Noticed the weird behaviour of the Oncologist's
9-years old boy during lunch last Saturday.
Initially, he looked no difference from other normal kids, chatty, running about for a short time. However,
he started repeating same question to everyone on the table aroused my suspicion that he could be autistic.His question, "Do you wake up late?" He will kept posing the same question to you even after you had responded to him.
The most shocking act was when he touched the buttock of everyone who leaned forward while sitting in his chair but I was spared.
Without understanding that these are traits of autism,
the relatives labelled his actions as being hyperactive & playful.The Challenges of Students with Special Needs in the Mainstream SchoolInvited article by Mr Yap Keng Ann, parent of a son with special needs
I am heartened to hear the Prime Minister say that “more can be done” and the capacity in the special education (SPED) schools will be expended. This is what many parents of children with special needs have long waited for.
However, I wonder if people are aware that not all children with special needs go to SPED schools? I know, because I am a parent of a child with special needs studying in a mainstream school.
Any additional help by the government for the special needs community is definitely welcomed. Therefore, I am not writing to dampen the mood. Instead, I am riding on the opportunity given by the Prime Minister’s national day rally speech, and the heightened interests of the public and media at this time, to highlight that
students with special needs in the mainstream school are also facing certain challenges. And I felt that government should likewise look into this area.
STUDENTS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS IN MAINSTREAM SCHOOL
“Special Needs” is a term generally use to describe a person with
~~ Autism spectrum disorder (ASD),
~~~ Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD),
~~~~ Dyslexia,
~~~~ learning difficulties,
and other intellectual challenges.
I have two points to make as follow:
Firstly, as the Prime Minster had noted, SPED schools have long waiting list. The demand for vacancies is always greater than the supply. Due to this limited supply,
SPED schools have to set certain criteria for admission. Children who are not able to get into SPED schools for whatever reason would either continue to be on the waiting list, or enter the mainstream schools; except in cases where a relatively small group of parents who prefers to home-school their children.
Secondly, children may have entered the mainstream schools as a “normal” student but later diagnosed to have special needs. Let me use Autism Spectrum Disorder as an example which I am familiar with.
It is called a “Spectrum Disorder” because it is a range of conditions range from severe, to mild, and to almost unnoticeable.
My son is now studying in Primary 3 in a mainstream school. When he was in K2, the teachers and principal brought to our attention that he showed signs of having difficulties in learning. Later, an education psychologist we engaged to observe him in class told us that he could have Asperger Syndrome coupled with Sensory Integration Disorder.
However at time, he had already secured a place in his present primary school. We were advised that if we wanted to defer or delay admission to primary one, we had to write in to MOE with supported medical reports.
There was simply not enough time to get a formal medical diagnosis report. The decision then was to let him go ahead with Primary 1.
I became my son’s primary caregiver to provide all the necessary support to him as he entered the mainstream education.
After he was already in Primary 1, we got his form teacher to write a referral letter for him to go to Child’s Guidance Clinic.
The entire process from making an appointment for the formal assessment (in March) to undergoing the tests (in September) and to finally receiving the diagnostic report (in December) took 9 months.
In my son’s case, we were already aware of his condition before he entered primary 1.
Getting the formal diagnosis was just to provide the necessary documentary support in order for the school to justify certain special accommodation measures for him – such as giving him extra time for the year end examination and be allowed to sit in a more conducive and quieter place to complete the examination papers. The irony was that extra time was actually given to him during the examination before the diagnostic report was received in December when school holiday already started.
However, If one were to speak to the school’s Allied Educators (or Special Needs Officers as they were initially called), she would tell you that school teachers monitor and refer those student whom they suspect to have learning difficulties and sometime behavioural issues to them, and through them to education psychologists for assessment.
There are actual cases of students being diagnosed even as late as at primary 4. These cases usually come as a great shock in life to their parents as they could not accept the fact.
One would ask again, if students were diagnosed while in mainstream school, would they be transferred to SPED schools? The answer is it depends on the case itself. Some may be able to get a place in SPED school, but it is also true that many will just continue with the current mainstream school, or transfer to another mainstream school with better support for students with special needs.
Whichever the case, the fact is there are students with special needs in the mainstream school. It may seem that I am stating the obvious but I observed that many parents including myself (before I became a parent of a child with special needs) are not aware of this.
WHAT COULD BE DONE AT MAINSTREAM SCHOOLS
Allied Educators were only introduced into mainstream schools in recent years. It was an effort by the government to help the special needs after realising of such needs. So I really welcome what the Prime Minister said in the rally speech – that more should be done, both at the special education schools and at the mainstream schools. Like others with keen interest in this area, I await eagerly further announcements on these.
