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"A
Passion For
Teaching"
By
Judy Winter
Ronna Robbins thrives in her challenging role
as a special education teacher at the Washington Careers Center
in Detroit's inner city. The center is part of the Detroit Public
School System and serves the educational and vocational-training
needs of 350 special education students, ages 16 to 26.
"There's a warm atmosphere at our school," Robbins explains.
"We have wonderful principals who are very positive, very
caring and very visible. They walk the halls, connecting with
both the students and staff."
Robbins has been a teacher at the Washington Careers Center for
seven years. Her students, who have moderate to severe disabilities,
also face tough challenges like poverty, alcoholism and crime.
One of her students shared with her a photograph of what he looked
like before he was shot while sitting on his front porch. Today,
he uses a wheelchair.
"There's abuse, there's neglect and there's
poverty in our students' lives," she admits.
Despite these challenges, Robbins says she loves
being at the school precisely because of the students' significant
needs. It's what has kept her from taking another job in the suburbs.
"These students have been brought up to
literally fight for what they want and need," she explains,
"so we try to channel that fortitude and strength into more
appropriate behavior. These are wonderful students."
Robbins grew up in suburban Skokie, Illinois, a world away from
that of her inner city job. She was an outgoing child, who was
born extremely nearsighted. She remembers getting her first pair
of glasses at age two, which she laughingly describes as "coke
bottles." Robbins believes her vision challenges have provided
her with unique insight.
"I understand some of my student's challenges
well," says Robbins. "I have muscle problems with my
eyes, so I appear visually impaired. People who don't know me
sometimes stare and back away. They think that I can't see them."
A childhood encounter with a kindergarten classmate
who was deaf started Robbins down the road to becoming a special
education teacher.
"I was like a magnet drawn to him,"
she explains. "I wanted to help him and be friends with him."
In junior high school, she had a friend whose parents were also
deaf. "I was so intrigued that they could still lead normal
lives," she explains.
Robbins received a bachelor's degree in special
education for the visually impaired from Michigan State University
in 1975. She begins her teaching day with a 45-minute commute,
then greets as many as 50 supportive students on her way to the
classroom.
"A heart feels a heart," Robbins says,
warmly. "I'm supportive of my students, I'm comfortable with
them, and they reciprocate."
Her classes include students with various disabilities, but her
homeroom is reserved for students with visual impairments. She
also writes and oversees their individualized education plans
(IEP).
"Everybody works at his or her own pace,"
she says.
"A few years ago, I helped secure an X-ray
developer work study program for one of my former students who
is blind. She helped this same student obtain a leader dog named
Foster, the first dog allowed in a Michigan classroom. The student,
who graduated several years ago, is just one of many who keep
in touch with their former teacher.
Robbins has taken students to Washington, D.C.,
as part of Close Up, a program that gives students an opportunity
to experience the workings of the United States government firsthand.
She takes students to the Library for the Blind and Physically
Handicapped in downtown Detroit and joins other teachers each
year to take students holiday shopping. For many of her students,
Robbins says, these field trips provide opportunities for experiences
they might otherwise never have. She admits that parental involvement
at her school is not what she wishes it were.
"Some parents don't have transportation and
some of our students are mothers, so their parents are watching
their children while they attend school."
The reality of her students' daily challenges
only motivates Robbins to increase her efforts on their behalf.
"I try to make school as positive, as rewarding and as enriching
as possible," she says, "and I try to provide them with
as many experiences as I can."
"When people hear what I do, the first thing
they often ask me is, 'Isn't it depressing working with these
special needs students?' I tell them, 'No. It's heartwarming and
rewarding and so enjoyable.'"
She admits it takes a special person to do what
she does. "That's why they call it special education. Every
student is unique and every student has abilities," she continues.
"I'm just trying to tap into those abilities."
This story first appeared at www.MichiganLearning.org and is reprinted
with permission from Judy Winter. Email Judy at JappWinter@aol.com
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