The challenges of working with Special Ed kids often need creative approaches.
Swami Lalitananda, a senior monastic disciple of Sri Gurudev, shares her work with her Special Ed students who
affectionately call her “Ms. Swami.” It will become apparent why these kids claim that Ms. Swami is
their “most best and favorite teacher in the whole wide world!” |
As a special education teacher, I work among third grade students with serious emotional and
behavioral problems. My students are intelligent, thoughtful and as capable as any others their age, but some of these
children come to school with unbelievable traumas and difficulties that no little eight or nine year old should have to
bear. Although children, by nature, want to please their teachers, parents and others they care about, sometimes in their
frustration and rage, these children just don’t know how to go about it. So, the first thing I do each morning is
gather the children together to review the classroom rules. Then the children observe, on a posted chart that records their
daily behavior, how they’ve been doing over the past week. The children can then choose the area(s) of behavior they
need to pay special attention to.
A teacher must be creative when reviewing the same material every day of the school year, especially with these children who
can get bored very easily. So one day the inspiration came to write down on the board the “Four Keys to the Four
Locks” outlined in Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras. Sri Gurudev used to speak about these concepts, reminding
us that there is a Yogic way of approaching all people, no matter what behaviors and attitudes they may be exhibiting at
the moment. I felt these concepts were simple enough for my students to understand and that we could explore various ways
the four keys could work in their lives and their correlation to the classroom rules.
As we began to discuss Key #1, Friendliness Toward the Happy, the children learned that it means being able to
share in another person’s happiness or good fortune, instead of being jealous or trying to destroy their joy through
a “sour grapes” attitude or negative verbal comments. I asked them to think about this and give an example in
which they could practice this first key. After a couple of minutes, one boy raised his hand and said “I know! If
someone goes to Disney World on their vacation, we should be happy for them and ask them to tell us all about it, instead
of saying ‘so what’ or ‘that’s no big deal’ because we are jealous!” As he said that,
I could see big smiles of understanding spread across the faces of the other children as they “got it” too!
The Light of Wisdom was starting to dawn!
They came up with other similar day-to-day examples, and we then moved on to study the other three keys and their meanings.
The children came up with their own examples as we explored and discussed each one in detail over the course of several days.
Ultimately, their general understanding of how to implement them in their own lives were is follows:
Key #2: Compassion Toward the Unhappy. “When you see someone is upset, try to help them or comfort them if
you can. If they need space, then leave them alone after letting them know you will be there for them when they are ready.
Don’t take pleasure in seeing someone else get scolded or punished, but remember how it felt when it happened to
you and have compassion for them...”
|