How My Special Education and ELL Students Used This “Evaluating Point of View” Lesson And What Actually Worked

 As a Special Education and English Learner teacher, I used this lesson with students who struggle with reading comprehension and written expression at my Washington DC school. In the specialized world of the Digital Literacy Academy, my classroom serves as a bridge between foundational communication and the practical skills required for the workforce. My students … Read more

How I Tried This “St. Patrick’s Day” Differentiated Writing Lesson With My SPED Students — Here’s the Data and Student Growth

As a Special Education and English Learner teacher, I used this lesson with students who struggle with reading comprehension and written expression at my Washington DC school. In the high-stakes environment of my classroom, my days are spent navigating the intersection of cognitive disability and language acquisition. I am the lead teacher for a group … Read more

We Made It! Welcome to Our New Home at BilingualSPED.com

I’m sitting here at my desk at 11 PM on a Saturday night, staring at a WordPress dashboard that finally looks like a real website, and I have to tell you—I’m equal parts exhausted and exhilarated. We did it. We’re here. Welcome home. If you’ve been following along (or if you’re just discovering this space … Read more

Big News: We’re Moving to a New Home!

Hey everyone, I need to share something exciting with you. After years of writing here on Blogspot, FUNSHINE (Digital Anthology) is moving to a brand new home! If you’ve been following along, you know I’ve always been honest about what works and what doesn’t in my special education classroom. Well, I’m about to take my … Read more

How My Special Education & ELL Students Used “Citing Textual Evidence” Lesson — And What Actually Worked

As a Special Education and English Learner teacher, I used this lesson with students who struggle with reading comprehension and written expression, and what I witnessed was a powerful shift in how they engaged with informational text. My name is Maria, and for the past 22 years as a teacher in an inner city school … Read more

How to Teach RI 6.7 Analyzing Text Features AI Enhanced Visual Lesson for SPED & ELL

I often tell new teachers that our students often miss the “signposts” that authors leave behind. These signposts—headings, captions, charts, and bold words—are not just decorations; they are the keys to the kingdom of informational text. In the 6th-grade landscape, specifically under Standard RI.6.7, we focus on integrating information presented in different media or formats. … Read more

How I’m using AI to Enhance my Lesson Planning

Tired of spending hours rewriting the same lesson for students at different levels? In this post, National Board Certified Teacher Maria Angala pulls back the curtain on how she uses AI as an “iteration partner” in her bilingual special education classroom. Teaching students who are navigating both IEPs and English language learning, Maria once spent evenings manually differentiating every text three ways. Now, AI handles the drafts — and she handles the decisions. She shares exactly where AI saves her time (leveling texts, generating sentence frames, simplifying vocabulary) and where it falls short (missing cultural context, overestimating reading levels, using idioms that confuse ELL students). The result? More time for one-on-one instruction, stronger lesson delivery, and a less burned-out teacher. A must-read for any SPED or ELL educator curious about AI — but wanting to stay firmly in the driver’s seat.

How I Tried This Differentiated “Valentine’s Day” Reading Lesson With My SPED Students — Here’s the Data and Student Growth

As a Special Education and English Learner teacher, I used this lesson with students who struggle with reading comprehension and written expression at my Washington DC school. In the world of intensive intervention, the arrival of February often brings a specific kind of anxiety. While the rest of the building is focused on candy and … Read more

How to Use Making Inferences Reading Comprehension Strategy

In a standard classroom, we often tell students to “read between the lines,” but for a neurodiverse learner, those lines can feel like a solid, impenetrable wall. If the information isn’t stated explicitly, it simply doesn’t exist to them yet. As a mentor, I’ve learned that our role isn’t to ask our students to be … Read more

How to Use Main Idea & Details Reading Comprehension Strategy

To a student with an IEP, every sentence often carries the same weight. They might read an entire passage and, when asked for the big idea, fixate on a minor, colorful detail about a character’s shoes rather than the central message. As a mentor, I’ve learned that our most important task isn’t just to teach … Read more