Since my son entered the mainstream education about 3 years ago, as an interested parent, I have made some observations which I hope the government can consider.
1. PSLE
My son is Primary 3 this year. Two months ago, he sat for his first formal Semestral Assessment (SA). For his school, there are no SAs for Primary 1 and 2.
I was not at all surprise when his teachers told me that his result is one of the “bottom” few. The teachers advised me on various options to help my son. One of the recommendations was to take the examinable subjects at the foundation level for PSLE.
I appreciate the teacher’s recommendations and I state without reservation that the teachers and principal are very supportive and caring for my son all these years. But none of them can really help it when it comes to PSLE.
In Singapore, the performance of the schools is somehow ranked according to PSLE results. I can understand why this is done. However, I wonder if PSLE is meaningful for a student who has already been diagnosed with learning difficulties?
To the school principals, HODs and subject teachers, especially those teaching the higher primary classes, they are naturally very concerned when a student is not doing well academically, and the result will eventually pull down the overall performance of the school.
The school teachers, the parents and the child are all stressed out, to order to put in more effort hoping that this child do better for the PSLE.
What meaning does PSLE hold for children with special needs? They are different from their peers. Their pace and style of learning are different. If they are already being diagnosed as such, why put them through a national examination where the objective is to measure the normal students?
Therefore, I urge the MOE to consider:
(A) Exempt students with learning difficulties or with special needs in the mainstream schools from taking PSLE; or
(B) if they are still sitting for the PSLE either because such exemption cannot be granted based on current education policy, or because the parent do not mind that particular student take the PSLE (because as I mentioned earlier, the degree of learning difficulties varies and some would be able to do so), EXCLUDE their individual results from the computation of the overall ranking in their respective schools.
This way, we take the stress from the school teachers, parents and the students because they will no longer negatively affecting the school’s performance ranking. The subject teachers can now be more relaxed and have the discretion of giving a reduced workload to the student with special needs.
In my son’s case, I have applied to MOE for MTL exemption following the school’s advice. And after the 3rd school term started, the teacher feedback to me that my son actually performed better and appear to enjoy more in the learning because he is now given much less work. This is a case in point.
2. OTHER ACCOMODATIONS
Along with Asperger Syndrome, my son also have visual tracking difficulties. This is part of the overall neurodevelopmental disorder.
He had great problem doing comprehension passages when the text was printed on one page and the questions are printed on the back page. He had problem copying the answers from the text as it requires him to flip the page back and forth.
As he was not able to track where he last copied the word, he ended up spending time looking for where he left off again and again, copying the words wrongly, getting frustrated and in the end gave up writing.
Once I remembered asking the school if it is possible to print the worksheets or test papers in a A3 size paper and perhaps enlarge it for him so that his eyes can read easier and he does not have to flip the papers.
I remembered I was told that it is the job of the school to “prepare” the student for PSLE and in PSLE, there is no such thing as a bigger examination paper printed in single side. This is another case in point.
Once I attended a workshop organised by the Dyslexia Association of Singapore.
I remembered a parent stood up and told the story of her daughter failing her science paper because while she correctly answered the questions but failed to darken corresponding small dots on the OCR answer sheet! The father was upset that the school insisted that what was on the OCR answer sheet is the final. This is another case in point.
I hope any inter-ministerial taskforce on this topic will seek out genuine feedback from parents like me. These are important daily issues affecting the students with special needs in mainstream school.
Often people said that children with ASD seem to have come to a wrong planet. The question is can we make it right for them and how? I believe the government wanted to make positive changes. Perhaps they are not able to identify very specific issues.
Being a concern parent has led me to become an active citizen. I am putting together a plan to form a non-profit organisation to champion such causes for parents (or caregivers) of children with special needs especially in the mainstream environment.
I hope this effort can be just as successful as the one initiated by those active parents in our special needs community many years ago, resulting in a better SPED school environment in Singapore. The objective is to let the students with various learning difficulties and special needs to be to enjoy at least the first 6 years of basic education at a pace and approach suitable to them, and together with their mainstream peers.
While there is no doubt definitely a need for government to continue enhancing SPED, as a parent of a child with special needs in the mainstream school, I always have this thought:
if the ultimate aim is to include and accept those with special needs into mainstream society, educating them and equipping them with knowledge and skills,
wouldn’t it make sense if a larger percentage of these efforts are put into the mainstream schools where they can integrate at an earlier age?“Autistic and Aging Out” – What Happens When Children with Autism Grow Up?Families of children with autism face a tough road when the services of high school programs end at age 21, and parents are often compelled to take on even more care than ever.
For Heidi Roger and her 18-year-old son Andrew, the prospect of "aging out," while still a few years away, is a question mark looming large over their future.
Movie, "Autistic and Aging Out"