Mark Lynn
Master Black Belt
Hi there, so i'm throwing around the idea, of teaching kids with special needs, both physical and mental, to give them an outlet, exercise, confidence, discipline ext.
I was wondering, who all has experience with this and any suggestions?
One thing I do know, probably foremost, is PATIENCE! I have nephew with autism so I get it. I understand almost every student will need special attention, and for me to work with them as much as possible.
I know to be very positive, and understanding. I also plan on talking with each parent, to understand their diagnosis, and they're strengths and weaknesses personally, so I can treat each student properly.
Chrissyp
First off I applaud your wanting to help out students with special needs, I believe that is an area that is under served by the martial arts community as a whole but it is not an area that every instructor would want to embrace.
I have several students who face these types of challenges in my classes currently and have taught many more over the last 11 years. Although mine have generally been more from the behavioral side as opposed to physical side. Teaching these kids can be a great joy and can be very trying as well.
I also substitute teach in our local school system often times in the SPED side of things. In fact my wanting to be a more effective teacher for my students with learning challenges is what prompted me to work in the SPED areas of the school district in the first place.
My advice (in regards to teaching kids/young teens)
1) Always talk with the parents, to find out if the child has any learning challenges. This can be hard and awkward but if the parents trust you that you care about the betterment for the child then they will generally open up and discuss their challenges.
2) Don't be afraid to adjust your expectations of what a child can learn or what they can do just to try and hold up some ideal of what a given rank should look like. Sometimes due to medications my students won't have the same look about them as unmedicated students do as to crispness of technique or form. I look at the student as to what they have had to over come to get where they are at. Do they have the right attitude in class, are they trying their best, are they coming to class, do they know the material, etc. etc.
3) Be firm and be kind. Sometimes my students might get all wiggly when they should be still, when I feel they are fooling around (being silly) I get on them and correct the behavior. But sometimes they are off meds (of which you will not be told by the parents) and they won't have the same control as the other students, so then they don't need to be corrected as much as reminded that they are behaving badly and a hand signal will do. However a word of encouragement that tells them you notice how hard they were trying in class that day can bring them huge relief and make their day. Especially in front of their parents.
4) Realize that if you don't suffer the same/similar issues they do we can't begin to relate to what they might be going through at home or school or life in general. And we as instructors can either be helping the student or making their life worse even unintentionally by the way we conduct class. I once had a student who fidgeted, I would warn him m to stand still, he fidgeted more and the cycle would begin. What I didn't understand was that the child got nervous and I was triggering the behavior, the more I corrected the more he got worse and so on. His mother told me later that he had played basketball and that was the worse thing they could have put him in, because he took all of the yelling and cheering as if he was doing wrong and internalized it. He couldn't separate out cheering and correction so he thought EVERYONE was yelling at him, it made him a nervous wreck. So they put him back into my class, that's when I found out I was triggering him due to him fidgeting when he lined up for drills. So I let him quietly fidget and he did fine.
5) One of the biggest things is to have a strict pattern of running class so there is a sense of order and expectation. I fail here cause I like to be more spontaneous in how I teach. But I'm told more SPED kids need order in the classroom.
6) SPED kids take extra time and they need understanding but they have huge payoffs sometimes. Some times you get diamonds in the rough. One student of mine tries very hard and was basically kicked out of an after school karate program and was told he had special needs like it was a put down (meaning that class wasn't for him). His mother and I had an awkward talk and at that time he wasn't determined to have any special needs. Now about 4 years later the kid is very talented physically, super smart, takes part in my TKD and Presas Arnis and Kobudo programs and is one of my best students. However I've devoted a lot of time to him, before and after class working with him, correcting him (every class over and over), but he needs the attention and the constant correction and praise. Because his brain works so much faster than mine he sees things at times in the Arnis program (as well as the other arts) that I don't and he makes a connection between techniques/concepts etc. etc. and he'll call my attention to it. What can be more rewarding than having your student show you things, it shows that you are getting through to them right?
I hope this helps, sorry for the long post but I wanted to tell you of some of the successes I've had with teaching SPED kids in my program. They are fully integrated and are not taught apart from the rest of the kids. I encourage you to follow through and set up a class working with these kids.