by Gayleen Langthorn
Every child is special, as unique as a shimmering sunset or an autumn afternoon. And each has a potential all his own.
Few would argue with that statement in principle, but it is a concept
that often falls by the wayside in the test-score driven world of
education.
For the last few years, Trinity School in north Oklahoma City has
implemented a program that enhances its individualized approach to
learning. “Schools Attuned” is a comprehensive professional development
and service program offering educators new methods for recognizing,
understanding, and managing students with differences in learning.
“The Schools Attuned philosophy is very similar to what we do already
at Trinity,” said Sherry Rowan, Head of School. The philosophy includes
keeping class sizes small and looking at each child as an individual
learner.
Understanding the Student Better
Part of the teachers’ one-on-one time with students will be spent
“attuning students” using the concepts learned during the intense
Schools Attuned training. The process begins with parents, teachers,
and students all filling out questionnaires evaluating the child’s
learning style in each of eight brain-development categories. By
involving students, parents, and teachers, everyone gains a better
understanding of the underlying brain functions that can affect a
student’s learning, both positively and negatively. Rowan said they
plan to begin with those students who have learning challenges, but by
next year they will likely have learning profiles on almost all of the
students.
Schools Attuned was developed by Dr. Mel Levine from the Clinical
Center for the Study of Development and Learning at the University of
North Carolina School of Medicine in Chapel Hill. The core of the
program is the study of eight developmental brain factors that affect
learning. These include attention, language, memory, hand-eye
coordination, the ability to recognize shapes and symbols, the ability
to order letters, numbers, and recognize patterns, interpreting
communication, and grasping concepts.
The entire Trinity faculty was trained in the program over the summer
and Rowan is excited about the implications for students. “For an
educator, this is a great tool because it lets us work more honestly
with the students and have a greater understanding of where they are
and what we can expect from them, what is reasonable, and how we can
encourage them,” she said.
More Ways to Learn
In addition to exploring Levine’s theory of learning and understanding
how to evaluate a student’s learning style, the Trinity faculty
acquired strategies to help their students be more successful.
Rowan said they’ve been using strategies in specific areas for a long
time, like Alphabetic Phonics to help students who are
language-learning challenged. Schools Attuned will not replace those
programs. But this new approach looks at the question of learning as a
big picture and gives teachers strategies for all kinds of tasks rather
than just focusing on one.
“It gives you so many strategies to help children maximize their
strengths and use their strengths to help them in areas that are
difficult for them,” Rowan said.
She used a class on the Civil War as an example. A student who has
difficulty taking notes might be given the notes by the teacher and
asked to use a highlighter during a lecture to mark the key points. By
doing this, the student is still processing the information, but he is
using a strength—his listening skills—rather than relying on something
he might have difficulty with, like trying to write down notes and
understand the lecture at the same time.
“You don’t want a child’s learning to be negatively impacted by
something that doesn’t really have to do with your goal,” Rowan said.
In this case, insisting on written notes from a student who hasn’t
mastered that skill is letting a learning style issue interfere with
your actual learning goal.
“In my view, and in Dr. Levine’s view, this happens a lot in school—we
get so hung up on having things done a certain way that we sometimes
lose sight of what the real objective is,” Rowan said.
Her goal, and the goal of everyone at Trinity School, is to help
students find and maximize their strengths. The Schools Attuned program
has given them additional tools to aid in that mission. “It makes you
feel that you’ve opened up a whole new area of possibilities for a
student,” Rowan said. “It is a very optimistic approach.”
For more information on the Schools Attuned program, visit their
website.
Gayleen Langthorn is a mother of two
and a freelance writer in Oklahoma City. She holds a BA in journalism
from the University of Central Oklahoma and contributes regularly to
MetroFamily Magazine.