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Special Needs Colegio Luso Internacional do Porto A Study by Artur Victoria



To preparedness to adjust subject matter and working methods and the consistent practice of Individualized work skills, is the allocation of resources in response to current needs. School difficulties are connected with the social situation of school and pupils. This can mean reducing the number of pupils per teacher, increasing the proportion of trained remedial teachers, reinforcing the school management, increasing the numbers of social workers, recreation staff, school librarians, school hostesses, pupil assistants and school psychologists, and generally increasing the number of adults per child. Of course it can also imply material reinforcements. In schools where there are many children belonging to linguistic minorities, it is important not least for teaching materials also to be provided in these pupils' languages.

Special attention must be paid to the expansion and design of the school day in schools with many problems. If there are great differences between schools in terms of initial working conditions, there are also bound to be substantial differences in resource inputs.

Free resources must be available for deliberate deployment with reference to the central tasks of schools. Above all those tasks include equipping all pupils with sound knowledge and basic skills. If pupils have to contend with difficulties, the principal aim when allocating a school's auxiliary resource must be to provide for the needs of those pupils before applying resources to other purposes.

The school management and forms masters are responsible for seeing that preventive work is planned and conducted within the school in collaboration with other municipal authorities working on behalf of children and young persons. The working plans drawn up for a school management district and a work unit should indicate in concrete terms how this work has been planned.

The work unit is the natural unit within which to attempt the solution of different problems. The discussions which take place within a work team or at a pupil welfare conference concerning a pupil' problem must result in a practical program. This program should be jointly drawn up by the school, the pupil and the pupil's parents on the basis of the pupil's needs and must show what is being aimed at, e.g. better reading proficiency, more regular attendance, greater motivation, or greater capacity for cooperation. The program should also indicate the means and methods to be employed. It is important to endeavor to strengthen the pupil's self-esteem and self-reliance by basing activities on his or her strong points. It is not until after aims and methods have been discussed that the question of placing the pupil in another group should arise.

Several possibilities are available.

-Pupils needing special support can be formed into small groups for a brief period. Pupils can work on special projects for longer than is normal. Discussion groups can be formed on various topics. During the time allotted for free activities, pupils can be given special support in proficiency subjects over and above the time allocation for English and mathematics.

-Special parental interviews can be arranged, and time can be allotted for visiting parents who do not attend school meetings.

-Time can be allotted for helping pupils with home work which they are unable to do at home. Should these opportunities of variety in terms of methods, content and organization prove insufficient, the pupil's situation must be discussed at the pupil welfare conference. The pupil's difficulties may be so great that he or she requires support in the form of a special teaching group for a considerable period, i.e. more than one term The school must then early out a more detailed investigation of the pupil's situation. The pupil welfare conference, acting in consultation with the pupil and the pupil's parents, may decide that the pupil is to join a special teaching group of this kind, if one has already been established.
About Author Artur Victoria :

http://sites.google.com/site/arturvictoria/ http://sites.google.com/site/cliparturvictoria/


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Article Added on Thursday, October 22, 2009
LD
Other Articles by Artur Victoria

Colegio Luso Internacional Do Porto CLIP Philisophy Artur Victoria Founder Principles
The primary commitment of the Colegio Luso Internacional do Porto is the preparation of students to be literate, competent, educated, skilled, informed citizens, appreciative of the arts, capable of critical thinking and problem solving, and able to function effectively within a complex, interdependent and pluralistic world. The Colegio Luso Internacional do Porto is a k-12 school with the following goals: 1. To offer a student centered, thoroughly modern, academically challenging, and...

Colegio Luso Internacional Do Porto Clip Program of Studies Prepared by Its Founder Dr Arthur Victoria
Preparing this innovative educational program – in 1989 – the success case is actually shown. At the beginning the coordination between national curricula and international subjects was a preoccupation in order to get the official equivalence from the educational authorities The program of studies of the Colegio Luso Internacional do Porto will follow an innovative curriculum designed to prepare students for the International Baccalaureate, or for a professional diploma in International...

Colegio Luso Internacional Do Porto CLIP Rules Imposed for the Educational Innovative Project by the School Founder Dr Artur Victoria
The Role of the Teacher The teacher will function as coordinator of learning, and as a second source of reference. Teachers will be assigned to teams. These teams will be responsible for coordinating the development of curriculum, the preparation of learning units, the integration of the different disciplines, and the monitoring and evaluation of students. - The Role of the Teacher-Advisor Each teacher will be assigned as an advisor to a group of 15 students (grades 7-12). The teacher...

Colegio Luso Internacional Do Porto Artur Victoria Project
There are those who react to this conjuncture with a certain resigned realism, searching for their children a way of turning them into images of the foreigner, by sending them to schools where the curriculum, the teacher, and the language are those of the supposed invader - As we say with all candor and pragmatism: if you cannot beat them, join them! The typical, and we could say, natural reaction is, however, to scurry to the barricades, to decree the purity of the language and culture, and...

Colegio Luso Internacional Do Porto Guidelines For Its Foundation by Artur Victoria
The proposal for the CLIP – Colegio Luso Internacional do Porto international school that we created is based on five principles defined by Artur Victoria in 1989: 1. Team Teaching: The isolation of the classroom was broken, and the disconnectedness of the curriculum eliminated. A team of four teachers for the main disciplines (language arts, social studies, science, and math) is in charge of the education of a group , of twenty students. Their individual and group action in the classroom is...

Foreign Languages at School Colegio Luso Internacional do Porto A Study by Artur Victoria
English language practice is provided for preschool children in preschool. This practice must be continued in compulsory school in the form of home language lessons. The main criterion must be the needs of the pupils concerned. Instruction must be arranged for pupils having a minority language as their home language, i.e. both immigrant pupils and pupils belonging to other minorities. The purpose of home language instruction must be to maintain and develop the child's knowledge of the language...

Motivating the Pupils Colegio Luso Internacional do Porto A Study by Artur Victoria
In order to feel motivated for their work, pupils must have the opportunity of seeing it produce concrete results. They must have immediate and clearly defined interim objectives to work for. For this reason, lessons must not lapse into a succession of exercises or collections of material; instead there must be clear objectives which teacher and pupils have tried to agree on for a series of lessons. The demand for working methods which will activate the pupils precludes 'chalk and talk',...

School Value Judgments Colegio Luso Internacional do Porto A Study by Artur Victoria
In all school subjects, teachers and pupils must establish what questions are concerned with values in the sense that they can only be answered by means of value judgments. Any person about to adopt a standpoint concerning values needs a proper fund of knowledge to draw on. Schools should help pupils to realize this by means of practical exercises. The demand for neutrality and empiricism implies that pupils must also be informed of the rational arguments in favor of different standpoints...

Dealing With Pupil s Difficulties at School Colegio Luso Internacional do Porto A Study by Artur Victoria
Pupils may also be laboring under difficulties -intellectual and physical handicaps, emotional and social disturbances -which are so great that they have to attend a special teaching group for all lessons. In certain cases, however, they can also attend leisure activities and school lunches together with the main group. Special day schools or, in isolated cases, school boarding homes can be organized on these lines at the instance of the local educational authorities. Special teaching is...

Partnership Between School and Homes Colegio Luso Internacional do Porto A Study by Artur Victoria
Partnership between schools and homes it is the responsibility of headmasters and preschool staff to ensure that all children and their parents are put in touch with the schools where the children are to begin their school careers. When children start school, contact between their homes and school should be established in collaboration with preschool. The aim should be for the transition from preschool to compulsory education to be smooth enough for the children to experience the activities of...

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