WEBVTT 00:00:10.362 --> 00:00:11.696 Imagine. 00:00:11.696 --> 00:00:14.605 Imagine that schools recruit children 00:00:14.606 --> 00:00:17.989 who have the most different thoughts and behaviors. 00:00:17.990 --> 00:00:20.811 Imagine that children who learn differently 00:00:20.812 --> 00:00:23.516 are considered children with special rights. 00:00:24.205 --> 00:00:28.930 Imagine that educators have all the tools and strategies they need 00:00:28.931 --> 00:00:32.287 to meet all the needs of the learners in their classroom. 00:00:33.057 --> 00:00:35.489 Imagine that families are viewed 00:00:35.489 --> 00:00:38.898 as equal partners in their child's education. 00:00:39.598 --> 00:00:44.042 Imagine that there is a true convergence of all abilities in classrooms 00:00:44.043 --> 00:00:48.160 that promote and change the way we think about the world. 00:00:48.161 --> 00:00:51.829 This is the vision and hope of inclusive culture. 00:00:51.830 --> 00:00:55.200 This comes from my years of professional experience, 00:00:55.201 --> 00:01:01.150 but also comes from my experience as a granddaughter, as a sister, 00:01:01.151 --> 00:01:03.939 as a wife and as a mother, 00:01:03.940 --> 00:01:07.399 and it is those relationships that have made me most passionate 00:01:07.400 --> 00:01:10.523 about the impact of inclusive education. 00:01:12.158 --> 00:01:14.090 The roots of our educational system 00:01:14.091 --> 00:01:17.066 actually begin with the Industrial Revolution. 00:01:17.067 --> 00:01:21.138 With the best of intents, we ask our education system 00:01:21.139 --> 00:01:26.317 to promote learners who will be competitive in the next century. 00:01:26.317 --> 00:01:28.472 We ask that they have 00:01:28.472 --> 00:01:32.623 high academic achievement and competitive test scores. 00:01:32.624 --> 00:01:33.787 But sometimes, 00:01:33.787 --> 00:01:38.952 it is these attitudes and expectations that are actually counterproductive 00:01:38.953 --> 00:01:43.145 to the demands of the 21st century workforce. 00:01:44.384 --> 00:01:47.097 Consider our classrooms today. 00:01:47.098 --> 00:01:52.121 We expect that students have the capacity for universally accepted behaviors - 00:01:52.122 --> 00:01:56.122 the ability to sit still, the ability to listen to the teacher, 00:01:56.123 --> 00:01:59.115 the ability to focus and attend. 00:01:59.116 --> 00:02:00.535 And we assume 00:02:00.536 --> 00:02:04.731 that all students have the capacity, neurological and physiological, 00:02:04.732 --> 00:02:06.792 for those behaviors. 00:02:07.572 --> 00:02:11.998 And when a child is not meeting academic expectations, what do we do? 00:02:11.999 --> 00:02:16.886 We provide more study time, less recess, more tutoring, 00:02:16.887 --> 00:02:21.877 fewer after-school activities, all in the name of academic achievement. 00:02:22.660 --> 00:02:26.083 And what happens when a child doesn't have those behaviors? 00:02:26.084 --> 00:02:29.050 When they're fidgeting, when they can't sit still, 00:02:29.051 --> 00:02:32.077 when they're nudging a child next to them? 00:02:32.078 --> 00:02:35.815 Do you know what grade level has the highest expulsion rate? 00:02:35.834 --> 00:02:36.917 Pre-school. 00:02:37.819 --> 00:02:41.553 Just when children are learning to separate from their parents 00:02:41.554 --> 00:02:44.810 and be in a setting that promotes socialization. 00:02:47.006 --> 00:02:53.023 This often leads to a sense, or a lack of a sense, of belonging. 00:02:53.843 --> 00:02:57.078 And we all know what belonging is correlated with. 00:02:57.079 --> 00:03:00.655 It's correlated with intellectual achievement, 00:03:00.656 --> 00:03:04.181 and it's correlated with our sense of health. 00:03:04.182 --> 00:03:09.851 Isolation, loneliness, low social stature, 00:03:09.852 --> 00:03:14.166 all contribute to our ability to participate in the classroom. 00:03:16.744 --> 00:03:21.963 Does this feeling, or lack of feeling, of belonging and connectedness affect 00:03:21.963 --> 00:03:26.504 what we see in schools today with bullying and exclusion? 