Teachers gain a new ability to help

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One teacher admits she could use help to deal with the children in her classes with extra needs. More importantly, she would like some strategies to try once they have been identified.

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For Dr Woods this is a pleasing moment. She is part of a team, led by Professor Patrick Griffin, that has been trialling the Abilities Based Learning and Education Support (ABLES) research project in 250 Victorian schools for more than five years. This year the program is being rolled out in all state schools.

The project began about eight years ago when researchers in the Assessment Research Centre of the Melbourne Graduate School of Education decided the best way to help children with disabilities was to provide teachers with better materials and advice to create individual learning plans.

An online program was developed that allows teachers to record observations about children and place them on a developmental path.

“It helps a teacher recognise what they are seeing from the child’s behaviour. It points them to what the child can do and is ready to do next,” says Dr Woods. “We are taking the knowledge special education teachers have when they look at these kids and giving it to other teachers.”

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