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Educating Students With Chronic Illness

Statistics show that chronic illness is rising among all age groups, including students. Last month I mentioned in my blog some new research that supports this, and the problem that poor health is associated with students dropping out of school.

My colleagues Ann Fantauzzi and Paula Leitz and I have become increasingly concerned about this situation as we personally see the impact that chronic illness has on the education of young people we know through our professions. Ann is a former teacher and now a teacher mentor, Paula is a professor focusing on teacher training, and I treat a number of youth with chronic conditions, including cancer and fibromyalgia, in my clinical practice.

One of the biggest problems we see is that the school system is well accustomed to accommodating children with acute and/or short-term disabilities, like broken arms or legs, and traditional disabilities, like visual or auditory impairments. But they don’t do as well accommodating students with chronic relapsing-remitting conditions like cancer, multiple sclerosis or chronic fatigue syndrome, for example.

Although federal disability laws require schools to accommodate students with disabilities, we have found that school personnel, including administrators, teachers, principals and others, often need to be educated about the unique nature of chronic relapsing-remitting conditions. It can be confusing to see a student alter between periods of relatively good health and extreme weakness and disability, and the flexibility required to accommodate these students can be difficult to achieve in the stressed American school system.

What seems to work best in these cases is a combination of established pedagogical techniques, notably differentiated instruction, and chronic illness models, such as the Fennell Four-Phase Model.

Chronic illness models, including the Fennell Four-Phase Model (FFPM), address the universe of issues and concerns facing students and families with chronic conditions. FFPM outlines Four Phases that people commonly pass through as they learn to incorporate their altered physical abilities or psychological outlook into their personality and lifestyle.

Differentiated instruction is designed to accommodate the varying learning needs of students, whether they are gifted, learning disabled, chronically ill or typical. Differentiation allows teachers to provide high-quality learning opportunities while engaging each class member at his or her own level. Differentiation is also validating for students. It presents curriculum in a way that is relevant to their lives and helps them make connections between concepts, which in turn helps them to retain new ideas.

Overall, differentiated instruction gives the student more control over their own work because it is set up cooperatively with the teacher, and provides educators a greater sense of management and choice of outcomes for individual assignments.

By blending the FFPM approach with differentiated instruction, educators can develop individualized approaches to teaching students with chronic conditions that meet the students “where they are.” By using FFPM to take into consideration the medical, social, familial and psychological situation the student is facing, educators can use differentiated instruction to develop curriculum and assignments that are relevant to the student’s life, interests and abilities.

We’ve found that combining these approaches offers students a greater opportunity to maintain their education while coping with the relapsing/remitting nature of chronic illness.

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