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It is important that stakeholders are aware of practices supported
as effective for students with learning and behavioral disabilities
in order to provide instruction that results in improved learner
outcomes. Perhaps equally important, stakeholders should also know
which practices have been shown by research to be ineffective
(e.g., have no, small, or inconsistent effects on learner
outcomes). Special education has a long history of using practices
that, though appealing in some ways, have little or no positive
impact on learner outcomes. In order to bridge the gap between
research and practice, educators must be aware of which practices
work (and prioritize their use) and which do not (and avoid their
use). In this volume, each chapter describes two practices one
supported as effective by research and one shown by research to be
ineffective in critical areas of education for students with
learning and behavioral disabilities. Chapter authors will provide
readers guidance in how to do this for each effective practices and
provide concrete reasons to not do this for each ineffective
practice.
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Transitions (Hardcover)
Melody Tankersley, Bryan G Cook, Timothy J Landrum
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R3,631
Discovery Miles 36 310
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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How do students with learning disabilities or emotional and
behavioral disorders fare in adulthood? Are their rates of
employment, graduation from post-secondary schools, living
independently similar to their non-disabled peers? What can schools
and communities do to teach and support youth and young adults with
learning disabilities or emotional and behavioral disorders? This
Transition of Youth and Young Adult volume presents eminent
scholars discussing critical and timely topics related to the
transition of youth and young adults with learning disabilities and
emotional and behavioral disorders and provides a comprehensive
selection of chapters that address variables, issues, practices,
and outcomes related to the broad topic of transition.
Intensive, individualized interventions are certainly the hallmark
promise of special education. In a multi-tiered system of supports
(MTSS), tier 3 interventions are the most intensive and require
individualized delivery to address the learning and behavioral
needs of students who are most often identified for special
education services. MTSS, such as Responsiveness to Intervention
(RTI) and Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS),
are comprised of universal assessment, progress monitoring, and
databased decision-making as intervention is implemented with
increasing intensity and individualization based on the needs of
the learner. The chapters in this volume cover a broad range of
topics that address issues surrounding the identification of
students who need the most intensive intervention, intensive
intervention features and delivery considerations, behavioral
interventions, academic interventions, and preservice teacher
preparation. The authors of the chapters are recognized as
international experts on these topics and provide specific
recommendations that are based on research evidence as well as
discuss considerations for future enhancement of multi-tiered
systems of supports and intensive interventions. This is a
contemporary resource for teachers, administrators, and
teacher-educators who are charged with delivering special education
and/or supporting those who do.
Responding to the need for educational stakeholders to be equipped
to plan for constantly evolving developments in policy and practice
for learners with learning and behavioral disabilities, this edited
collection collates contributions from authors who predict what the
next big things in the field will be, and offer recommendations on
how to prepare for the future they envision. The chapters cover a
broad range of topics that include developments related to
students' legal rights and services, how research is utilized by
practitioners, using practice-based evidence to promote the use of
evidence-base practices, open science, neuroscience and special
education, professional development for teachers, adaptive tier-2
interventions, the field of emotional and behavioral disorders,
reading and students with autism spectrum disorder, and innovations
in early writing. Chronicling, too, the concerns and cautions that
the authors have about what they see as the next big thing, this
collection is a compelling resource for anyone looking to the
future of the field, and thinking about how they can be at the
front of developments in order to navigate change in a way that
generates positive effects.
The challenges associated with the education and treatment of
children and youth with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD)
have proven to be both persistent and exceedingly complex. Thus,
our best hope for improving outcomes for students with or at risk
for EBD lies not in miracle cures or the eradication of all
disorders, but in the incremental progress that furthers our
understanding of the nature of EBD, enabling us to systematically
refine interventions. Toward these goals, this volume focuses on
emerging research and issues related to students identified with or
at risk of EBD. Chapters within the volume include reports of
original research, and summaries of new and emerging research
issues. Specific topics include: bullying; technology-based
self-monitoring; issues around the direct observation of both
student and teacher behavior; the characteristics of youth served
in residential or other alternative settings because of their EBD;
and the application of function-based logic to social skills
intervention. Two additional chapters examine issues around
identifying evidence-based practice in EBD, including guidance for
practitioners who may be overwhelmed by the challenges of teaching
students with EBD, as well as the vast array of resources they must
sift through to locate credible and reliable information on
effective interventions.
