Mainstreaming

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The mainstreaming or inclusion of special education students in American schools today remains yet a controversial debate. There’re the arguments that teachers tend to spend more time attending to the needs of special education students, thus not enough time with regular students, and also that forced inclusion—as expressed by Southwest Educational Development Laboratory, the nonprofit research and development company, “leaves classroom teachers without the resources, training, and other supports necessary to teach students with disabilities in their classrooms” (SEDL, 1995). People who support mainstreaming—as expressed by on Raven’s Guide—argue that removing disabled students from the regular classroom stigmatizes them and often fails to improve their academic performance (Gorski, 2014), and as Kelly Gorski—author and special education activist—expresses, “some students who are mainstreamed can learn in a regular education environment and then seek external assistance through learning support teachers; other students, however, with more immediate needs, cannot or will not be their own self-advocates and therefore, help will be given too little too late” (Gorski, 2014). It remains a controversial and complex debate because arguably, both sides of the argument have plausible premises for their opinions.
For certain, parents, teachers, schools—and other parties pertaining to education, alike—want to teach and help students, and they want to create the best and most efficient learning environments possible, thus—and due to this factor alone—today’s education system isn’t a permanent one, but consists of constant changes and adaptations and trials—researches and surveys and tests are constantly being conducted in a continuous pursu...

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... their development, causing them to backtrack and seek out external tutoring and education. James M. Lang—author of On Course: A Week-by-Week Guide to Your First Semester of College Teaching and associate professor in English—wrote in his book that “teachers often spend too much time worrying about “coverage”—what they will teach—when putting together their syllabi” (Lang, 2010). Teachers are too concerned about keeping up with the syllabus and covering every topic on time that they often move on to next the topic, leaving the students who still haven’t fully learned the context in the dark. Differentiated teaching and the mainstreaming of special education students can help new and old teachers develop the ability to teach effectively and adjust to the specific needs of different students, and these skills will furthermore make them better, more effective teachers.

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