
INCLUSIVITY BY MAE JOY BOCTIL
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Mathematics
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Professional Development
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Easy
MAE BOCTIL
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19 Slides • 9 Questions
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Inclusivity: Learning with Disabilities
By MAE JOY SUBIBE- BOCTIL
June 11, 2025
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Draw
Draw your feelings today.
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Objectives:
To foster equitable and engaging learning experiences for all students, including those with disabilities.
To understand and adapt to the diverse learning needs of students with disabilities.
To implement effective strategies like Universal Design for Learning (UDL) and differentiated instruction to create inclusive classrooms.
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Word Cloud
Write 1-2 words that describe Inclusive Education.
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What is Inclusive Education?
It is the process of addressing and responding to the diversity of needs of all learners by moving towards the end-goal of full participation, presence and achievement in learning cultures and communities, which involves accommodation, modification, adaptation, and individualization in content, approaches, structures, and strategies.
Source: REPUBLIC ACT NO. 11650 section 4, Definition of Terms
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Department of Education (DepEd) Order No. 44 s. 2021 provides a framework for creating more inclusive schools, ensuring students with disabilities are included in general education classes.
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Multiple Choice
Republic Act No. 11650: Instituting Services and Programs for Learners with Disabilities in Support of Inclusive Education and Senate Bill (SB) 1907 (Instituting Services and Programs for Learners with Disabilities in Support of Inclusive Education) demonstrate the government's commitment to inclusive education.
When was Republic Act 11650 signed into law?
March 11, 2022
April 11, 2022
June 11, 2022
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An overview of Common LDs
Understanding Learning Disabilities
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Word Cloud
What are the common Learning Disabilities?
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Dyslexia is a common learning difficulty that mainly causes problems with reading, writing and spelling. It's a specific learning difficulty, which means it causes problems with certain abilities used for learning, such as reading and writing.
Dyslexia
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Dyscalculia is a specific learning disability that affects a person's ability to learn and understand numbers, mathematical concepts, and arithmetic.
Dyscalculia
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It’s a neurodevelopmental disorder, which means it affects how your brain develops. Symptoms begin before age 12 and include fidgeting, difficulty paying attention and losing things. ADHD is treatable with medications and therapies that manage symptoms and make daily life easier.
ADHD
(Attention Deficit Disorder)
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It is a complex developmental condition involving persistent challenges with social communication, restricted interests and repetitive behavior.
ASD
(Autism Spectrum Disorder)
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Draw
Are you learning so far? Draw your emotions.
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Why Focus on Best Practices for Students with Disabilities?
Every student deserves access to quality education that meets their unique needs.
Effective strategies don't just benefit students with disabilities; they enhance learning for all students.
Our goal: create equitable, engaging and empowering learning experience.
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Universal Design for Learning (UDL)
A framework for designing curricula that are accessible and engaging for all learners from the outset. It's about proactive design, not reactive accommodation.
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Multiple Choice
Which of the following accurately represents the 3 core principles of Universal Design for Learning (UDL)?
Provide diverse teaching methods; Assess through varied formats; Encourage group collaboration
Focus on individual student needs; Set clear learning objectives; Provide timely feedback
Offer differentiated instruction; Implement flexible grouping; Use technology for learning
Provide Multiple Means of Representation; Provide Multiple Means of Action & Expression; Provide Multiple Means of Engagement
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Multiple Means of Representation: Present information in different ways (e.g., visual, auditory, tactile, text, video).
Multiple Means of Action & Expression: Allow students to demonstrate learning in varied ways (e.g., written, oral, project-based, digital presentation).
Multiple Means of Engagement: Offer options for recruiting and sustaining interest, effort, and self-regulation.
Example: Provide choices in assignments, connect learning to student interests, foster collaboration.
Universal Design for Learning (UDL)
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Example: For a history lesson, some students might read a primary source document, others a simplified text, and some might watch a documentary. All then express understanding through their preferred method.
How to Differentiate?
Adjusting instruction to meet individual student needs in terms of content, process, and product.
What is it?
Best Practices 1: Differentiated Instruction
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Especially effective for students who struggle with abstract concepts or require clear scaffolding.
Why it's crucial?
Best Practices 2: Explicit Instruction
Example: Teaching a math algorithm, a writing structure, or a scientific procedure step-by-step.
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Learning is enhanced when multiple senses (sight, sound, touch, movement) are involved. This creates stronger neural pathways.
Best Practices 3: Multi-Sensory Approaches
Strategies:
Visual: Graphic organizers, concept maps, diagrams, videos, color-coding.
Auditory: Oral instructions, discussions, audiobooks, songs/chants.
Tactile: Using manipulatives (blocks, beads), textured letters, tracing, sand trays.
Kinesthetic/Movement: Role-playing, acting out concepts, movement breaks, hands-on experiments, building models.
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Best Practices 4: Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS)
Clearly Defined Expectations: State rules positively (e.g., "Be Respectful," "Be Responsible," "Be Safe").
Direct Teaching of Behaviors: Explicitly teach what expected behaviors look like in different settings.
Consistent Reinforcement: Acknowledge and reward positive behaviors.
Data-Based Decision Making: Use data to identify patterns and adjust interventions.
Tiered Support: Provide increasing levels of support for students with greater behavioral needs.
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Multiple Choice
True or False: Stating a rule as "No yelling in the classroom" is an example of a clearly defined expectation within PBIS.
True
Flase
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Multiple Choice
True or False: If a teacher models and role-plays how students should calmly walk in the hallway, this is an example of "Direct Teaching of Behaviors" in PBIS.
True
False
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Best Practices 5: Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) Integration
Many students with disabilities may face unique social and emotional challenges.
Self-Awareness: Understanding emotions, strengths, and weaknesses.
Self-Management: Regulating emotions, setting goals, managing stress.
Social Awareness: Empathy, understanding social cues.
Relationship Skills: Communicating effectively, conflict resolution
Responsible Decision-Making: Making ethical and safe choices.
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Best Practices 5: Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) Integration
***Many students with disabilities may face unique social and emotional challenges.
Integration Strategies:
Explicitly teach social skills (e.g., turn-taking, asking for help).
Use social stories or role-playing.
Create opportunities for collaborative work.
Provide emotional regulation tools (e.g., calm-down corners).
Foster a classroom community where all feelings are validated.
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Open Ended
What's one small change you could make in your classroom tomorrow to enhance inclusivity?
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Every student deserves access to quality education that meets their unique needs.
Inclusivity: Learning with Disabilities
By MAE JOY SUBIBE- BOCTIL
June 11, 2025
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