Metro A Valuable Tool Disabilities activist promotes learning through failure. RONELLE GRIER Special to the Jewish News T he best thing we can do for our kids is give them more opportunities to fail, says trainer/therapist and disabilities activist Norm Kunc. "What one person sees as failure, another person sees as the first try," said Kunc. "Failure is not something out there, it's our own perception." Our society is so focused on a nar- row definition of success that failure is viewed as something to be avoided at all costs instead of as a valuable learn- ing tool, Kunc explained to more than 400 people attending his talk at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield Feb. 2. He believes in the title of his speech: "If You Want Kids to Learn, Teach 'Ern How to Fail." He also spoke on "The Right To Be Disabled" the next day for parents of children with special needs and profes- sionals who work in education and mental health fields. A third presenta- tion, "Hell-Bent on Helping," was aimed at volunteers who help people with disabilities. Several agencies co-sponsored the program, including the Friendship Circle, JARC, Jewish Academy of Metropolitan Detroit, JCC, Jewish Family Service and JVS. Kunc, who was born with cerebral palsy, conveys his message with a mix- ture of eloquence and humor. He draws from his own childhood, when he attended a segregated school for chil- dren with physical disabilities until he turned 13, then was integrated into a general education school. He later com- pleted a bachelor's degree in humanities and a master's degree in family therapy despite the feelings of inadequacy he developed growing up handicapped. "When I started going out with girls, I thought that the less disabled I A VALUABLE TOOL on page 20 Inclusive Education Teaches All At MIND At the Jewish Academy of Metro Detroit (JAMD) in West Bloomfield, students and faculty don't just talk about inclusive education, they "walk the walk." Leading the procession is Danny Friedman, now in his second year at the school. Danny, who has Down syndrome, is the first student with special needs to attend JAMD, ful- filling a longtime dream of his mother, Linda Friedman of West Bloomfield. "My older daughter Nina went to Hillel, and I always wanted Danny to have a Jewish educa- tion," said Linda, who is a practicing social worker and psychotherapist. "Both of my par- ents are Holocaust survivors, so that was impor- tant to me." She met vvith members of the JAMD adminis- tration to discuss the possibility of having her son attend and found them receptive. "Danny went through basically the same admis- sion process as any other student," said Rabbi Aaron Bergman, director of Jewish Studies at JAMD. "It was not an easy decision because we'd never done this before, but what really touched us is how much Danny wanted to grow in his Jewish learning." JARC, through its School Inclusion Program, provides a paraprofessional to assist Danny daily and to help coor- dinate the efforts of a multi-disciplinary team that includes a speech therapist, occupational therapist, a behaviorist and a social worker. Before Danny started school, Chaya Leah Tinman, JARC school inclusion coordinator, provided staff train- ing and peer education. "I talked to the students about the goal of inclusion and gave them some ideas about how to help Danny, simple things that make a difference, such as giving him time to respond to a greeting, or inviting him to join their table at lunchtime," Tinman said. Said Rabbi Lee Buckman, JAMD head of school, "Danny brings to the school a steadfast enthusiasm for being Jewish that infuses the learning environment with an appreciation for all things Jewish. Danny showed some of this enthusiasm last year when he wrote an essay nominating Rabbi Bergman as " Second year JAMD student Danny Friedman proudly wears his school sweatshirt "Teacher of the Year." He won first place in the contest sponsored by Comcast, the Macomb Daily and the Oakland Press. "It was his own idea. He wrote it by himself and he typed the whole thing with one finger," his mother said. "We're all learning together," she said. "If something goes wrong, we work together to fix it. The JAMD staff really wants this to work. I call them 'The Dream Team,' and the kids have been wonderful." With a little help from his friends, Danny, 17, puts on tefillin every day for minyan, and attends services regu- larly with his mother at Congregation B'nai Moshe in West Bloomfield, where the Friedmans are members. "Danny is a fine student," said Rabbi Bergman. "He participates, he does his homework, he does all the things we want each of our students to do. It's not so much what we can teach Danny that's important — it's what Danny is teaching us." ❑ — Ronelle Grier, special writer "What one person sees as failure, another person sees as the first try" said Kunc. "Failure is not something out there, its our own perception." JN 2/24 2005 19