Teachers Working in Special Schools in Scotland Acting with Practical Wisdom: Supporting Children with Additional Needs in COVID-19 Lockdown
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Impact on education: While reliable figures on students with disabilities are not yet available, it is likely that the current crisis has exacerbated their exclusion from education. As detailed in the policy brief on the impact of COVID-19 on children (see United Nations, 2020a), students with disabilities are least likely to benefit from distance-learning solutions. Lack of support, access to the internet, accessible software and learning materials are likely to deepen the gap for students with disabilities [1] p. 6.
2. Scottish Context
3. Methodology
4. Acting with Phronêsis
5. Results and Discussion: Moments of Attentiveness
5.1. Attentiveness: Juggling Things
Carmen: So sometimes it’s in the evenings, because I’ll need to be spending time with my children during the day and we have had problems accessing the system as well because it was overloaded because everybody’s working from home. So to begin with, we weren’t able to access the system between 8:00 and 4:30 anyway, so I was doing a lot in the evenings: planning and tracking. And the other day to day things that you do as a teacher that people probably don’t realize indeed.
Interviewer: And that usually happens after your own children have gone to bed?
Carmen: Absolutely! Yes, yes.
Grace tackles this differently:
Some people are saying, that I’m going to do my blog and my emails in the morning and I’m going to do my own things in the afternoon. I personally, I have to do my own, uhm, my Google Calendar and I block it out. So like 12 to 2.00 pm, I’ll say that’s my lunch exercise time, 2:00 till 4:00 I work on my assessment time, 5:00 till 6:00 is my knitting. I’m quite methodical, I quite like to work like that.
5.2. Attentiveness: Learning and Teaching
Some of the boys in my class are quite big, bigger than their parents and they can get quite distressed and become quite aggressive, which is so in that sense, I think pretty much every family that I work with falls into a vulnerable category just because of the significant needs of the children really.
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Interview Questions
- A little about yourself
- What about your class?
- What is your role as a teacher during this lockdown? Are you supporting home learning, or are you supporting children in a hub?
- How has this experience affected your ideas of teaching, learning and curriculum?
- How have you adapted to this new teaching situation?
- What learning have you tried to focus on with your class? How far ahead can you plan or are there key areas on the horizon?
- Can you provide an example of something that was challenging and something which was relatively easy.
- What is the role of parents/carers in learning during this lockdown?
- What are your thoughts about the impact of this on pupil transitions?
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Mercieca, D.; Mercieca, D.P.; Ward, K. Teachers Working in Special Schools in Scotland Acting with Practical Wisdom: Supporting Children with Additional Needs in COVID-19 Lockdown. Educ. Sci. 2021, 11, 569. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11100569
Mercieca D, Mercieca DP, Ward K. Teachers Working in Special Schools in Scotland Acting with Practical Wisdom: Supporting Children with Additional Needs in COVID-19 Lockdown. Education Sciences. 2021; 11(10):569. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11100569
Chicago/Turabian StyleMercieca, Daniela, Duncan P. Mercieca, and Kumara Ward. 2021. "Teachers Working in Special Schools in Scotland Acting with Practical Wisdom: Supporting Children with Additional Needs in COVID-19 Lockdown" Education Sciences 11, no. 10: 569. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11100569
APA StyleMercieca, D., Mercieca, D. P., & Ward, K. (2021). Teachers Working in Special Schools in Scotland Acting with Practical Wisdom: Supporting Children with Additional Needs in COVID-19 Lockdown. Education Sciences, 11(10), 569. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11100569