I can see from their eyes that is actually fun. I remember for instance during the camps that youngsters tried to communicate with me using their poor English skills.  In my work contest back then and sometimes even now, people were speaking English with me (Assuming that I can´t any Finnish) and only later realizing that I can actually speak decent Finnish. They don´t matter they just continue to use their English skills to exercise.
I also noticed that Finns are ready to go deep in the culture if they want for instance open a business somewhere or even go for a vacation they are going to start to learn the local language in order to communicate.
As a teacher I think I am doing quite much during my courses to give them awareness on what Italy or be Italian means. Sometimes it´s enough my only present in the classroom cause (for instance) I cannot speak without moving my hands. The students find that really Italian.  I provide usually many extra material (videos, songs) and most of it I discuss with them every time there is an event happen in Italy (elections or national holidays for example). I tried to give them the part of the ice berg what I have got about Finland during 9 years in here. Teaching a language is not enough to learn about a country: this is the biggest learning what I have got from Finland. You need to know the history, the habits, the regional differences, the regulations of taxes, schools, and so many other issue that I m still processing.
I noticed when I came back home for a month break during my project (and also when I come back here now) how difficult for me is at the beginning to get use to Italy again. The personal area missing, the straight approach  for things, the relationship that Finns have with the nature itself. Of course when I come back in here it happens same: I miss the people close and smiling or chatting without a special reason (and no thinking if they are drunk), the weather, the warming from family and friends, the monuments and history that you can actually breathe in any corner of my country. It takes always couple days or a week but then, as usually, I settle again in the country.  After my project in France (even though I didn´t like at all) I had this thoughts that “here in Italy nothing changed. It´s me who is different. It´s me who change”. Abroad experiences gave me possibility to get to know myself even better. I notice one big different in education between the two countries: in Finland people continue to study and to improve their competencies even though they are on pension or have got a permanent job. In Finland is underlined the group spirit inside a company/organization/school : every year organized activities  are settle in order to help building a group (pikkujoulu, dinner at the restaurant, or somewhere in cottage etc etc).
In Italy the idea of education is restricted to the word of school: very few people continue to study and to improve their skills and competencies in a specific field, especially when they have got a permanent job. There are not organized by schools/companies/organizations any kind of activities that would improve the group spirit. 
I also noticed how much more competitive are women in Finland comparing to Italy. I know many Finnish women that sacrifices quite a lot their time with the family for the work. The interesting thing is that they are totally fine with that. Like it suppose to be.
My husband is at home with the kids. In my country, in small realities especially in south Italy the equality is something that is not in vocabulary.
In Ranua I had opportunity to meet other people from different country that were also participating to a project there.  I notice in general also nowadays that Finnish people are not always ready to take a foreigner to work if they can choose between them and a local. I guess this is the logic also in my country and it would take decades before it changes. I noticed anyway that with Italians, Finns are quite  open and they don´t have prejudices if  I compare with other nationalities (such as Russians or people from African countries).
In Italy is the same: unfortunately  I can say that we have a lot of prejudices with poorer countries and we see richer countries as a myth. In this contest the press plays the role of building those prejudices and myths.
I define my relationship with foreigner people quite good. I don´t think I have prejudices or difficult to interact with them . I am actually really curious. These studies in international contest were one of the best: beside different strategies that people has to interact between each other there are culture backgrounds that mix again the ingredients. The use of not native language might cause difficulties and frustrations at times  but I believe that if we want to communicate and find agreements we don´t even need to have a common language.  In this studies I met wonderful people and sometimes I needed to know how to read them.
My project in Ranua taught me that: it´s a fact that is frustrating don´t speak the native language. I did feel outside sometimes. Communication is something that we learn before the language itself (think about babies! they use other way to communicate with their mothers!) .
As a teacher I would like to promote as much as possible the international activities: going
abroad give so many new prospective in many issue and refers to the learning in daily activities, in work, family, leisure etc. It is mainly learning by doing. Non formal and informal learning enables young people to acquire essential competences and contributes to their personal development, social inclusion and active citizenship, thereby improving their employment prospects.
The European Voluntary Service and all other Youth in Action Programs are complementary to the formal education and training system.
My project  in Ranua was really educative: education took place in a diverse range of environments and situations, giving me and to the organization the flexibility necessary in field of work.
Meeting an international group have been one of my duty during my projects in Ranua and during my experience as a trainer for CIMO. I learnt a lot also during my pre departure training and middle term evaluation. I think the difficult part at the beginning is to find the balance and break the ice with the group. Listening for the expectations of the entire course and also be ready to possibly changes.  International groups might a challenging but with the correct attitude teacher will succeed. I think one important thing that I would keep in mind is the group dynamic. The icebreaking activities are the most important for building a group and create a learning environment that help the students to build that trust necessary for learning.

