“The Voice of the Parent Cannot be Undervalued”: Pre-Service Teachers’ Observations after Listening to the Experiences of Parents of Students with Disabilities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Mandate to Collaborate
3. Barriers to Parent Participation
3.1. Schools May Still Be Working towards Inclusive Practices and Including Parents
3.2. Cultural Differences about What Constitutes Participation
Latino families, as well as other [culturally and linguistically diverse] families, may need clearer signs that schools are interested in involving them in the education of their child. These strategies convey an assurance to families that they are valued and trusted participants in their child’s education.(p. 269)
3.3. Fear (Or Reality) of Not Being Included or Respected, Which Can Cause Disengagement
4. Teacher Preparation for Working with Families
- When parents are viewed as “visitors” (p. 298) to the classroom rather than partners in their child’s learning, they tend to be less involved, and that involvement is more likely to be teacher directed.
- There is a “lack of focused training for teachers” (p. 298) in how to support and engage parents, especially those outside of the teacher’s culture. Teachers need to be competent in their awareness of other cultures (and this can include the culture of disability).
- Both teachers and parents can feel a sense of a lack of trust and respect and can fail to see the contributions of the other to the success of the child. Each has a “unique relationship” (p. 299) with the child.
- Parents and teachers can also be on the defensive. Teachers are expected to collaborate with parents but are often not given the time, training, or resources to do so effectively. Parents can interpret teachers’ frustrations with the establishment as disinterest or judgment about their child or family.
5. Teacher Preparation for Working with Families of Students with Disabilities
6. General Education Teacher Preparation for Working with Students with Disabilities
- What do pre-service teachers learn from parents regarding disability issues in the family and school?
- How will pre-service teachers use their pre-service interactions with parents to influence their future teaching practices?
7. Materials and Methods
- An important thing they learned from the parent panel;
- Something that was surprising or confirming;
- How they will incorporate this new knowledge into their future teaching practice (or future career/parenting).
8. Findings
8.1. RQ 1: What Do Pre-Service Teachers Learn from Parents Regarding Disability Issues in the Family and School?
Overall, this parent panel was one of the most helpful things I have had the opportunity to be a part of while going to school to become a teacher. One of my biggest fears in becoming a teacher is failing at helping my students, but these parents were able to help me realize that a lot of what being a good teacher means is caring for students despite their differences.
8.1.1. Parents Do Not Necessarily Want Their Child with a Disability to Be “Fixed”
Something that was both surprising and confirming to hear was when every one of the parents said that they would not get rid of their child’s disability if they could. We had talked about this in class previously, but it was still amazing to actually hear the parents say it.
I think one of the most beautiful truths that became apparent is that, as much as parents raise and grow their children, children affect and teach their parents. I came away with the understanding that you never know what you can handle and what you can overcome until it comes time to cross the bridge.
I think I will need to remember how much these parents loved their children, and how wonderful their lives seemed to be. I think that by keeping that in mind, and by helping my children be engaged in their lives regardless of their disability status, I can ensure that they will have pleasant lives.
8.1.2. Kids with Disabilities Are Still Kids
In treating children like they have value, teachers must genuinely believe in their students’ ability to grow and provide proper instruction and support for all of their students. Far too often our society looks at people with disabilities as if they are incapable of many things and have less value than people who do not have disabilities. This is problematic because people with disabilities are still people, they just may need some extra support in some areas.
To my pleasant surprise, through the panel, I learned less of the challenging lives of these students, but more of their capacity to be kind, social, and positive contributors to not only the classroom, but the community as well.
