Just Another Child with SEND
He sits there, cross-legged on a chair, totally engrossed in some Maths work and utterly oblivious to everyone around, even though he is in a crowded school hall, filled with parents and children for a teatime concert. He looks up every time someone comes onto the stage for their performance, enjoys watching and listening and then returns to his Maths as some teacher comments on, or gives introductions to the performances on stage. For this blog I’ll call him Harry.
I knew Harry from the day he entered our school, as I taught his older sibling and at times was his older siblings form teacher. As SENCO I got to know children across the whole school, even those I didn’t teach. I would see children in their classes, at break times and in the dining hall. Whenever Harry saw me he would come up and hug me, always greeting me with a huge smile. While he was still in the infants I was told by his teacher that he was naughty. He couldn’t sit still. He was bright enough in conversations, but too lazy to get on with his work and far too fidgety. He really used to wind his teacher up, the typical cheeky little boy.
I visited his class more often, and yes he did struggle to stay still. He was happiest when standing or walking or generally moving. He loved doing maths, had good ideas in English, but just never got them down on paper. He came to my office and I made him a ‘fidget string’, something I invented to help those who struggled to stay still. He chose the wool, he chose the cord, colours and textures that he liked. He loved his fidget string however his teacher didn’t quite get it and I would frequently find it on her desk – she’d taken it away because he was fidgeting with it, oblivious to the fact that that was the whole point. I would casually return it to him, gently remind the teacher of its purpose, and yet know that I’d be doing the same thing the next day. After speaking with his parents I ran some assessments which demonstrated his high intellectual abilities, amazing aptitude for patterns and sequences, yet a real difficulty with the written word. Your classic dyslexic, although to young to be formally diagnosed as such. He continued to wind up his year 2 teacher.
Then he joined year 3. He wasn’t the only one in the class who preferred to work standing up. His teacher, after checking with me that that was okay, allowed the children to work standing up if they so preferred. He came along to me for what we then called Reading Club, along with three other children. We had lots of fun with Dr Seuss and other favourite books, always chosen by the children. His confidence gradually began to develop, aided by his amazing swimming abilities. He still didn’t think he was that clever, because reading and writing were so difficult for him. With the support of his wonderful year three teacher and other teachers who followed, accepting of his need to work standing up and his needs to fiddle with his fidget string, he was clearly happier generally in school even though he still didn’t have the self belief he deserved. Yes he was still cheeky, but I never did see him as a naughty child. Year four and I did more assessments with him; he was getting old enough for the sorts of assessments at my disposal to give a more accurate idea of his strengths and weaknesses – being young in year makes a difference. When I did some non-verbal reasoning with him at the tender age of nine, his score was off the scale so I had to use the assessment that went up to adulthood. On this is scored as a 16-year-old; a clear indication of his abilities. When I read the verbal assessment for him, again his score was top of the scale. What kept his score down hadn’t been his verbal reasoning, it has been his inability to access the test due to the high reading element.
Harry eventually went on to sit the 11+, being in an area that still has grammar schools. He didn’t pass every element – it was the literacy element that let him down. Others, far less generally able than he, passed. He got in on appeal because although the 11+ exam is heavily weighted against dyslexics - this is both in the content and the layout of the paper – the school believed in him and fought for his place. Harry was without doubt one of the most intelligent children I’ve had the privilege to teach, a special child in so very many ways. The biggest heart you will ever have the pleasure to touch yours, he was a child full of love and joy and mischief.
The reason I chose to write about Harry today, a child I taught several years ago who is now well into his secondary education, is because he represents so many children in our schools who get labelled as naughty. I absolutely adored working with Harry - he was appreciative, fun and caring. I found it unbelievable that he wasn’t causing real disruption in class because he must have been so frustrated every day in school, faced with the written word lesson after lesson after lesson. I am so grateful to his year three teacher for letting him and his classmates work standing up, and wander around the classroom if that’s what was needed. She realised that what mattered was that they were becoming more confident and they were learning. By the way, by year six that class were generally working happily sitting in their seats. We need to be aware of the whole child, the individual child, their personal specific strengths, and not see them simply as being annoying for not fitting in to the lesson we have planned. It is surely our job is to help children to learn, not to expect them to simply learn the way we have taught people in the past. We need to adapt teaching methods, be aware of those in our class, be as accommodating as we can for a variety of ways of learning. It is no hardship if we write something on the board to space out words, alternate colours to make things easy to find, and read things out loud so that children have heard as well as seen in the words. We can give them ways other than writing to demonstrate their understanding, we can read questions to them so that the reading of the question is not a stumbling block to finding the answer, we can have patience and give children excuses to move around the class. These are all things that we can do if we only get to know the whole child, and remember that it is a child in front of us not just a piece of behaviour.
I have worked with so many wonderful children, of all ages, who have been written off by the system when they have so much to offer. As I said before, we need to see, support and nurture the whole child to have the confidence to say “I can…”.