In Ranua, in my actual job and also in my training I used quite much resources from salto-youth.net, activities and games.  At the moment my groups are from Finland but I consider them as “international groups” cause of my italianity.
Usually I give myself simple rules:
-         enjoying the lesson and the group: try to have a connection with them. It doesn´t matter how long it will take.
-         Respect their culture and backgrounds. Joke about only your own culture and about yourself.
-         Make the students work together possibly same level. They won´t get bored or it won´t feel too difficult.
-         Exercises, activities and games they have to concern the theme of the day
-         Give always constructive feedback.
One challenge that instructors face is how to design a course so the material engages students' prior knowledge and their skills, whether the intent is to build on that knowledge, to interrogate it, or to situate new ways of thinking.  When students bring diverse backgrounds, course design is particularly challenging.  On the other hand, attending to student differences provides valuable clarity for both students and instructors; and drawing on student differences multiplies the teaching and learning exchange in a class.

Conclusion: it´s difficult to write in 10 pages what I learnt from my Finnish experience. I tried my best. Maybe one day I will find again my identity : at the moment I really feel between Finnish culture and Italian culture. I don´t know if my students could see it and I don´t know either if it an advantage or disadvantage for them.
I just hope that I can give them the will to explore my country, the  passion for the language and the culture.








[i] So the project is this way: 3 months(sending country) + 8 months  (hosting country)+ 1 month (return to the sending country). For more information about the program www.replay.cemea.it

24/05/13

Closing Seminar part 2

 Closing seminars bring up usually good and bad feelings. The good feelings here is that we could again produce as a group terrific strategies about problem solving. We had to discuss and find solutions about these theme today:
ICT usage in the school > the group was pointing out a very practical issue. Nowadays there are so many server and platform that you need to log in that it would be better also for school to simply things. Teachers in this way they would have possibility to actually enjoy the use of computer for teaching purpose. The reality is that most of the teachers they don´t enjoy to us computers in classroom cause it´s time consuming. 
Competency based education and Process vs product > what is the dilemma here? the number of students that have to go throught to the institution, which actually pays a lot of  euros and still  how are we able to prove that students that are graduate they have the competences and skills?
Educational politics: cutting the working places and studying possibility all the time demotivate teachers. What teachers can do to try to save the system from inside?
We came out with these solutions: 


Cut backs in vocational schools and university of applied sciences level from the teachers’ point of view

PROBLEMS:
-          Quality of graduate students skills/knowhow is decreasing à cannot “fail” students no longer à faster pace in getting graduates, because the budget comes from graduate students
-          Contact lecture hours are being cut down
-          Teachers’ motivation deteriorating, because of the uncertainty


SOLUTIONS:
-          tuition fees! BUT not too expensive
o   in case a student prolongs his/her studies, the payment would be more expensive (penalty payment)
-          inclusiveness not always the best solution à grants for good students
-          teachers’ sponsorship – companies/organisations would became teacher’s sponsors
-          teachers’ training; in the area which would support their teaching, become more skilled teachers i.e. improving the product
-          online teaching, case studies or such outside contact hours
-          sell products! Educational export

 Tuition fees are really normal in many countries (including mine): but here it seems to be something extremely unfair. The reaction from the ivet students was really intresting: some of them came out with really intresting quetions and the discussion around it was exttremely inspiring. Pity that we had so few time.
Last but not the least part of our seminar today was with Blair.
He spoke about our future as teacher and the possibiluity that we could do research. The researching is something that always have been intresting me, but AGAIN I feel left so behind by my personal study path from the past. I don´t have contacts, I don´t have a theme and  for sure I don´t have financial support to do research.
But yes, I would like to research  A LOT. 