00:03:27.214 --> 00:03:32.352 What then is the effect of the standardized system on educators? 00:03:32.353 --> 00:03:35.013 Educators are more pressured than ever 00:03:35.014 --> 00:03:38.148 to show that their children can make the grade. 00:03:39.268 --> 00:03:44.785 They are judged by their children's performance on standardized tests, 00:03:44.786 --> 00:03:46.128 and they are judged 00:03:46.128 --> 00:03:49.907 by the performance of the schools and their academic ratings. 00:03:49.908 --> 00:03:54.342 Educators are more isolated and lonely than ever before. 00:03:56.345 --> 00:03:58.527 So for children with disabilities, 00:03:58.528 --> 00:04:03.273 that sense of isolation and separation has been there throughout history. 00:04:03.923 --> 00:04:10.330 Institutionalization was a long-accepted strategy until 25 or so years ago. 00:04:10.331 --> 00:04:13.088 It wasn't until Brown vs. Board of Education 00:04:13.089 --> 00:04:17.033 was passed by the Supreme Court in 1954 00:04:17.041 --> 00:04:22.029 that the racial segregation ruling paved the way for de facto segregation 00:04:22.031 --> 00:04:24.720 of children with disabilities from their peers. 00:04:26.321 --> 00:04:28.955 It took another 20 years 00:04:28.956 --> 00:04:34.788 for Individuals with Disabilities Education Act of 1974 to be passed. 00:04:34.789 --> 00:04:38.911 That was what finally gave children with disabilities, aged 5 to 21, 00:04:38.912 --> 00:04:45.386 the educational entitlement to be educated in same schools as their peers. 00:04:46.296 --> 00:04:50.529 Yet still, many of the children labeled with special education 00:04:50.530 --> 00:04:54.287 are in segregated settings, or what we call 'pulled out', 00:04:54.288 --> 00:04:57.420 where they are pulled out from the regular classroom 00:04:57.421 --> 00:05:00.253 and given specialized assistance. 00:05:00.259 --> 00:05:03.578 42% of children with special education needs 00:05:03.579 --> 00:05:05.298 are learning-disabled. 00:05:05.299 --> 00:05:07.472 By that very definition, 00:05:07.473 --> 00:05:11.111 they have average or above-average intelligence, 00:05:11.112 --> 00:05:13.872 and yet, they are still pulled out of the regular classroom 00:05:13.873 --> 00:05:16.753 on a regular basis in many settings. 00:05:17.773 --> 00:05:22.751 For children with disabilities, that sense of segregation, 00:05:22.752 --> 00:05:25.213 they suffer more than others. 00:05:25.214 --> 00:05:29.781 Children with disabilities are twice as likely as their same-aged peers 00:05:29.782 --> 00:05:32.442 to be suspended or expelled. 00:05:32.443 --> 00:05:37.627 Yet, just one suspension in 9th grade increases the likelihood 00:05:37.628 --> 00:05:44.047 that that child will drop out of school eventually, and/or serve jail time. 00:05:45.676 --> 00:05:48.814 That is why suspensions and expulsions are often cited 00:05:48.815 --> 00:05:51.582 as the school-to-prison pipeline. 00:05:52.383 --> 00:05:55.866 So we have the disability rights movement. 00:05:55.867 --> 00:05:58.867 People with disabilities throughout history 00:05:58.868 --> 00:06:02.106 are the most marginalized in all of our society. 00:06:03.686 --> 00:06:05.195 Think about what we've taught, 00:06:05.196 --> 00:06:08.225 how we referred to people with disabilities: 00:06:08.226 --> 00:06:14.502 deviant, sick, crazy, special, retarded. 00:06:14.503 --> 00:06:18.854 It's taking a different way of viewing people with disabilities 00:06:18.855 --> 00:06:23.066 in a strength-based way, to not blame the child for her disability. 00:06:23.067 --> 00:06:26.634 And families are also often judged 00:06:26.635 --> 00:06:30.744 for taxing an overburdened education system, 00:06:30.745 --> 00:06:34.215 for bringing their school's test scores down. 00:06:34.965 --> 00:06:37.691 So now, consider inclusive education. 