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As schools move toward inclusion, 2/3 of students with disabilities are spending 80% or more of their time in a general education classroom.
Inclusion involves providing support for students with disabilities within the general education setting. To give this support, integrated co-teaching (ICT) classes have two teachers: one general education teacher and one special education teacher.
Choosing the right co-teaching models will not only help you and your co-teacher succeed. It will help your students learn better.
1. One Teach, One Assist/Observe
One instructor actively teaches while the other either assists students who are struggling with the content or observes to collect data.
2. Parallel Teaching
3. Station Teaching
Students rotate from station to station in small groups. Each instructor teaches different content at their station, and some stations may have students working independently.
Advantages
lowers the student-to-teacher ratio so that each student gets more instructor attention
gives students the opportunity to move around
4. Alternative Teaching
One instructor teaches a larger group of students while another instructor teaches a smaller group of students.
Did you know?
5. Team Teaching
Quiz Time
Ms. Wright and Mr. Graves are teaching their class of 25 students to solve word problems. Three of their students have disabilities that impact speech and language, and another two students are English language learners with intermediate reading skills. These students benefit from reading word problems aloud together and discussing the problem before solving.
Quiz
Which of the following co-teaching models would be the best choice for this scenario?
Alternative teaching allows Mr. Graves and Ms. Wright to divide the class into two groups. While one instructor teaches the larger group, the other can provide specially designed instruction to the smaller group.
Take Action
Interested in using co-teaching models in your classroom?
This Byte has been authored by
Lauren O'Neill
Educator | Curriculum Designer