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Unsung heroes series:
Mrs. Henderson’s special gift
By Chris Fitzgerald, KP News
The
soft hush of students reading aloud fades after just a
few minutes on Susan Henderson’s side of freestanding
bookshelves in the big special education room at
Evergreen Elementary School, where she welcomes a total
of 30 students across all grades.
Henderson earned her K-12 teaching
credential in 1988 and waited 10 years to use it,
choosing to stay home while her four children were
small. She lives on the Key Peninsula with her family,
and her entire seven-year teaching career has been in
service to Peninsula schools. Her first year, Henderson
taught special education at Peninsula High School, and
then found her teaching “home” with the young learners
at Evergreen Elementary, where she has been ever since.
A “resource special education
teacher” helps children learn strategies to control
disruptive behavior and utilizes programs in reading,
writing or math to fill in learning gaps to help
students progress toward grade-level participation. A
special-ed teacher like Susan Henderson, calmly
reassuring and joyfully animated, could be just what a
troubled, defeated child needs. She is unaccustomed to
putting her dedication in words. “I look for the key
that unlocks a student’s learning…” she begins, then
turns the conversation from herself back to the
children.
When a classroom teacher, school
counselor, principal or parent feel a child could
benefit from special education enrichment, a process
with state-mandated guidelines ensues. Henderson teaches
each child participant for about an hour every day; they
then return to their regular classrooms. Each child has
an individualized program, the culmination of care and
knowledge of an entire team of people, from teacher to
parent. Special-ed teachers like Henderson use it to
make magic.
The first thing she and a new child
do is write a story. Not just any story, but the tale of
that child’s difficulty, and what the child
instinctively knows about providing self-help. The
telling of difficulty is necessary, but it’s not the
focus.
“Everybody has things they’re good
at, and things they need to work on, but what makes you
valuable as a person is completely different,” says
Henderson. “A student who feels powerful will learn much
faster. I build students up with things they know about
themselves.” She adds that if they’ve forgotten, or did
not know, she helps them find the good things. Every
day, Henderson and the child begin their session by
reading that story about all the good things and ideas
the child has inside.
Once in special education, a
student remains in the program for three years, with an
evaluation and updated plan completed prior to each
year’s anniversary. That’s a long time for
grade-schoolers to have the comfort of the same teacher
helping them succeed. Such a teacher becomes a
confidant, a resource the child relies upon; every
victory over behavioral, emotional or academic challenge
becomes a celebration.
Even with days beginning at 7:30
a.m. and ending at 5:30 p.m. or later, Henderson earned
her master’s degree in elementary education two years
ago, and attends classes and courses to enhance her
skills. Her husband, a former science teacher, is now
working toward his master’s degree in theology; their
children are in middle school and high school. The
family makes wilderness camping at Lake Roosevelt an
annual adventure, and Henderson is learning to ski a
wakeboard. “Last summer I got up one time, and came to
school in September all bruised up from falling off the
board!” she says, laughing.
Henderson is also a singer and
songwriter for her church, where her husband is pastor.
As a child in the Yakima Valley, she remembers meeting
special needs’ kids; her cousin has Down’s syndrome.
“Special” children have always tugged at her
compassionate nature, and teaching felt just right.
Recalling that math was hard for her, Henderson says,
“After struggling with algebra, I felt like a failure.
It took every ounce of courage I possessed to go forward
and get the math I needed for college.” She understands
what a toll difficulty in school can take on a child’s
confidence.
An observant teacher, she noticed
that many of her students have excellent spatial skills.
“I can’t draw at all,” she says. So she asks new
students to draw with her. The immediate boost to the
children’s self-esteem results in smiles. Sometimes she
asks students to help her with diagrams and charts,
important tasks in assistance to Mrs. Henderson.
When pressed to explain such
dedication to other people’s children, Henderson says,
“I’m passionate about children. It’s inside my heart to
help the children who need help the most. It’s my job to
figure out what is getting in the way of a child’s
ability to learn… In my mind, I picture my own kids. If
they were needing help, I would want someone to work
very hard and do everything they could for them. So how
can I do any less for my students?”
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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