This volume explores serious challenging behavior in schools, with
an emphasis on promising and research-based approaches to dealing
with such behavior. Topics include what we know about (a) the
nature and extent of the problem (e.g., rates of aggression,
violence, and noncompliance in schools); (b) addressing extreme
forms of noncompliance; (c) dealing with serious disruptive
behavior; (d) violence prevention programs; (e) schoolwide response
to aggression and violence; (f) issues of covert antisocial
behavior (e.g., vandalism, truancy, theft); (g) functional
behavioral assessment and function-based interventions; (h) legal
and policy considerations in disciplining students with
disabilities; and (i) promising and needed avenues for further
research.
The focus of this volume is to identify and review issues and
outcomes associated with behavioral concerns of students with
learning and behavioral disabilities. Students must navigate a
number of environmental conditions, task demands, and social
interactions with peers and adults throughout the school day. To be
successful, they must employ a variety of learning and
self-regulatory strategies, as well as meet teachers' expectations
in the classroom. Students with learning and behavioral
disabilities are more likely to fail in navigating the school day
than nondisabled peers. Their failure is often associated with
difficulties in some aspect of behavior. In this volume,
internationally prominent scholars address contemporary topics such
as grade retention, bullying and Harassment,
response-to-intervention and universal systems in relation to how
students with learning and behavioral disabilities are affected by
them. Additionally, the scholars describe and discuss future
directions for treatments such as social skills instruction,
cognitive-behavioral prevention, social emotional learning
programs, and self-monitoring. The volume is intended to be of
interest to clinicians, teachers, researchers, graduate students,
and others who work with students with learning and behavioral
disabilities.
This volume focuses on evidence-based practices (EBPs) , supported,
sound research studies documenting their effectiveness with a
target population. As such, EBPs have significant potential to
improve the outcomes of learners with learning and behavioral
disorders. However, a number of obstacles exist in identifying,
conceptualizing, adopting, and maintaining EBPs that have prevented
educators from realizing their potential benefits. The chapters in
this volume address many of these issues, with the goal of
improving stakeholders? Ability to identify and implement EBPs.
Chapters discuss the following topics: appraising systematic
evidence-based reviews, using single-subject research to identify
EBPs, legal issues, implementation fidelity and EBPs, guidelines
for implementing EBPs, obstacles to implementing EBPs, teacher
preparation and EBPs, EBPs for learners with learning disabilities,
EBPs for learners with behavioral disabilities, EBPs for learners
with autism spectrum disorders, EBPs in early childhood special
education, EBPs in special education in Australia.
As a tribute to scholar and mentor James M. Kauffman and his
prodigious influence on the education of children and youth with
disabilities, Achieving the Radical Reform of Special Education
highlights and examines issues central to the continued growth and
maturation of the field of special education. This impressive
collection features the issues Kauffman has raised pointedly and
repeatedly in his writing over the past three decades. With
contributions by prominent scholars, essays throughout the book
provide a valuable synopsis of the status of special education and
its progress toward the achievement of radical reform at the outset
of the 21st century. The volume is divided into four sections,
corresponding to the following themes: 1) recognizing and
responding to individual differences among special education
students; 2) repairing and elaborating the historical,
philosophical, and legal foundations of special education practice;
3) strengthening the field's empirical base; and 4) confronting
problems of advocacy and reform in special education. Chapters
within each section discuss the status of the field, its progress,
pitfalls, and promising subsequent steps. Achieving the Radical
Reform of Special Education is intended for scholars, policy
makers, and graduate students in special education and associated
disciplines who seek to improve schools and to improve the
education of students whose behavior and exceptional learning needs
prevent their academic and social development.
As a tribute to scholar and mentor James M. Kauffman and his
prodigious influence on the education of children and youth with
disabilities, "Achieving the Radical Reform of Special Education
"highlights and examines issues central to the continued growth and
maturation of the field of special education. This impressive
collection features the issues Kauffman has raised pointedly and
repeatedly in his writing over the past three decades. With
contributions by prominent scholars, essays throughout the book
provide a valuable synopsis of the status of special education and
its progress toward the achievement of radical reform at the outset
of the 21st century.
The volume is divided into four sections, corresponding to the
following themes:
1) recognizing and responding to individual differences among
special education students;
2) repairing and elaborating the historical, philosophical, and
legal foundations of special education practice;
3) strengthening the field' s empirical base; and
4) confronting problems of advocacy and reform in special
education.
Chapters within each section discuss the status of the field, its
progress, pitfalls, and promising subsequent steps.
"Achieving the Radical Reform of Special Education "is intended for
scholars, policy makers, and graduate students in special education
and associated disciplines who seek to improve schools and to
improve the education of students whose behavior and exceptional
learning needs prevent their academic and social development.
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