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The Value of a Detailed School Schedule

The Value of a Detailed School ScheduleNFXF admin2020-07-30T14:15:24-04:00

The Value of a Detailed School Schedule

By Jayne Dixon Weber

During the COVID-19 response, school schedules may look at little different everywhere, but we want to provide ideas that you can use at school as well as adapt at home. See all our COVID-19 articles and resources here.

When we saw an increase in my son’s aggressive behavior during his middle school years, his teacher and I worked long and hard on a detailed schedule to help manage it. We had done a functional behavior assessment and knew the reasons for the behavior — it was his way of communicating that the work was too hard or too much, and the environment was overwhelming.

The focus of this article is the schedule we developed during Ian’s 8th grade, but a variation of it was used all through high school.

Meet Ian

Ian attended a public middle school of about 350 children. Our district provides special education for children in two ways, based on the level of help they need throughout the school day:

Life Skills students either stay in their own class all day or are included in typical classes with aide support. My son was based in a Life Skills classroom and, with the exception of reading and math, was included in typical classes through the day.

When we developed my son’s daily schedule, we alternated between gross and fine motor activities. When Ian arrived at school, he would go into the Life Skills classroom before his first-period class and choose a gross motor activity: bouncing on a therapy ball, swinging, rocking, or jumping on a mini-trampoline. A visual schedule for the day was also reviewed with him. Here was his schedule, with each period lasting about 40 minutes:

As with most kids with Fragile X syndrome, 40 minutes was a long time for my son to stay on task. Twenty minutes was about the most we could expect. After that, his aggressiveness escalated, so we knew we had to vary each lesson and keep it moving.

As with most kids with Fragile X syndrome, 40 minutes was a long time for my son to stay on task.

We broke reading down into two 20-minute halves. The plan was to have the first half be fine motor/academic and the second half gross motor/sensory. For the first half, Ian had to complete three activities, after which he would get to do a gross motor activity. Our thoughts behind this:

The crucial consideration was that reading had to be done on a 1:1 basis—not small group. It was often done by an aide, but under the instruction of a teacher. It also had to be done in a quiet room with no distractions, including sights, sounds, smells, and textures. Here is a detailed example of the approach:

Presenting each activity:

Again, start with the big picture, the teacher might say,

An example of three activities that Ian might do:

After a week of this, Ian knew the routine. We then repeated the program with math, computer, and science. He did not need anything like this for PE or cooking (play and food … hmmm 🤔).

The day we implemented this schedule the aggressive behaviors dropped substantially. Because he was working 1:1, it was much more relaxed (we all know that’s a good thing) and the aide could work on helping him vocalize his thoughts and feelings. If he was struggling with work, she might model what to say, such as “This is hard,” or “I need help.” And when she taught Ian to say, “I need a break,” it was honored, and strategies were developed to help him take the break. “Why don’t you get a drink of water and then we can finish the words?” the aide might say.

The middle school years can become challenging with that puberty thing going on. Add in anxiety, limited speech, unreasonable expectations, and an environment over which students have little control, and you have a recipe for disaster/suspension (in this case they are synonymous). While Ian had been doing a simple version of this program throughout elementary school, we had to kick it up a notch for middle school.

So if you are having similar problems, take a step back — see what’s working and what’s not. If it is working, keep doing it or do more of it. If it is not, work with the school (!) to try new ideas. Send me an email and I will gladly help you come up with some ideas with you.

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Jayne Dixon Weber, director of community services, NFXF