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Children with special needs may require extra attention, and more guidance than other students. They may also need more one on one time with a teacher.
it depends what "special needs" they have.
No they do not need to get them.
Special Educational Needs Coordinator
Special Educational Needs Inclusion Service..
Peggy Dettmer has written: 'Consultation, collaboration, and teamwork for students with special needs' -- subject(s): Educational consultants, Special education, Teaching teams, Education, Children with disabilities
Special needs students require individualized accommodations, modifications or adaptationsæbased on what thieræspecial needsæor disabilities may be at the time.
Fern Snart has written: 'The integration of students with special needs into educational settings' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Children with disabilities, Education, Mainstreaming in education
Inclusion in education is an approach to educating students with special educational needs. Under the inclusion model, students with special needs spend most or all of their time with non-disabled students. Implementation of these practices varies. Schools most frequently use them for selected students with mild to severe special needs.Inclusive education differs from previously held notions of 'integration' and 'mainstreaming', which tended to be concerned principally with disability and 'special educational needs' and implied learners changing or becoming 'ready for' or deserving of accommodation by the mainstream. By contrast, inclusion is about the child's right to participate and the school's duty to accept the child. Inclusion rejects the use of special schools or classrooms to separate students with disabilities from students without disabilities. A premium is placed upon full participation by students with disabilities and upon respect for their social, civil, and educational rights. Inclusion gives students with disabilities skill they can use in and out of the classroom,"Students learn the importance of individual and group contributions and develop valuable life skills that are often unexplored in less inclusive settings" (Tapasak 216). Tapasak, Renee and Christine Walther-Thomas. "Evaluation of a First-Year Inclusion Program: Student Perceptions and Classroom Performance." Remedial and Special Education 20 (1999): 216-225.Fully inclusive schools, which are rare, no longer distinguish between "general education" and "special education" programs; instead, the school is restructured so that all students learn together.
A child with special need can find help with their education be hiring a "Learning Assistant". Other methods can include attending a "Special Needs" school.
Kidscope toys is a great company to get educational toys for children with special needs. They have a large line of therapeutic toys as well as educational ones. They are more geared toward Autistic kids but provide for any child in need.
Yes absolutely ! Homeschooling helps the special needs children the same as it helps other students.