Giant strides in baby steps
Alex Coolman
EDITOR’S NOTE: The following is the third in a four-part series
focusing on the struggles and triumphs of the disabled, their families
and those who live and work with them.
COSTA MESA -- It’s a day for small things in Pat Balen’s class at
College Park Elementary School.
Balen’s group of third-graders has heard a story about a “teeny-tiny”
woman, a story that’s supposed to help their reading skills and improve
their understanding the concept of opposites, like small and large.
“There was a teeny-tiny woman,” the story begins. “She lived in a
teeny-tiny house in a teeny-tiny town.”
By the time a visitor arrives to talk with Balen, the exercise is
over, her students are at recess, and the 47-year-old teacher is
chuckling about the difficulty she sometimes has in making sure her
students are understanding their lessons.
“They’re very sweet,” she said. “They sit there and nod, and then you
ask them to get started and sometimes they don’t know what to do.”
Balen teaches in what is called an “instructional support program”
class, which provides special education services for kids that don’t
perform as well in school as conative tests indicate they should.
Though her students are third-graders, many of them have difficulty
with basic reading skills, or are in other ways not as advanced as most
kids their age.
When recess is over, the afternoon exercises proceed in the way they
often do in Balen’s class: at a slow pace, making small moves toward
comprehension.
She leads a unit on punctuation, helping the kids understand when to
use a period and when to use a question mark.
What’s not immediately evident from watching Balen, but what becomes
clear upon speaking with her, is the satisfaction she finds in her work.
She has a reason, one that goes deep, for connecting with the labor of
special education.
Balen’s son, David, has cerebral palsy. The condition affects the way
he walks, and it has also caused him to have learning disabilities.
That hasn’t stopped David from living a rich life: he’s now 19 years
old and a freshman at Santa Ana College.
When David was born, it changed the way Balen thought about her
connection to her work. She didn’t start out working in special
education.
“When I was initially a teacher, it wasn’t a field that I was
acquainted with,” she said.
But the process of raising her son gave Balen an empathy for the
disabled -- something that remains powerful in her.
“That’s really where my heart ended up being,” she said.
Lynda Van Kuren, spokeswoman for the Council for Exceptional Children,
a professional association for special educators, said Balen’s experience
is a common one.
“She’s not that unusual,” Van Kuren said. “Many, many times [teachers
who work with the disabled] have had direct contact” with disabilities in
their own lives.
The challenges of teaching special education can be daunting, Van
Kuren said. And it’s the people who are best able to relate to the
experience of the disabled who find it most rewarding.
“Quite honestly, special education can be very frustrating because the
kids’ progress is so slow,” she said.
But teachers learn to take satisfaction in giving of themselves and in
witnessing the minor triumphs of the school day, she said.
“It’s the little things,” Van Kuren said. “It’s the little, teeny baby
steps that make a difference.”
In her punctuation lesson, Balen keeps it simple.
“Whenever somebody asks a question,” she tells the class, “their voice
is going to go up a little bit at the end.”
Some of the students are clearly getting it, and they’re straining
forward in their seats. One boy seems bored, distracted and fidgety.
Balen works to bring them all along, pushing them gently through the
idea.
Reaching these students and making sure their schooling is meaningful
can be difficult, Balen said, but she doesn’t think it’s that complex.
And it’s not that different from the way she would treat her own son:
the teacher simply needs to believe that the child has the capacity to
learn, and that the teacher can help that learning take place.
“The rewards far outweigh the frustration,” she said.
“Number one, I love the children. And number two, I just delight and
take a great thrill in every little bit of progress they make.”
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