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  • 7/30/2019 Curriculum Approach Compatible With an Inclusive Ed. Model

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    Is a Functional CurriculumApproach Compatible with an

    Inclusive Education Model?Gary M. ClarkA nagging question for rnany special education teachers at elementary, middle school, and high school levels is the question of what to teach. What is most importantfor students to know or be able to do both now and in the future?

    Instruction has always involved deciding on what to teach (curriculum) and how to teach it (methods, materials, and activities). Special education in its earliest yearwas left to develop its own discipline around both of these areas. As a separate educational system, it went about this in a variety of ways, but most often it started withthe general education curriculum as a base and modified it to fit the expected performance levels of the students. Most of the modifications were accomplished byadapting instruction; for example, devising new ways of teaching reading (Fernald method or the Gillingham approach) and mathematics (Cuisenaire rods, abacas, etc.)or new materials, and not by modifying the content itse1f.

    Looking back, this approach to academics was a logical first step. Many of the children placed in special education classes during those early years had mild levels oflearning and behavior disorders. Hopes were high that specialized methods and materials could remediate their difficulties and he1p them achieve in the generaeducation curriculum with other children, although at a slower pace. As special education identification and placement began to include children with moderate tosevere disabilities, the next logical step as to consider some changes not only in how children with special needs are taught, but also in what they are taught. The term

    functional academics was used early on to reflect the shift away from traditional academics.

    In the 1970s, the field of special education moved from being the sole provider of special education content and instructional strategies and techniques to being a systemthat would provide and support a continuum of educational options. Most of the options developed, however, placed the responsibility for curriculum back in the handsof general education. Before long those early questions regarding the generalizability and relevance of traditional academics for students, with moderate and severedisabilities evolved into the current questions regarding functional outcomes for all students with disabilities.

    Functional outcome of education-that is the ability to live and work as a part of the community satisfactorily may or may not result from traditional academic curricula.What makes it so difficult for parents and educators to deal with this fact is that the idea of providing a more functional curriculum for more functional outcomes seemsto preclude full inclusion, especially given today's increased emphasis on academics in public education. This special focus section ofTEACHINExceptional Childrenlooks at a functional curriculum approach and how it might work within an inclusive educational context, to intervene and redirect aggression used to communicateneeds, and to encourage participation from learners who either verbally or nonverbally refuse to participate as a means of controlling their environment. By using acollaborative method of problem solving, these teachers feel they have been better able to find solutions to these difficulties than if they had been trying to problemsolve alone.

    After a trip to the local grocery store, studentsPrepare lunch using the items purchase

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    Future Implications

    As this program demonstrates, the thrust for including learners with disabilities in thegeneral education classroom should not stop with learners who exhibit only milddisabilities. Learners with multiple disabilities can also benefit from programs that increase the amount of quality interactions they have with their peers withoutdisabilities. Although current schoolwide involvement in this inclusionary program is still limited, additional possibilities for expansion to other classrooms and settingsexist.

    For expansion to be possible, it is essential that general and special educators work together to discover methods that can be used to teach all learners side by side in a

    productive setting. By doing so, not only will the learners with disabilities benefit by becoming active participants in the class activities, but so may other learnerbenefit who are deemed at risk for school success. Cooperative group work and team-teaching are efficient ways in which the individual needs of all learners can be mewithout sacrificing quality instruction.

    Beyond the scope of the classroom, there exist sociocultural implications of inclusion. In our society, people often view learners with disabilities as needing help,always receiving and rarely giving Through the use of cooperative learning and inclusion, the contrary can be realized as each member of the group contributes to thefunction and uniqueness of that group. With an increase in inclusionary practices, perhaps the next generation, on will learn to value all people as participating membersin society instead of as separate groups of givers and receivers. To promote such social changes, future endeavors to create programs that destratify and desegregatecurrent homogeneous classrooms should be encouraged.

    References

    Cohen,E. (1986). Designing group work New York: Teachers College Press.

    Putnam,J., (1993) Cooperative Learning and strategies for- inclusion. Celebrating diversity in the classroom. Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brooks.

    Schaffner, B., & Buswell,B. (1991). Opening doors: Strategies for including all students in regular education. Colorado Springs, CO: Peak Parent Center, Inc.

    Melissa M. Jones (CEC Chapter#11l) was a Special Education Teacher for learners with multiple disabilities, Clermont Northeastern Intermediate School, and nowsupervises programs for learners with severe behavior handicaps, Clermont County Office of Education, Cincinnati, Ohio. Laura Little Carlier, General EducationTeacher, Clermont Northeastern Intermediate School, Batavia, Ohio. The work the authors began, including learners with disabilities in general education, continues

    with the help of a team of exceptional general and special educators.

