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What is Active Learning?
As the name implies, Active Learning revolves
around the learner being active.
Active Learning (AL) ... for Development, with
blindness, cerebral palsy, developmental delay, deafblindness,...
There are many of different kinds of "Active
Learning" for typical learners. This kind of
"Active Learning" is designed for, and
reaches learners with significant disabilities. Originated by
Dr. Lilli Nielsen, the Danish expert, AL is
suitable for learners who have a
developmental age of 4 or under.
Active Learning (AL) Basics:
AL Emphasizes Toys with Sound and Touch
Most AL toys are household items, all with
interesting auditory and tactile qualities. From
brushes to bead chains to walnuts, there are
zillions of interesting objects. Soft and quiet
toys don't provide the interesting feedback so
much.
AL Emphasizes The Learner
is the Active One
AL creates environments that feedback and support the learner so
that they can take action on their own initiative to learn. No
hand-over-hand, no interrupting with feedback or cheerleading. AL
provides the learner their own time and space to do their own thing.
AL Emphasizes Everyone can Learn
Active Learning reaches learners at the severe
end of the disabilities spectrum. If a learner is
not learning, the issue is always the environment
isn't tuned well enough (or the learner is fighting
for survival).
AL Equipment to Support and Feedback
Available AL equipment includes:
- The Little Room, for laying down and
sitting play
- The Resonance Board, a vibrational
feedback base
- The Support Bench, for prone play
with arms and legs free
- The HOPSA Dress, a vertical
suspension jacket
- The SPG (Scratch, Pull and Grab) Board, a
modular play board.
Some of the equipment can be made at home
with authorized plans, and/or kits are
available. More...
Applying 'Active' to the Passive
It is rather ironic that while we recognize that
people learn best when they actually do something,
yet it hasn't really been applied to learners that
need it the most- those with multiple disabilities.
It took a special person like Lilli Nielsen to fully
appreciate this and apply it to learners with
multiple disabilities.
It is probably very natural, because learners
with disabilities and especially those with
neurological deficits
take so long to respond, that
most people feel compelled to supply the active
quality to their interactions in a learning
situation. That is, initiate, demonstrate, show,
guide their hands, help, facilitate, prompt, or
otherwise do it for them. This, however, is the
crucial element. Any action by a teacher or care
provider that supplies the active element for the
learner, in many ways robs the learner of the
vital essence of learning: to do something
for themselves.
"Helping"
When sharing something new, the first reaction of
a child is to play with the item themselves to show
their friend how to play with it. As all adults will
recognize, sharing and, moreover, learning requires
that the learner actually try it, do it themselves.
The classic anecdote to illustrate how futile
demonstration it is should be very familiar to
any
parent or teacher of typical children over the age
of, say, 3 (younger than that we would not expect
true sharing). There have been many times when I had
to correct our five-year-old when he would "share"
computer games with his friends by playing it
himself - he was "showing" them how to do it.
So
often do we see parents, educators and therapists
engage in the same style of behavior when working
with learners with disabilities. There is much
evidence that the "guided hands" approach for
children with disabilities produces both a negative
reaction and increased passivity.
Tolerance for Inaction
Virtually every conventional and alternative form
of therapy and education is designed, or is
implemented with a low threshold of tolerance for
inaction. While high-functioning children can much
more easily engage in an activity independently,
learners with disabilities are seldom left to do
their own devices for any significant amount of
time. Else they are left in wholly non-learning
places- literally left in a corner, or with
materials or environment they cannot productively
engage in. Active Learning is based on creating
optimal environments for learners to actively learn
on their own, their own time and space.
Tuning The Environment
It may take a lot of trust to allow a child or
challenged learner to be on their own and apparently
not be accomplishing anything. It also takes a very
well tuned environment so that this time is
productive and not simply frustrating. There is
productive frustration and futile frustration. This
has been the most difficult aspect as a parent to
decide when frustration is a learning mode vs. a
fiasco.
In order to justify any appreciable level of
frustration, one must make due diligence that the
environment is optimally suited to learning for the
challenged learner. This is where Dr. Nielsen's
research has paid off. She has through the years
seen so many children and older learners with severe
disabilities and tried so many variations that she
has identified some that work much better than
others. In Active Learning, if the learner is not
playing, the environment can be tuned better, and
that is the responsibility of the adult, not the
learner.