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  <title>203. Your student with Down Syndrome belongs in a mainstream Physics Class</title>
  <description> Most special education systems operate on this premise:  Students with disabilities must master small foundational skills before they are allowed access to academic content.  &amp;amp;nbsp;  In practice, this often means students spend years repeating the same goals - decoding, counting, basic worksheets - while their peers move forward into real subjects like science, history, and mathematics.  &amp;amp;nbsp;  But what happens when a student with significant disabilities is simply included in a high school physics class?  &amp;amp;nbsp;  In this episode of Non Linear Learning, I speak with Sruthi Muralidharan, a high school physics teacher who is testing that question in a public school classroom.  &amp;amp;nbsp;  Sruthi teaches general education physics where students with significant cognitive disabilities - including students with Down syndrome - participate alongside their peers in labs, engineering activities, and scientific investigations.  &amp;amp;nbsp;  Her work challenges several assumptions that dominate special education today.  Sruthi did not begin her career in education. She holds an MS in Physics and a PhD in Electrical Engineering and spent more than ten years working in the semiconductor industry.  &amp;amp;nbsp;  In This Episode  We discuss:  • Why mastery-based IEP goals often keep students repeating the same material year after year  • The limitations of self-contained special education classrooms  • What happens when students with significant disabilities join general education science classes  • Why educators often confuse communication challenges with cognitive limitations  • How inclusive classrooms can actually improve regulation and engagement  • Why the burden of proving intelligence should never fall on the child  &amp;amp;nbsp;  About Our Guest  &amp;amp;nbsp;  Sruthi Muralidharan is a high school physics teacher and advocate for inclusive education.  She previously worked for more than a decade in the semiconductor industry and holds an MS in Physics and a PhD in Electrical Engineering.  Links &amp;amp;amp; Resources    Sruthi’s Substack on lesson modification and inclusive teaching     Vaish's course on making academics possible: Non Linear Education    If You Enjoyed This Episode  • Share it with a parent, teacher, or school leader  • Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify </description>
  <author_name>Non Linear Learning - Rethinking Education for Neurodivergent Learners</author_name>
  <author_url>https://www.drvaishsarathy.com/</author_url>
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