    Copyright 1995 CEC.

    Creating Schools for All Our StudentsWhat 12 schools have to say?

    A product of the Working Forum on Inclusive Schools provides an inside look at how 12 schools from different communities are making the inclusive concept work.

    School-based teams composed of teachers, principals, parents, classroom aides, support services personnel, other administrators, school board members, and union andassociation representatives carne together at a working forum in March 1994 to explore what is being done at the elementary, middle, and secondary levels. TheWorking Forum was sponsored by 10 national associations including AASA, AFT, CEC, The Council of Great City Schools, NAESP, NASBE, NASI)SE, NASSI?,

    NEA, and NSBA.

    Chapters

    1. Inclusive Schools and How They Begin2. A Sense of Community3. Collaboration, Collegiality, and

    Partnership4. Improved Learning through

    Innovative Instruction5. Leadership in an inclusive School

    6. How We Can All Work Together toCreate More Inclusive Schools

    P5064, 80 pp., $18.50 CEC Members $13.00Discounts are available on multiple copies. Call for information.

    CEC Publications Sales, Dept. K501381920 Association Drive, Reston, VA 22091-1589800/232-7323; FAX 703/264-1637

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    What Is a Functional Curriculum Approach?

    A variety of writers have defined functional curricula, or what is sometimes referred to as we skills instruction (cf. Brolin, 1991, Brown et al., 1979; Clark, 1991Cronin & Patton, 1993; Falvey, 1989; Mithaug, Martin, & Agran, 1987). While there is a common theme imbedded in these and other perspectives described in theliterature, there is still a possibility of miscommunication when the term functional is used.

    The basic notion of functionality implies the usefulness of something or user unless for somebody. Given that, it is clear that what is functional for one person is notnecessarily functional for another person or what is a functional use for an object in one situation may not be functional in another situation. A cane may be functionalfor a person who needs support for mobility, but it has no usefulness for someone who does not need it. Likewise, the cane can be functional as a support tool forwalking but without function in swimming. For our purposes, functional curriculum must have a specific context and focus for children and youth with disabilitiesThe context and focus arise from the need of all persons with disabilities to have the life skills to make a successful transition from school to adult living (Brolin, 1991Clark & Kolstoe, 1990; Halpern, 1985; Polloway, Patton, Epstein, & Smith, 1989). From this perspective, the concept can be defined as follows:

    A functional curriculum approach is a way of delivering instructional content that focuses on the concepts and skills needed by all students with disabilities in the areasof personal-social, daily living, and occupational adjustment. What is considered a functional curriculum for any one student would be the content (concepts and skills)included in that student's curriculum or course of study that targets his or her current and future needs. These needs are based on a nondiscriminatory, functionalassessment approach.

    How Do You Determine What Is Functional Knowledge or a Functional Skill?

    The answer to this question depends upon the answers to a variety of related questions:

    Is the instructional content of the student's current educational placement appropriate for meeting the student's personal -social, daily living, and occupationaadjustment needs? That is,

    Does the content focus on necessary knowledge and skills to function as independently as possible in the home, school, or community?

    Does the content provide a scope and sequence for meeting future needs?

    Do the students parents think the content is important for both current and future needs?

    Does the student think the content is important for both current and future needs?

    Is the content appropriate for the student's chronological age and current intellectual, academic, or behavioral performance level(s)?

    What are the consequences to the student of not learning the concepts and skills inherent in the current educational placement?

    As these questions imply, the determination of functionality with a specific focus on transition to adult living does not depend on a particular point of view about wherea student is educated. A student in a segregated, self-contained special school or class may not be receiving a functional curriculum any more than a student in aninclusive education model. This is not to say that there may not be positive benefits associated with various current placement alternatives. If those benefits do notinclude life skills instruction at all or in sufficient amount, however, the educational placement is not providing an appropriate functional curriculum. If parents andstudents choose general education as the desirable primary or even exclusive placement, a functional curriculum must be planned within that context. The Special Focusarticle by Field, LeRoy, and Rivera gives an example of a student centered functional curriculum determination.

    Current functional curriculum models focus direct1v on knowledge and skills that need to be taught and leave the delivery procedures and instructional environmentdecisions to users. Some of the better known models include the Community-Referenced Curriculum (Smith & Schloss, 1988), Community Living Skills Taxonomy(Dever, 1988), Hawaii Transition Project (1987), and Life Centered Career Education model (Brolin, 1991). Of these, the Life Centered Career Education (LCCE)model by Brolin is probably the best example of a comprehensive functional curriculum model across age levels and the most completely developed curriculum

    package for secondary school teachers (Brolin, 1992).