I will miss this group with all my heart, but in other hand a group has a life time and this was just one year. When we are in a terrific group like this one, one seems to be very short time.
It´s has been a fantastic journey. I am going to use this blog again in the future, starting reflecting in my work what I do and why I do that way. Why. Why. Why. 
I would like to thank my family for supporting me during this time. Without them I wouldn´t have possibility to go back again in lifelong learning enviroment. I did really need and want this so badly. 
grazie <3

23/05/13

Closing Seminar part 1

I started my morning with these two picture: where I am now? I am at the end of this fantastic journey. It has been challengings at time and I have been facing situations (at personal level) later that make me distract from the main focus. Linda and Päivi were using the word FOCUS today and I have after these studies the energy to focus more and more on my next target. I won´t stop my studies here with these school. I want to get further education, get those competences that I can document and add to my portfolio. We spoke about evaluating the competences with numbers: I found that really limited.  (...continue...). Some teachers measure the competences by the time, I wonder how this is going to change. It´s true that I can document my competences throught this blog, I am just worry that this is not taking as serious as it should be.
I am looking forward about tomorrow.







16/05/13

Teaching Training Closing Seminar

The Teaching Training Chapter closed for me today. It was interesting session, especially because I could hear others people experience.
I was very lucky with my practice: the relation with the group and the tutor, the close distance (not so long trip for once) and also possibility to try different teaching method.
We started with a swot analysis and give grades on feelings for general experience from 1 to 4. I would give mine 3-4: I think I still have some weakness.
We discussed about other issues too, going deeply in what we did.
What we learn from the observation of the students and other teachers?
For me was the group dynamics: to see my students hanging around with the same people it was good tool to use int he right moment. especially when we were talking about communication. Other people also mentioned useful stuffs, such as:
- learning to be prepare for difficult personalities
- learning how taxing actual lesson might be
The tricky part in the seminar was: how to assess the learning, meaning not from the final test.
In my case I didn´t assess all the time the learning. I think I was actually seen that from their participation and enthusiasm on the activities. Most of the people had to use quizzes at the end of the lesson or give them at home homework and check in the classroom. exercises, practical tasks, giving them number...We spoke about this last autumn a lot.
So at the end my teaching practise was great. I felt good about it, I still feel so.

07/05/13

The ideal classroom - Educational Science closing seminar

What is the ideal classroom settings and place arrangement in 21 century?
In order to answer that question I think we should consider several aspects.
1) age of the group and size
2) material and space what a teacher would need
3) the activities that a teacher would be doing in that space.

The exercise was fun. Pity that we had only 10´ to produce something but now that I have time I think that having the perfect learning environment is almost impossible to have. In our presentations we all of us had this teacher center classroom instead of students. Many time classroom are arranged that way: I work in 7 different schools and most of them have (what I call) the top 3:
teacher, board (On the teacher side) and desk (Better if individual desks).

In my ideal classroom I wanted to have a round table built from singles one. In this way is easier to separate them during test time for instance. The round table will help the collaborative learning.
Each desk surfice is made by a screen touch computer connected with the screen touch teacher computer. People don´t need to look at the board they have only to look down. In every station there headphones where students can listen as much as they need dialogues if they are learning languages.

In a corner of the class is going to be an inside garden (preferably) next to the big window. All the material is done with ecological material.
At the end of the class there is an area with big pillows and a library shelf with the classics of international literature. This idea comes from my experience with some adult students that actually they didn´t read at school any classic. I think it´s time to introduce that kind of aspect in Finnish school system.

In one wall is going to be an interactive window where every day come different art pictures from all over the word (Picasso, Leonardo and many others) in order to let the students to get to know a bit about art.

So actually my class is a language/culture lab that can be used with adult and young students that need to learn a foreigner language. Educational Science course was well organized and the today session very useful. The second block of the session was "try to guess to which theorist a classroom drawing belong to". I did miss in the first drawing the TV (small and in the corner) so my guess Montessori was wrong.
The second drawing I was correct. The third and fourth Skinner and Piaget.
Between all these theorists probably what I am bringing with me the idea of how important is the collaborative learning. I also enjoyed very much the idea of teaching video and comments there. I was looking for that kind of experiences when I started these studies and so I did.