00:06:38.827 --> 00:06:41.141 Perhaps we could imagine a school 00:06:41.142 --> 00:06:45.454 where all the sports are played by children in wheelchairs, 00:06:45.455 --> 00:06:52.314 where the mathematician moves to think, where the scholars are non-verbal, 00:06:52.315 --> 00:06:56.511 where everyone belongs and everyone participates. 00:06:57.593 --> 00:07:01.830 There are some models now for inclusive education across the globe 00:07:01.831 --> 00:07:05.982 that are paving the way, and the outcomes are startling. 00:07:05.983 --> 00:07:09.695 The academic outcomes for all the children are increased 00:07:09.696 --> 00:07:12.719 by looking at inclusive education. 00:07:12.720 --> 00:07:15.016 There is a recent movement in the past 10 years 00:07:15.017 --> 00:07:16.792 called neurodiversity. 00:07:16.816 --> 00:07:19.721 It means that we look at the human diversity 00:07:19.722 --> 00:07:24.026 that is inherent in the classrooms, and we celebrate it in our education. 00:07:25.200 --> 00:07:27.451 Dr. William Henderson is a principal, 00:07:27.452 --> 00:07:30.191 well-renowned in the Boston public school system 00:07:30.192 --> 00:07:34.069 who started the Henderson School as an inclusive model. 00:07:34.070 --> 00:07:37.674 He quotes three effective practices that make a difference 00:07:37.675 --> 00:07:40.352 in the effectiveness of inclusive education. 00:07:40.353 --> 00:07:44.588 They are culture, curriculum, and collaboration. 00:07:45.924 --> 00:07:49.895 Start with culture - all learners belong. 00:07:49.896 --> 00:07:52.613 In fact, the environment is enhanced 00:07:52.614 --> 00:07:56.766 by having all people of all abilities within that classroom. 00:07:57.616 --> 00:08:00.636 Consider the person with an anxiety disorder 00:08:00.637 --> 00:08:04.596 who has the sensitivity to help and tutor another child. 00:08:04.597 --> 00:08:07.593 Consider the child who is a visual-spatial learner 00:08:07.594 --> 00:08:11.043 who can create PowerPoints for another child. 00:08:11.064 --> 00:08:15.259 Consider that classrooms can be places where there are rich environments 00:08:15.260 --> 00:08:18.245 to be taught social and emotional confidence. 00:08:18.246 --> 00:08:22.108 And conflicts can be avoided by the time the children move to the playground. 00:08:22.728 --> 00:08:24.547 Curricular approaches. 00:08:25.467 --> 00:08:29.811 In addition to neurodiversity, we have what is called universal design. 00:08:29.812 --> 00:08:34.039 That is a set of principles that helps educators design curriculum 00:08:34.041 --> 00:08:37.831 for the highest of learners, as well as the lowest of learners. 00:08:37.832 --> 00:08:42.899 The result is that it's good for all the learners in between as well. 00:08:44.184 --> 00:08:46.969 Jonathan Mooney is an expert in neurodiversity, 00:08:46.970 --> 00:08:49.062 and himself, a self-advocate 00:08:49.063 --> 00:08:54.442 with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and dyslexia. 00:08:54.443 --> 00:08:57.636 He has developed a program called Project Eye-to-Eye, 00:08:57.637 --> 00:08:59.367 which is a mentoring program, 00:08:59.368 --> 00:09:02.852 and there is a component of it here at the University of Denver. 00:09:03.852 --> 00:09:05.940 He talks about using arts 00:09:05.941 --> 00:09:11.424 as a way of leveling the playing field for all children. 00:09:11.425 --> 00:09:13.629 And what else do children learn? 00:09:13.630 --> 00:09:16.802 They learn abstract reasoning, they learn logical thought, 00:09:16.803 --> 00:09:18.826 they learn creativity. 00:09:18.827 --> 00:09:21.258 He also talks about technology. 00:09:21.259 --> 00:09:25.442 Technology, despite all the advances, is still so underutilized 00:09:25.443 --> 00:09:28.624 in our education system for kids with disabilities. 00:09:28.625 --> 00:09:34.209 iPads, note takers, audio books are all tools 00:09:34.210 --> 00:09:38.328 that help make meaningful content to children who learn differently. 00:09:39.978 --> 00:09:42.928 And last but not least, collaborative teaming. 