8.1.3. My Words and Actions Can Significantly Impact Parents, Both Positively and Negatively
I have thought about the impact that teachers have on their students, but I have never put much thought into the impact that a teacher can have on a student’s parents. These parents made it clear that it is a big deal when a general education teacher works with them and knows how to interact with them appropriately and effectively.(Max)
Another thing I will definitely take into consideration after this panel is the impact that you have as a teacher on the parents of a student with a disability. I have realized over the course of the class that there are always things to consider when teaching students with disabilities, but I think I have never really considered the effect you have on the parents.(Charlene)
I never considered just how painful it was for a parent…I knew that children with disabilities are bound to be different, but the reactions and how the parents conveyed the information showed me just how much it impacted them too. The fact that the parents also emphasized the language that was used in the IEP process suggests just how sensitive and difficult process it really is.(Elizabeth)
8.1.4. Inclusivity (Not Necessarily Inclusion) Is Important to Parents
All of these stories they shared helped me realize how important having a strong community must be for these families. Having social experiences, such as Special Olympics, or being in programs at school with other students with disabilities seems to have been instrumental for both the children and the parents, both socially and emotionally.
When I become a teacher, I’ll make sure to include every student as much as possible in my lessons and activities. I really would like to emphasize to my students that every person is a person no matter who they are or what they do.(Hope)
8.1.5. Parents May Be Carrying a Lot of “Baggage”
The parent panel definitely opened my eyes to my own thought process and caused me to think deeper about disabilities, and the fact that sometimes it does not matter how supportive a parent or a teacher or a school is, the child might just struggle.(Luke)
It also helped me understand that these parents not only have to worry about normal parenting problems, they have to worry about problems related to the disability and to how others receive their child. This made me realize how hard it is to raise a child with a disability.
8.1.6. There Are Varying Definitions of Success
I thought the message that the child is making progress, no matter how slow, towards more successfully managing their disability and living in a way that is fulfilling to them to be fundamentally important. I imagine it would be easy to slip into a deficit model and start to view a child with excruciatingly slow progress as fixed and hopeless. As a future educator, especially one likely to be in a general education classroom with all the more opportunities for discouraging comparisons, it is crucial to return to the idea of a complete, uniquely-perfect child, who is capable of growth and worthy of the effort involved to foster that progress.
8.2. How Will Pre-Service Teachers Use Their Pre-Service Interactions with Parents to Influence Their Future Teaching Practices?
8.2.1. Parental Input Is Important and Valuable; Listen and Believe Parents
I will definitely incorporate the notion that parents of children with special needs become subject matter experts in their own right, and that they will likely have more knowledge and information than I will about the disability itself, and, of course about, how the disability manifests in their child.(Frank)
While listening to their urges for us to listen and believe parents, I tried to think about the school’s perspective and what values or modes of thought I would have to change. While it seems obvious now to listen to a parent when they tell you about what a child is like at home, I could see it easily being pushed aside in the mind of a teacher who has a perspective on the kid they may feel like the parent is not believing.(Amy)
Teachers need to understand that they don’t know more about a child than their own parents do. Teachers need to listen to the parents, and try not to have more expertise than the parent. When I’m a teacher, I want to be conscious of this, and make sure that I listen and don’t talk over the parents.(Jake)
8.2.2. Schools Often Work from a Deficit Mentality
I learned about how important language can be when describing a child’s disability or disabilities. More than one parent explained how although evaluation is objective and results must be communicated accurately, it is very discouraging to hear about their child exclusively in language of deficiency, rather than emphasizing their strengths or how to achieve their academic goals.
8.2.3. Communication with Parents Is Important
A large takeaway for the future I got from hearing the panel is just how imperative it is to be in communication with the parents about the child. The parent-teacher relationship in every case should, ideally, be positive and productive but I think this is even more important in the cases of children with disabilities.
Hearing how crucial the community and external interactions are to the raising of the kids made me realize more acutely how important it is to integrate home and school. Copious hours of time are, after all, spent by the children at both locations and both environments help the child develop in different ways; teachers and parents should work together as cohesively as possible to ensure that children are receiving the most effective care and education.
8.2.4. Be Patient with Yourself, Your Students, and Their Parents
The most useful piece of information I acquired from the parents is to be patient with progress…After hearing from these parents, I have learned that it is very difficult to find solutions immediately, and that progress is not overnight. I will be sure to keep this lesson in mind in my future classrooms.