In here some pictures of my ideal classroom.





17/04/13

Let´s talk about inclusion - Personal Reflection on Special Needs Students

Picture from http://www.jssa.org/services/specneeds


"For me, inclusion is about a community where everyone is recognized for their differences and everyone is recognized as belonging – not only in our schools, but in our communities."
Dr. Joseph Petner, Educator


Special needs students are those people that "may need support in the physical, cognitive, emotional or social areas of development or in the development of skills for varying periods of time. It is important to identify and define the child’s individual opportunities to act in different environments and in different educational situations and to also define related need for support and guidance. The aim is to prevent the child’s need for support from accumulating and becoming prolonged."

Finnish system works cause the cooperation between municipalities, schools and health care is in harmony. The children are followed since early stage: earlier the problem is identify bigger is the possibility to act on time.
At education level, special needs students have same rights that not special needs ones. This includes the possibility for them to get an education and a degree exactly as same as others. The students must provide an IEP (Individiual Education Plan) a pedagogical written document based on national curriculum where is written the provision of education and other support in accordance with the decision on special support issued for the pupil.

At Vocational level this plan must set out details of the qualification to be completed, the national core curriculum or the requirements of the competence-based qualification observed in education and training, the scope of the qualification, the individual curriculum drawn up for the student, grounds for providing special education and training, special educational and student welfare services required for studying as well atr

One issue that came out after reading some of the reflection paper from my fellows teachers students collegues it was: what is the support that special needs students got after the ended schools?
I truly believe that people in general should work on the word of "inclusion".
Inclusion is the key word of Finnish system: with this strategy they give possibility to special needs students to partecipate and learn in same classes with others. Therefore special needs students develop skills they canuse in and out of classroom.
Inclusion education system has inside 2 different kind of approaches:
1) Full time inclusion: is not world wide accepted: The students with special needs are always educated alongside students without special needs, as the first and desired option while maintaining appropriate supports and services. In wider point of view the "inclusion"is a concept that the whole class learn.
2) Part time or regular inclusion: the special needs students participate for several hours to the activity of the class: nearly all of the day, or at least for more than half of the day. For this kind of approach maybe more suitable is the word "integration" than "inclusion".
Both approaches requires some basics and practical elements in a classroom. It´s also extremely important to have a strong community behind that support the work of teachers that need to create an enviroment  "diversity" is not a minus but a "plus". In this issue Finland wins again. The cooperation between the municipalities, schools and health care centres helps to build a community around everybody not only around special needs people.
According to Wikipedia, teachers use a number of techniques to help build classroom communities:
  • Using games designed to build community
  • Involving students in solving problems
  • Sharing songs and books that teach community
  • Openly dealing with individual differences by discussion
  • Assigning classroom jobs that build community
  • Teaching students to look for ways to help each other
  • Utilizing physical therapy equipment such as standing frames, so students who typically use wheelchairs can stand when the other students are standing and more actively participate in activities
  • Encouraging students to take the role of teacher and deliver instruction (e.g. read a portion of a book to a student with severe disabilities)
  • Focusing on the strength of a student with special needs
The inclusion positive aspects are quite many and easy to find: benefits for everybody, easier riching IEP goals,post schools adjustmens.
Challenging for the inclusions of special needs students in normal classes are quite many and include educators, administrators and parents. As a parent, if my son would be special needs students I might be worried that he will be ridiculed by other students, or be unable to develop regular life skills in an academic classroom.

According to UNESCO, inclusion “is increasingly understood more broadly as a reform that supports and welcomes diversity amongst all learners.” Under this broader definition of inclusion, steps should also be taken to eliminate discrimination and provide accommodations for all students who are at a disadvantage because of some reason other than disability.


References:

UNESCO (2009) Policy Guidelines on Inclusion in Education. UNESCO: Paris. http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0017/001778/177849e.pdf

All publications about special needs students and their inclusion in Finland are retreived on:
http://www.european-agency.org/country-information/finland/publications-fi