Starglider wrote:
Do you have any experience of properly setted/streamed education?
Yes, in fact, my High School did mainstreaming quite well. Severely autistic and mildly mentally retarded children were integrated into easier classes and electives.
Certainly in my experience education works a lot better when teaching can simply proceed full speed without having to slow down and repeat things or worry about different curriculums for different students in the same damn room.
Well, yeah. Everyone should be able to understand the material. But if one kid is at the point where they can really get it, and see the entire relationship, while another kid is just struggling to do a single problem - than there's real opportunity for cooperative learning.
This is entirely unpredictable and unreliable; there is no guarantee that the 'faster kids' will care about 'explaining things', particularly to disruptive retards who keep holding up the class. Furthermore the kids in question may be awful teachers and/or have it wrong themselves. This is why expecting children to do the teacher's job is just stupid.
Well, perhaps at the Elementary level it wouldn't work. But I've seen it work at the Middle/High school level. Faster kids want to explain things because they're passionate and excited about the material.
Solving lists of problems provides a much more thorough and reliable check on your ability.
The idea here is to summarize the knowledge and abstract it. Just doing more problems won't do that. Doing problems is important, but it doesn't provide the experience you get from re-teaching the material, at least for me.
Frankly they're not normal and I'm not sure it's sane to try and pretend otherwise. If they want to be 'normal', they're going to have to put in some effort and shape up, that fact has to be absolutely clear or there won't be any motivation.
No amount of motivation will make a mentally challenged student "normal". What's important isn't that they become normal, what's important is that they see how normal people act and behave - and have a good role model for behavior.
At my high school mainstreaming was very well done. We elected a girl with severe down syndrome our homecoming queen, and mentally challenged students were integrated well into some classes.
I'm unsure if this is a typical outcome or not...