Reverse Mainstreaming is becoming, well, mainstream! (Please excuse my sloppy pun).
Here’s the deal. If you’re like me, sometimes you have a classroom of students with pretty significant needs. And sometimes you have Para’s out. And sometimes you have a major blowout or puke and need all hands on deck. And sometimes…..well, you get the point. Managing a classroom of students with mulitple levels, grades, and needs AS WELL AS a team of paras, specials, schedules, etc. It can be tough to find time to send a student and a paraeducator out of your room for certain times of the day.
Lets be honest here. In a perfect golden world, General Education (GE) teachers would be trained in Including students with different Needs. Class sizes would be smaller, they would have assistants to help differentiate materials, and full inclusion would be the norm. THAT. DOES. NOT. HAPPEN. I am 100% for full inclusion or mainstreaming when done correctly, but the honest truth is, if you are just throwing a 3rd grader in a 3rd grade class for an hour of ELA when he/she is at a Pre-K reading level, what are they really getting out of that experience? Most of my experience has been; they get overwhelmed, they get distracted because they don’t understand, or they shut down. And that is an hour I could have been teaching him to read at HIS level! To each their own. If you mainstream and it is working for you and your class, KEEP DOING IT! But you may want to consider Reverse Mainstreaming as well!
Reverse Mainstreaming MAY be right for your class if:
- Your students have behaviors that may be destructive or too distracting in a General Education setting.
- You are short staffed or can’t spare staff members to attend a general education class with 1-2 of your students at specific times.
- Your students are more than 2 grade levels academically below their actual grade and would be overwhelmed or bored in General Education classes.
- You have uncooperative General Education teachers or teachers who are apprehensive about Mainstream Time. (I mean, not ideal, but it happens)
- You want GE kids to be nicer and include your students more.
- You want the GE kids to know more about your class and your students!
What you need to do:
I’m going to explain how I went about beginning this program with my school. Feel free to leave additional information/tips in the comments! Not every school or district is the same so the more advice the better!
First things first, some background on my class situation. I run a County Class – a Severely Handicapped Program that takes some of the more Severe medical and academic needs from 3 small local districts. We are housed on a district campus, but I do not work for the district. I have my own separate Principal and all of my staff also are employed by the County. This can be/is super confusing. So for example, I do NOT need to go to any of my Elementary Campus’s Prof Development days, after school meetings, etc. The county has their own. This is great because our county PD can focus on OUR classroom needs (I know many a District PD day I have been bored out of my mind because they were going over something we just didn’t use). But it can also be isolating, I don’t get to bond with the campus staff as often. This is my 4th year with my current program but due to logistical reasons, we changed to a different Elementary Campus this year. The change has been WONDERFUL for my students and staff and we feel very welcome here, but we needed to get a whole new staff and student body used to our students and their needs! Some kiddos haven’t even SEEN a student with this level of needs before! Daunting!
So first, you need get the staff at your school acquainted to your program. If you have been on your campus a while, you’re probably already close with your co workers. If you’re new or you think your colleagues could use a refresher, ask to take over a 30 minute time slot during a training or PD day! I love power-point so since we were new to this campus, I asked the Principal (who is an angel) if I could commandeer a slot of their first day back meeting in August. I threw together a power point on my class, my students, our schedule, what we do, etc. It looked a bit like this:
And ask if they have any questions!
After things got settled on campus and we were in our routine and our specials, I asked the principal if we could step it up with some visitors in our room. We have 2 students who go into GE classes at specific times during the day, but I wanted more school involvement and social skill opportunities! I have 11 kiddos grades K-6 and only 3 paras and it would be extremely difficult to manage the Ins and Outs if my kiddos were travelling all day .
We started bringing in some kids during Music Class and loved how the dynamic was working out. When my Principal gave the go-ahead, I put together a sign up sheet though Google Docs and Shared it with the teachers. It looks kind of like this:
Friday Jan 11th
Time and Activity | Class and Students (3-5 Preferable) |
915-945 Library | Mrs. Dawley – Molly, Olivia, Mackenzie |
10:15-10:45 Music | Mrs. Hugues- Savanah, Addison, |
12:30-1:00 Games | Mr. Moore – Amber, Gio, Anthony, Layla |
We started with every Friday (Since we have fun Fridays anyways). I put down 3 time slots and was overwhelmed with the response. EVERY slot was filled from November through December! I ended up adding 2 slots on Mondays for Jan/Feb to help with demand! I would offer to have a para go get the younger students (K or 1st) and bring them back afterword. Older students met us at our door. I send reminder e-mails to teachers the morning of and send pictures of their students engaging with ours when the day is done.
I put together a paper based on the above power point that teachers can share with their students and I will talk to the group (usually 3-5 kids at a time) about what we are doing before they enter the room. I tell them that ALL questions are welcome. Fear comes from the unknown! I considered giving them a big speech before they enter about “How people can be different” etc. But honestly sometimes I don’t say anything! Why, You might ask? Because simply giving that speech implies that our students are “Different”, and that is NOT the message I want to give. When I give simple instructions on what to do and who to hang out with, the students are more under the impression that things are ‘normal’ and less likely to be scared or apprehensive! And if you do happen to have a behavior or issue come up, just re-direct and MOVE ON! You don’t need to dwell or feel like you need to explain yourself!
For Example: During game time, we had 4th graders with us in our room. One of my students grabbed a handful of tiles from the memory game we were playing and threw them on the ground. I simply smiled and said “Jimmy, no cheating!” We all laughed and I sat near Jimmy the rest of the game. The kids probably don’t even remember that happened. Crisis averted.
We have students join us for:
- Music Class- assisting with instruments and manipulatives, singing along.
- Sensory Room- playing with students, doing Yoga, rolling/stretching
- Games- Playing board games, practice turn taking, communication
- Library or Reading- Read books to our students
- Movies- watch movies with us, enjoy each others company, eat POPCORN!
THE BENEFITS
Hooooooooo boy, there are so many! For my students, my top 2 are communication skills and social skills. There are many more opportunities for communication when you have students who are unfamiliar come in and are asking lots of questions! Social skill opportunities come up more frequently and naturally with general education students than with being in our classroom learning in unnatural situations all day (sorry, but practicing making friends with your teachers just isn’t the same as the real thing!)
And for the General Education students, honestly they probably benefit the same or even more than my kiddos. Forget the basic quality benefit of just exposure to people who are different than they are. They are learning empathy and how to communicate with nonverbal people. They learn some sign, and they learn how they take easy things like going to the bathroom or saying yes and no for granted. And most of all they learn that they CAN be friends and have FUN with our students!
THE DOWNSIDE
If you have behaviors in your class, such as aggression or tantrum, there may be a risk of a GE student getting hurt. Personally, I will make sure that GE students are placed as helpers with students who are having a good day and making good choices. It may be embarrassing/awkward to have to explain to a GE kiddo why your student is throwing toys or stomping his feet in the back of the room, but don’t make it a big deal, and they wont either.
If you have uncooperative admin, they may say that you are taking away from “Academic Time”. I come back with the Benefits List. You can also use the time for peer tutoring, have older student help with Math or Writing Centers and Younger students with Art or PE! It is up to the GE teachers to decide when to send their kids. Some choose during Free Read, and some during their Art or Library Time. It is really up to them, so I do not know how they justify it. But I know if MY child was going to help out in a special education classroom, I wouldn’t be worried about if they are missing some silent reading 🙂
Have you tried Reverse Mainstreaming in your classroom? How did it work out? What did you do? Let us know in the comments below and be sure to share on Facebook or Pinterest!