    The LCCE model is organized around 22 competencies needed for adult living. The competencies are clustered across three basic domains: Daily Living,Personal-Social, and Occupational Guidance and Preparation. Each of the 22 competencies can be broken down into subcompetencies that may be appropriate forindividualized education program (IEP) goals or short term objectives. The curriculum content domains of the LCCE model, as well as the other models that areavailable, are directly on target for the planning of transition services mandated for students 16 years of age and older under Public Law 101-476 (IDEA), theIndividuals with Disabilities Education Act of 1990.

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    The curriculum development committee met regularly to provide innovative options for students with learning disabilities, mental disabilities, and behavior disorders.

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    When Do You Start a Functional Curriculum?

    Special educators who value Life skills education have long held the view that a functional curriculum for children with disabilities shouldbegin formally when these children enter the public schools (Kokaska & Brolin, 1985; Clark, 1979), The Division on Career Developmentand Transition of The Council for Exceptional Children established its position on early beginnings with a formal policy statementreflecting the view that many concepts and skills must be introduced at the awareness and exploration stages for elementary school childrenin order to make the most of instructional efforts during the secondary school years (Clark, Carlson, Fisher, Cook, & D' Alonzo, 1991). TheSpecial Focus article by Beck, Broers, Hogue, Ship stead, and Knowlton demonstrates the possibilities of this practice for elementary schoolchildren in grades two through four.

    Who Needs a Functional Curriculum?

    All children and youth in public schools today should be provided an education that is specific enough to provide them with the knowledgeand skills they need to perform age-appropriate roles while in school and to meet the demands of being family members, citizens, andworkers as adults. As early as 1979, the Carnegie Council of Policy Studies in Higher Education stated in an educational reform paper thatthe public education approach to teaching basic skills and academic content was successful with only about two-thirds of the school

    population. Few would argue that a large proportion of the population of students who are at risk and many students with disabilities havedifficulties using what schools provide for successful adult adjustment. Follow up studies of former special education students, includingthe majority of students referred to as having mild disabilities, support the Carnegie study contention that another approach should beconsidered.

    Many teachers who are assigned to resource rooms or collaborative programs either do not consider their students as needing functionalcurricula or perform their roles within whatever curricular offerings exist without concerning themselves with curriculum alternatives. Somestates using non categorical teacher endorsements complicate the issue by differentiating mild/moderate teaching endorsements fromsevere/profound teaching endorsements according to the different curricula used with the students in the two groups. That is, a functionalcurriculum is typically identified with students with severe disabilities, and all other students (.e., those with mild to moderate disabilities)are assumed to be able to benefit sufficiently from the general education curriculum.

    Logic, research data, and now the IDEA mandate to at least address functional curriculum needs through transition planning for studentsage 16 and above all lead to only one answer to the question of who needs a functional curriculum: All students with disabilities need such acurriculum, but each must be determined individually.

    How Do a Functional Curriculum and a Traditional Curriculum Relate to OneAnother?

    For some people, the relationship between a functional life skills curriculum and academics is a practical question. For others, it is aphilosophical question that might be phrased more direct1v as "What is the place of a functional curriculum approach in the context of theinclusive education movement?" It is easier to deal with these questions if a distinction is made between a functional curriculum andfunctional curriculum approach. The term functional curriculum, gests a document or written guide t is ~n place and used for all students i

    particular setting. While this could the case, the definition given earlie implies that it could also be a specific program of instruction orcourse study for an inc5vidual student. It n--be tied to a group instructional setting in fact, it is used for most or all of the s dents in thatsetting, but this is not necessarily the case. lf it is tied to self-contained or separate delivery alternative, a high degree of responsibility

    placed on special education teachers demonstrate that the outcomes are no only satisfying to the students and the families, but alsoacceptable and des able outcomes of the school's commitment to providing quality, integrated educational programs.

    A functional curriculum approach, the other hand, suggests that functional content is prescribed on the IEP but that it has no restrictionsregarding the type or location of instructional delivery. This perspective permits educators and families to look first to what a childsinstructional content should be before determining where and how it should be provided. The functional curriculum approach places a highdegree of responsibility on both general and special educators to make sure that t instruction is delivered effectively and with integrity,regardless of the delivery environment(s).

