¶ … performed by the student. The case study took place in the classroom environment, as part of the students part time job in Early Childhood Education, where there are normative and special education students present. The case study objectives involved problem solving, strategy implementation, and differentiated instruction. The specific area of focus in the case study is difficulty with literacy or reading.
This was a challenging situation because the case study took place in an Early Childhood Education setting. At this stage, there is not much evidence of literacy. At this point in development, most of the students are emerging as readers. That is not to say that there is no evidence of literacy, as literacy does begin with the identification and memorization of letters. In the classroom where my case study took place, there were a total of fifteen students on any given day. There was usually one leader teacher, which rotated depending on the schedule, and two to three assistant teachers. The founders of the Early Childhood Center would visit on a regular, yet sporadic basis, and often offered to provide additional supervision when they were not occupied with administrative activities. This would provide the lead teacher more of an opportunity to engage with the parents during pick up and drop off times, as well as allow for the lead teacher (more often than not) to perform behavior modification or applied behavior analysis techniques for the children either showing early signs of disabilities or those who have already been diagnosed formally with some kind of learning or intellectual disability. There are no children present with physical disabilities. All the students present normal to exceptional development physically.
I chose to narrow the group of students for this case study. I wanted to narrow my focus to the student with emerging or present special needs, as well as the children who may be borderline normative-special needs students, so as to extend the context within which I would consider behaviors and literacy competencies. I chose one particular boy, Kai, for this case study. Kai will be turning three in the coming months. His parents come from different cultural backgrounds. His father is American (Caucasian) and his mother is Japanese. Kai had a great deal of difficulty adjusting to "school" when he first began. He had a language delay compared to the other students. I was not certain as to whether he experienced this delay because of a developmental delay or because of some other reason of which I was unaware. Nonetheless, his delay intrigued me in relation to the objectives and goals for the case study. I decided that Kai would be my primary focus, while I would still pay close attention and consideration to three other students with relative abilities to Kai's.
Though many children at this stage are not reading or not reading with great facility, the children have a keen awareness regarding reading and literacy. Part of what fascinates them about adults is that adults have the power to read at will. Every student at this Early Childhood Education facility really enjoys when the adults read stories to them, individually, as a large group, and in small groups. Therefore, there is a clear line between being read to and being able to read for these young students. Another reason I selected this student, Kai, for my case study is that I noticed a number of students who were the most socially apt were also the students that showed the most potential and progress for literacy. Another student, Luna, for example, can read some words and has an exceptional vocabulary. This is part because three languages are spoken in her household. She has a keen interest in reading and writing already, and this shows evidence in her social skills. She has more words with which to resolve conflict, describe her feelings, and may more intricate requests from teachers than the other students, such as "Teacher, may I please have a cup of water with my lunch?" whereas Kai might say something such as, "Water, please."
Command of language and literacy have a direct connection to social skills and social power. Kai does not have many friends at school. He is at an awkward stage with his speech development. He is not a part of the younger group of students who only know their names and just a few words because they are so young, yet he is not quite at the same level...
For this reason, it is critical to ascertain the causes of word reading difficulties in order to identify these problems and provide appropriate instruction as early as possible. (Allor, 2002, p. 47) Spear-Swerling & Sternberg note that the fundamental reason that children need to be screened for difficulties in pre-reading skills is that once the child is supposed to, by grade level be able to perform certain tasks it may
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There were also more subtle apparent connections between Steven's relative inability, (especially in light of his intelligence in other areas), to recognize moral issues provided they do not involve lying, physically overpowering, or overtly stealing from others. As a child, Steven used to trick his peers about the relative quantity of ice cream or candy in packages to trick them into unfair (but voluntary) trades. As an adolescent, Steven became
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