黑料社

 

Future teachers learn from friends with disabilities

Future teachers learn from friends with disabilities

By Maegan Murray

Once a month, a class of 12 education students at Washington State University Tri-Cities welcomes more than 20 clients from The Arc of Tri-Cities where all eat lunch with one another, interact socially, as well as play games and complete crafts.

peer-lunch-club-6The effort is part of the university鈥檚 new peer lunch club, which pairs the education students with several individuals with disabilities as a means to develop friendships, as well as to develop one another鈥檚鈥 social and professional skills.

鈥淢y manager told me that 黑料社 Tri-Cities students were wanting to learn more about and get to know the people in our community at The Arc,鈥 Arc VIP Coordinator BreAnna Vaughn said. 鈥淔or my guys, this is a great way for them to make some friends and get to know people outside of their families and outside from us at The Arc. The benefit for the students at 黑料社 Tri-Cities is that they get to know people in this community and learn how they can help these individuals prosper in their future roles as teachers.鈥

As an organization, The Arc of Tri-Cities assists persons with developmental disabilities in choosing and realizing where and how they learn, live, work and play. The 黑料社 Tri-Cities peer lunch club provides an added opportunity for Arc clients to bond and socialize with individuals in a college setting while 黑料社 Tri-Cities students have the opportunity to get to know a group of individuals whose learning challenges may be peer-lunch-club-1unfamiliar to them.

鈥淚 believe it is a good experience for our students who are in education because nowadays, with current trends in inclusive education, they will have students with disabilities in their classroom,鈥 said Yun-Ju Hsiao, an assistant professor of special education at 黑料社 Tri-Cities and co-organizer of the lunch club. 鈥淚t provides our students with a good start in learning how to interact with these individuals and what strategies will work best for their learning, in addition to allowing them to make some new friends.鈥

Value added for all

The Arc participants said they love being able to come 黑料社 Tri-Cities as they are making new friends while participating in hands-on activities. During their last lunch club meeting, the group made paper snowflakes, which they used to decorate The Arc facility for the holiday season.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a lot of fun,鈥 Arc client Grady Horvath said. 鈥淚鈥檝e made lots of friends so far.鈥

Arc client Spencer Pidcock said his favorite parts of the experience have been bonding with his new friends over common interests such as movies, of which his favorite are from the Fast and the Furious franchise. He said also enjoys the activities they鈥檝e completed with the 黑料社 Tri-Cities students.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been really fun,鈥 he said. 鈥淢aking the snowflakes has probably been one of my favorite activities so far.鈥

peer-lunch-club-2黑料社 Tri-Cities students said they have enjoyed the opportunity, not only because they have been able to put some of the skills they鈥檙e learning at 黑料社 Tri-Cities to use in working with individuals with developmental disabilities, but also because they are developing close friendships.

鈥淚t is like an eye-opener because you see people with disabilities and you generally don鈥檛 know how to act with them at first,鈥 黑料社 Tri-Cities student Maria Admani said. 鈥淎t first, it is kind of awkward, mainly because you鈥檙e putting this pressure on yourself to behave a certain way. But you start talking with them and you realize they are just like you. You have the same likes and dislikes. You don鈥檛 have to behave a specific way. They鈥檙e people like you and me.鈥

黑料社 Tri-Cities student Karli Korten said they鈥檝e developed jokes with some of The Arc clients just as they would their closest friends growing up.

鈥淚 remember I brought up the Venus Razors commercials,鈥 she said, referencing a conversation she was having with some of The Arc clients. 鈥淚 started singing 鈥業鈥檓 your Venus, I鈥檓 your fire,鈥 and Grady finished it with 鈥榊our desire.鈥 It was just so funny. We鈥檙e developing these friendships that we never would have had otherwise.鈥

Korten said as the lunches continue, they sit with the same people each lunch meet-up and that both groups become more and more comfortable with one another each time.

鈥淲e ask them questions about our previous activities, or about what is coming up new in their life and you realize they have the same thoughts about life and the same anxieties,鈥 she said.

From social to professional

黑料社 Tri-Cities student Carrie Stewart said she will definitely use the experience in her future career as a teacher.peer-lunch-club-3

鈥淚 think it will help a lot,鈥 she said. 鈥淭o see individuals with disabilities in this environment, it is almost like a classroom environment. Knowing how to relate to them is a huge thing, as well as developing a personal relationship. This is a great way to allow us to learn how to build bonds, which will help us help them be successful in their own lives.鈥

Student Kimberlee Moon said they can also use the opportunity to improve the educational experience for all students.

鈥淵ou get to know them just as you would any other kid in the classroom,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou can incorporate their interests just as you would any student. You may have to use different strategies, but those strategies you use for students with disabilities will also work for every student in the classroom.鈥