I will also be sure to adopt the characteristic of patience. I believe that this is a crucial quality for all teachers to develop before being placed in a classroom. All students, especially those with disabilities, deserve patience and time.
8.2.5. Teachers Need to Educate Themselves about Disabilities and Interventions
Another important thing that I learned from the parent panel is that in order to be the best teacher I can for a child with a disability, I need to understand their disability first. If I am able to understand the disability the child is dealing with, I am better equipped to help that student in the classroom with their needs.
9. Conclusions and Recommendations
9.1. Educate Pre-Service General Education Teachers More about Working with Children with Disabilities in an Inclusive Setting
9.2. Include the Parent Experience in Teacher Education Programs
- A discussion panel similar to the one described in this paper [34].
- Having parents embedded in courses as described by Murray, Handyside, Straka, and Arton-Titus [36].
- Creating an assignment where pre-service teachers interview or have a conversation with a parent of a child with a disability about their experiences [16].
- Working with professional development schools to allow pre-service teachers to sit in on and observe an IEP meeting and/or parent–teacher conferences [16].
- Creating opportunities for pre-service teachers to interact with parents in community-based settings (camps, etc.) away from the constrictions of the school and classroom [31].
9.3. Require Program and Course Outcomes in Parent Collaboration and Communication for All Teachers, General Education and Special Education, in Their Teacher-Education Programs
10. Limitations
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Parent | Gender | Gender and Age of Child(ren) | Child(ren)’s Disabilities |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Female | Female, 14 y | Intellectual disability, language delays |
2 | Male | Male, 28 y | Autism spectrum disorder, ADHD |
3 | Male | Male, 15 y Male, 17 y Male, 18 y | Down syndrome, ADHD |
4 | Female | Female 12 y | Intellectual disability |
5 | Female | Male, 18 y Female, 13 y | Emotional disturbance, autism spectrum disorder, learning disabilities |
Semester | Female | Male | White | Black | Latinx | Asian |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total students N = 106 | 88 (83%) | 18 (16.9%) | 91 (85.8%) | 7 (6.6%) | 5 (4,7%) | 3 (2.8%) |
1. N = 19 | 16 (84.2%) | 3 (15.7%) | 18 (94.7%) | 0 | 0 | 1 (5.2%) |
2. N = 29 | 24 (82.7%) | 5 (17.2%) | 24 (82.7%) | 2 (6.9%) | 2 (6.9%) | 2 (6.9%) |
3. N = 19 | 16 (84.2%) | 3 (15.7%) | 15 (78.9%) | 2 (10.5%) | 2 (10.5%) | 0 |
4. N = 39 | 32 (82%) | 7 (17.9%) | 34 (87.1%) | 3 (7.6%) | 1 (2.5%) | 1 (2.5%) |
Research Questions | Data Codes |
---|---|
What do pre-service teachers learn from parents regarding disability issues in the family and school? |
|
How will pre-service teachers use their pre-service interactions with parents to influence their future teaching practices? |
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Koch, K.A. “The Voice of the Parent Cannot be Undervalued”: Pre-Service Teachers’ Observations after Listening to the Experiences of Parents of Students with Disabilities. Societies 2020, 10, 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc10030050
Koch KA. “The Voice of the Parent Cannot be Undervalued”: Pre-Service Teachers’ Observations after Listening to the Experiences of Parents of Students with Disabilities. Societies. 2020; 10(3):50. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc10030050
Chicago/Turabian StyleKoch, Katherine A. 2020. "“The Voice of the Parent Cannot be Undervalued”: Pre-Service Teachers’ Observations after Listening to the Experiences of Parents of Students with Disabilities" Societies 10, no. 3: 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc10030050
APA StyleKoch, K. A. (2020). “The Voice of the Parent Cannot be Undervalued”: Pre-Service Teachers’ Observations after Listening to the Experiences of Parents of Students with Disabilities. Societies, 10(3), 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc10030050