    At present, the relationship between a functional curriculum approach and the traditional academic curriculum is a tenuous one. A lot is

    going on in pub education that sends both discouraging and encouraging messages. The discouraging message is that general education ismoving toward a mo rigorous academic model and that effective schools and outcomes-based/performance-based education will focusfostering higher achievement scores the traditional subject matter areas and increased skills in higher-order making and problem-solving.The encouraging message is that some educators are viewing outcomes-based education more broadly than as simply increasing, academicachievement scores and higher-order thinking. They are advocating functional, generalizable skills for responsible citizenship as the endsand academic skills as the means to those ends. This broader view of outcomes for education provides special educators and families whowant a functional approach a window of opportunity lo choose to be a part of a single educational system that takes responsibility for allstudents.

    How Can Schools Develop a Functional Curriculum Approach and Promote InclusiveEducation?

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    Even a functional curriculum delivery system that is based on a special class model can incorporate many aspects of inclusion. The verynature of life skills instruction depends upon age-appropriate skills and experiences with age peers who do not have disabilities. A transition

    perspective of preparing students to leave school and assume adult roles depends upon real-life, community-based skills and experiences forlearning and generalization. This means that a high1y inclusive model can organize and present instruction together with students withoutdisabilities, but it mu5t meet the functional, community based needs of all students. Functional skills instruction must be planneddeliberately and implemented with families and general education teachers. Implementation of this type of planning and collaboration

    becomes increasingly more difficult and complex as students move from elementary to high school settings. This may affect both the natureand the quality of both functional skills acquisition and inclusion.

    Three ways of developing and implementing a functional curriculum within an inclusive education philosophy are presented in the threeSpecial Focus articles that follow. The three approaches reflect a "bottom-up" model, a student-centered model, and a "top-down" model.Each article illustrates not only what can be done but also what has been done in certain situations and settings. Each reflects a high degreeof commitment to the notion of the importance of functional life skills and integration outcomes. Your task as a reader is to determinewhich one, if any, fits your situation and decide what you can replicate or adapt to suit your needs.

    References

    Brolin, D. E. (1991). Life centered career education: A competency based approach (3, d ed.). Reston. VA: The Council for Exceptional Children.

    Brolin, D. E. (1992). Life centered career education (LCCE) curriculum program. Reston, VA: The Council for Exceptional Children.

    Brown, L., Branston, M., Hamre-Nietupski, S., Punpian, L, Certo, N., & Gruenwald, L. (1979). A strategy for developing chronological age appropriate andfunctional curricular content for severely handicapped adolescents and young adults. Journal of Special Education, 13(1), 81-90.

    Carnegie Council of Policy Studies in Higher Education. (1979). Giving youth a better chance Options for education, work, and service. San Francisco:Jossey-Bass.

    Clark, G. M, (1979), Career education for the handicapped child in the regular classroom. Denver, CO: Love Publishing.

    Clark, G. M. (1991). Functional curriculum and its place in the regular education initiative. Paper presented at the Seventh International Conference of theDivision on Career Development, The Council for Exceptional Children, Kansas City, MO.

    Clark, G. M., Carlson, B, C., Fisher, S, L., Cook, I.D., & D' Alonzo, B.J. (1991). Career development for students with disabilities in elementary schools: Aposition statement of the Division on Career Development. Career Development for Exceptional Individuals, 14, 109-120.

    Clark, G. M., & Kolstoe, 0. P (1990). Career development and transition education for adolescents with disabilities. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon.

    Cronin, M.E., & Patton, J.R. (1993). Life skills instruction for all students with special need: A practical guide for integrating real -life content into thecurriculum. Austin, TX: Pro-Ed.

    Dever, R. B. (1988). Community living skills: A taxonomy. Washington, DC: American Association on Mental Retardation.

    Falvey, M, (1989). Community-based curriculum (2nd ed.). Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes.

    Halpern, A. S. (1985), Transition: A look at the foundations. Exceptional Children, 51, 479-486.

    Hawaii Transition Project. (1987). Honolulu: Department of Special Education, University of Hawaii.

    Kokaska, C.J., & Brolin, D. E. (1985). Career education for handicapped individuals (2nd. ed.). Columbus, OH: Merrill.

    Mithaug, D., Martin, J. E., & Agran, M. (1987). Adaptability instruction: The goal of transitional programming. Exceptional Children. 53, 500-505.

    Polloway, E. A., Patton, J. R., Epstein, M. H., & Smith, T E. C. (1989). Comprehensive curriculum for students with mild handicaps. Focus on ExceptionalChildren, 21(8), 1-12.

    Smith, M. A., & Schloss, P. J. (1988). Teaching to transition. In P.J. Schloss, C. A. Hughes, & M. A. Smith (Eds.), Community integration for Persons withmental retardation (pp 1-16). Austin, TX: Pro-Ed.

    Gary M. Clark (CEC Chapter #665), Professor, Department of Special Education, University of Kansas, Lawrence.