00:09:42.929 --> 00:09:46.440 Let's take away the isolation that educators feel, 00:09:46.441 --> 00:09:48.262 and partner them with a specialist 00:09:48.263 --> 00:09:52.243 who can help them with the children in the classroom tap all those abilities. 00:09:52.244 --> 00:09:54.097 Look at speech language pathologists, 00:09:54.098 --> 00:09:58.057 occupational therapists, art therapists, counselors; 00:09:58.058 --> 00:10:00.427 all of these people enrich the experience 00:10:00.428 --> 00:10:03.749 and take away the isolation of the regular educator. 00:10:04.879 --> 00:10:07.933 Believe it or not, the cost can be the same. 00:10:07.934 --> 00:10:10.039 Those same resources and moneys 00:10:10.040 --> 00:10:12.769 that go to support pull-out-systems and supports 00:10:12.770 --> 00:10:17.235 can be reallocated and redistributed into the regular classroom. 00:10:17.236 --> 00:10:19.424 So there is not an increased cost 00:10:19.425 --> 00:10:23.239 to the tax payer, the educator, the administrator. 00:10:25.265 --> 00:10:30.135 So imagine the 21st century in a school community 00:10:30.136 --> 00:10:34.875 where all of the following learn, belong, and thrive: 00:10:34.876 --> 00:10:38.460 Helen Keller, Whoopi Goldberg, 00:10:38.483 --> 00:10:42.152 Robin Williams, Stephen Hawking, 00:10:42.153 --> 00:10:46.072 Albert Einstein, Nikki Giovanni, 00:10:46.073 --> 00:10:52.728 my grandfather, your daughter, my co-worker, your neighbor, 00:10:52.729 --> 00:10:54.939 me and you. 00:10:55.989 --> 00:11:00.779 Disability has inspired many great things in our culture. 00:11:01.839 --> 00:11:08.479 People who learn differently have created some of the very things we use everyday. 00:11:08.480 --> 00:11:10.588 We've learned to move differently. 00:11:10.589 --> 00:11:14.918 Think about the Americans with Disabilities Act and wheelchair ramps. 00:11:14.918 --> 00:11:16.500 We've learned to create. 00:11:16.501 --> 00:11:20.252 Think about the impact of artists such as Vincent van Gogh. 00:11:20.253 --> 00:11:22.031 We've learned to invent. 00:11:22.032 --> 00:11:25.069 Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone 00:11:25.070 --> 00:11:29.895 when he was trying to create a device to help his parents who were deaf. 00:11:29.896 --> 00:11:31.697 We've learned to communicate. 00:11:31.698 --> 00:11:36.005 The typewriter was invented to help the visually impaired. 00:11:38.225 --> 00:11:42.842 In fact, what we've learned to do better is to interact with one another. 00:11:42.843 --> 00:11:48.585 So in inclusive communities, we suspend judgment, we advocate. 00:11:49.670 --> 00:11:54.076 We learn that living and being in community together 00:11:54.077 --> 00:11:56.962 creates better outcomes for all of us. 00:11:57.772 --> 00:12:04.344 When we are all in inclusive cultures, we create ways in which people belong. 00:12:04.345 --> 00:12:07.449 We create roles that everyone honors, 00:12:07.450 --> 00:12:12.957 we create a room for everybody to show and demonstrate their strengths. 00:12:14.817 --> 00:12:21.767 When we are in inclusive communities, we teach socio-emotional skills, 00:12:21.768 --> 00:12:24.487 so that we not only have higher intelligence, 00:12:24.488 --> 00:12:27.228 we have higher emotional intelligence. 00:12:28.518 --> 00:12:32.217 We also create ways where families' cultures are honored, 00:12:32.218 --> 00:12:35.520 and all families learn together in community. 00:12:37.460 --> 00:12:40.413 We bring it together, we converge people, 00:12:40.414 --> 00:12:44.283 like at TED, with different ideas and different thoughts 00:12:44.284 --> 00:12:46.915 to make a richer community. 00:12:46.916 --> 00:12:50.762 By creating inclusive schools where all ideas are honored, 00:12:50.763 --> 00:12:54.978 and all abilities are valued and cherished, 00:12:54.979 --> 00:12:57.517 we transform the way the world could be. 00:12:57.518 --> 00:12:59.043 It could be a better place. 00:12:59.044 --> 00:13:02.725 In fact, and imagine, that we change the world. 00:13:02.726 --> 00:13:03.726 Thank you. 00:13:03.727 --> 00:13:05.371 (Applause)