From the Classroom
Involve, Prepare, Apply, and Develop: iPads in the Classroom
3/23/2011 By:
by Autumn Kelley
Technology
opens doors to learning and builds bridges to learning concepts for kids with
special needs. SESI (Specialized Education Services, Inc.)—an organization of alternative
schools and specialty programs that operate across the country (currently in
AZ, CA, DE, MA, MD, MO, RI, VA, and Washington, DC)—uses iPads to supplement
instruction in reading and math as well as to facilitate communication for
students with autism spectrum disorders and others who require support through
the use of augmentative communication devices.
SESI follows
four key principles concerning iPad integration in our classrooms:
I = Involvement
P = Preparation
A = Application
D = Development
Developed by
SESI’s department of curriculum and instruction, under the leadership of Autumn
Kelley with technological support by Adrian Pellew, director of technology, these
four principles form the corners of the learning model our teachers employ to support options for iPad use in fun, creative ways for kids with a wide
variety of needs. The principles of Universal Design for Learning (UDL)—a philosophy that integrates supports for all learners, often through the use of technology—comprise the foundational framework for iPad use in our schools. Endorsed by the U.S. Department of Education, UDL provides the support required by those with special needs as an integrated feature of the instructional design. Content and support become one in iPad-assisted learning experiences.
The iPad applications
developed by speech and language experts, which are commercially available via the
Apple App Store, are used throughout the day to enhance learning for our
students who have specific communication needs. These learning applications promote
student engagement in reading and math as they are carefully woven into
classroom instructional practice, providing independent and collaborative
learning opportunities for students experiencing reading and math skills delays
at any grade level.
At each
stage, collaboration between students and teachers is key. “Technology provides
avenues for one-to-one instruction in the classroom setting that didn’t exist
10 years ago,” said Michael Kaufman, CEO and President of SESI. Indeed, iPad
use in our schools has proved an efficient avenue for improving core academic
skills for our most challenging students and for empowering our teachers to
adapt technology in support of advancing students' learning.
Step 1: Involve
Students
with communication disorders can easily be marginalized from group learning
experiences in the classroom setting if they are not provided a “peer-friendly”
way to communicate. Prior to the introduction of the iPad into this setting, their
involvement was limited by a self- and peer-imposed communication barrier. “The
iPad extends the involvement of children with limited speech ability,” said Brooke
Violante, SESI’s Connecticut Regional Director of School Services. “Seeing our
children with speech limitations interact in group instruction with peers
brings the classroom to life and greatly expands their interaction.”
Apps on the
iPad—such as MyTalkTools
Mobile, Proloquo2Go, Artikpix,
and iCommunicate—allow
our students to interact with other students in conversations about animal
dissection during science lab, for example; to participate in a group
discussion about their local community during social studies; and to share YouTube
videos about a math skill they are trying to master in math group. “Giving students
with communication disorders access to an iPad for communication sets them
center stage in the learning process,” commented Stacy King, classroom teacher
at SESI. Student learning teams can use
handheld access to the Internet to support research and topic exploration in
creative ways.
Step 2: Prepare
In addition
to using the iPad to increase student involvement in school, it can be used to
lay the groundwork for teaching in the first place—prepping and organizing
instruction materials for both students and educators. For instance, prior to a
lesson, teachers preload the iPads with mini-lessons on the chosen topic from
SchoolTube, YouTube, Google, or Yahoo. Upon entering the classroom, students
select the iPad device of their choice and then spend the first few minutes of
the period “warming up” on the software to prepare for the lesson content.
Applications
such as Notes,
Popplet, and Papers help the
middle and high school student with memory-based learning deficits to learn
from notes, lectures, and readings. Students can prepare for statewide testing
through a review of key math skills using apps like MathBoard,
Pad Math,
and Math
Bingo. Reading classic high-school-level novels is often a challenge for
students with reading disabilities, but the iPad facilitates success for these
students with its built-in, at-the-fingertip supports such as text-to-speech,
Wikipedia/Google in text, text magnification, and a wealth of apps that
incorporate video clips and real-life descriptions of literary meanings. Apple’s
preparatory teaching applications thus allow students with reading challenges
to access and master grade-level content in pace with their nondisabled peers.
Step 3: Apply
Teachers
apply the iPad device to an extensive variety of learning programs, not just
for core subject matter, but also for vital elective content like music and the
arts. The mobility of the device and the universal nature of its fingertip
access have expanded its use beyond the classroom. Music classes, for example,
benefit from such apps as miSoft Music!,
Classical
Music Listen and Learn, and Sheet
Music Treble Game by increasing appreciation, exploration, and application
of musical principles to course content. And user-friendly graphics, such as touch
play with a screen-activated record player and live feed to YouTube and Twitter
(which can include images of students’ compositions), have opened the doors
even further on the ways in which technological innovations can influence
learning and play in music curriculums.
The iPad can
virtually deliver a field-trip experience to an art museum for students, with
the touch of a hand. One’s artistic vision can expand full-scale with such apps
as Art
Authority for iPad and Art
Museum (Match’Em Up History & Geography), which offer students the
chance to study art by simply touching the image on the screen to
instantaneously access detailed information about content and creator. The works
are organized by time periods to improve students' understanding of key
artistic features that define each decade.
The ability
to cut-and-paste and import various artwork pieces to external applications and
presentation software on the computer further enhances student study of color,
line, shape, and visual communication of texture. Students can then apply these
lessons as they transfer historical tenets of art into their own creative projects.
Step 4: Develop
Finally,
since the iPad is less a tech device and more a portal for access, it is
particularly well -suited to help students with special needs take advantage of
learning opportunities in the classroom. Students with learning challenges need
access to information that can support them when they feel lost or off topic
with grade-level content, and this is precisely what the iPad can furnish.
When a
subject they are unfamiliar with is brought up in history class, for instance,
the iPad is right there, loaded with themed apps, offering entrance to any
web-based platform of historical information, or even containing a reference
outline the teacher e-mailed to the device, containing composition tips and
help on study questions. Or when communication-impaired students need a peer-accepted
way to communicate with someone in the lunch line, the iPad is there with apps
that allow them to “talk” to others in “cool,” socially acceptable ways.
The iPad
develops educational experiences for students with special needs in ways that
deliver information, facilitate communication, and enhance their learning
experience throughout the term of the school day and beyond. The four
principles of iPad learning—involvement, preparation, application, and development—infuse
all facets of student learning and teacher implementation, and they lead to virtually
unlimited schoolwide innovations. The iPad serves as a powerful technological
portal, guiding today’s learning experiences toward the lessons of tomorrow.
Autumn Kelley is the Director of Curriculum and Instruction for Specialized Educational Services, Inc.