A good sign that a class, course, or workshop went well is when I (the facilitator) learn something from it. Last week our first Facilitating Individualized Education workshop had a few of those learning moments. The workshop reminded me about what motivates learning. Rarely do someone else’s desires or interests serve as good motivation for learning. Who has ever learned a subject well because their parents wanted them to? Yet how often have we tried to get good grades in order to please our parents? The habit of listening to other people’s considerations likely settles in at an early age, and it is a hard habit to break.
Desire, inspiration, interest: these are the things that fuel true learning. Obligation, expectation, and fear do not do the same thing. Many of us have learned to learn in order to satisfy what others expect from us. How often have we heard the phrase, “you should learn X, you’ll need it later,” and then later never materialized?
| Element | What it means for your teen |
|---|---|
| Strengths and interests | We start from what already engages your teen |
| Learning goals | Specific, realistic targets set with the student |
| Accommodations | Adjustments to how work is presented and assessed |
| Regular review | The plan changes as your teen changes |
Facilitating individualized education means we have to listen to the learner. Listen to what they are interested in, to how they take in information, to how they express themselves. True learning requires that we listen to the voice in our own head that does not want to listen, the voice that says “I know best.” As teachers, we have to practice being of service to the being in front of us more than to the system in which we find ourselves. The system in which we are learning will change. The people with whom you work are the source of inspiration for how the system will change.
Accept people as they are, not as you want them to be.
Abraham Maslow, on the self-actualizedWondering what individualized really means? See AVRO for yourself and meet the team who would work with your teen. Book a visit.
Facilitating individualized education starts with that kind of listening. It is slower than telling, and it is the only kind of learning that lasts. There is an upcoming workshop here in midtown Toronto for anyone who wants to explore it further.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an IEP?
An IEP, or Individualized Education Plan, is a written plan that shapes learning around a specific student. It records the teen’s strengths, goals, and the accommodations they need, so that teaching and assessment fit the learner rather than forcing the learner to fit the class.
What does a dynamic IEP include?
A dynamic IEP starts from the student’s strengths and interests, sets realistic learning goals, lists accommodations for how work is presented and assessed, and is reviewed regularly. Because it changes as the teen changes, it stays genuinely useful instead of sitting unused in a drawer.
Who creates my teen’s individualized plan?
At AVRO, the teaching team builds the plan together with the student, and with the family where that helps. Teachers first uncover how your teen learns, then design a plan around it. Because classes are small, they can follow and adjust that plan day to day.
How is individualized learning different from a regular classroom?
A regular classroom teaches one lesson at one pace to many students. Individualized learning sets the goals, pace, and support to each teen. It works best in small classes, where a teacher can notice what a student needs and adjust in the moment.
Does an IEP change what my teen learns?
Not the core credits. Your teen still follows the Ontario curriculum and earns OSSD credits. An IEP changes how they learn and how they show what they know, through accommodations and flexible assessment, not the qualification they ultimately graduate with.
Can I see how AVRO builds a plan for my teen?
Yes. Book a visit and the team will walk you through how they get to know each student and shape a plan around them. You will see the small classes and the individualized approach that make the plan actually work in practice.
Continue reading:
More on teens who learn differently
- Alternative Schools: A Pathway to Flexible and Inclusive Education
- Why our private school embraces atypical students
More from AVRO Academy
- 7 ways you can help support your teen now
- How we help students fail in 4 easy steps
- Should we learn all day?
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