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Contextual Processing of Objects: Using Virtual Reality to Improve Abstraction and Cognitive Flexibility in Children with AutismWang, Michelle Jai-Chin 30 December 2010 (has links)
Background: The current study investigated the efficacy of a novel virtual reality-cognitive rehabilitation (VR-CR) intervention to improve contextual processing of objects in children with autism. Contextual processing is a cognitive ability thought to underlie the social and communication deficits of autism. Previous research supports that children with autism show deficits in contextual processing, as well as deficits in its basic component abilities: abstraction and cognitive flexibility. Methods: Four children with autism participated in a multiple baseline single-subject study. The children were taught how to see objects in context by reinforcing attention to pivotal contextual information. One-on-one teaching sessions occurred three times per week for approximately two weeks. Results: All children demonstrated significant improvements in contextual processing and cognitive flexibility. Mixed results were found on the control test. Changes in context-related behaviours were reported. Conclusions: Further studies using virtual reality to target specific cognitive impairments in children with autism are warranted.
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Validity and Fairness in Accommodations, Special Provisions, and Participation Decisions on the Ontario Secondary School Literacy TestBlack-Allen, Jesse 24 May 2011 (has links)
Policy guidelines of the Education Quality and Accountability Office (EQAO) state that accommodations and participation decisions on the Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test (OSSLT) do not threaten validity. However, these issues are contentious in American large-scale testing. New approaches integrate test access, administration, accommodation and participation within a unified fairness and validity construct. The current study, based on demographic and outcome data for the entire population of OSSLT-eligible students from 2006 to 2009, demonstrates changing patterns in accommodations and participation decisions across schools and years. In particular, English language learners are found to be considerably underrepresented among students receiving special needs accommodations. This has implications for the valid interpretation and fair use of test scores. Recommendations are proposed for improving fairness, consistency, and validity in administering accommodations and participation.
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Experiences in Critical Literacy: Students Deemed “At Risk” in Canadian SchoolsMc Leish, Kaylyn 11 August 2011 (has links)
Recently Ontario included critical literacy in the Language Arts curriculum. I plan to investigate what impact critical literacy will have on Canadian schools. I will present ideas in a critical narrative framework; drawing on pre-existing data-sets of experiences I gathered teaching in an urban Ontario school board for the last six years. I will also review research by other academics working in critical literacy, student engagement, and democratic education. I plan to investigate the effectiveness of using critical literacy-based activities with students deemed “at risk” in our school system. I will also explore the impact of critical literacy on the relationships between students, teachers and administrators. I believe this process will allow me to reflect, interpret and explore my experiences, as well as encourage others to draw their own opinions about the impact of teaching critical literacy in Ontario schools.
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The Experience of Students with Learning Disabilities Transitioning to Postsecondary EducationChaplin, Elyse 29 August 2011 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to explore how students with learning disabilities understood and experienced their transition from high school to postsecondary education. In-depth interviews with 7 graduates of Achievement School (pseudonym), a private high school for students with learning disabilities in the southwestern region of the United States, were conducted to elicit personal narratives of students’ transition experiences from high school to college. By doing so, findings contribute to a deeper understanding of students’ experiences and what allows students with learning disabilities to succeed in their transition to university or college. In addition, 4 parents and 4 high school staff members were interviewed for this study to provide a triangulated perspective on the experience studied.
Few studies have collected and analyzed the perceptions and voices of students with learning disabilities as they transition to postsecondary education. This study provides insight towards bridging the gap in providing further insight into the students with learning disabilities’ experiences on their transition to college and the factors students’ feel have impeded or supported their success in this new environment.
This study utilized a descriptive and phenomenological qualitative research methodology consisting of individual in-depth interviews with the students and member checks with informants, their parents, and staff members of the participants’ former high school. Suggestions will be made for future research as well as for practical application for future students as well as high school and postsecondary service providers.
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The Impact of Text Reader Training and Teacher Strategies on a Six-week Reading ProgramWhite, D. Heather 20 November 2013 (has links)
This study investigates the effects of intensive remediation in reading and assistive technology skills combined with the use of a computer based text to speech reader in a six-week intensive reading program for junior-age students with reading disabilities. The study reports on the strategies used by the teachers, week-by-week student progress, and the results of a criterion-referenced reading assessment. Other themes include student attitudes towards the technology and barriers to implementation. Findings indicate that a computer based text to speech reader provides significant compensatory support, resulting in improved fluency and comprehension scores. Students using technology were able to access paper and on-line text at a higher level. A model which builds on the work of Dyck and Pemberton (2002) and Edyburn (2004b, 2007) is proposed which provides a theoretical framework to assist schools in decisions about remediation or compensation for struggling readers in primary, junior, intermediate, and senior grades.
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The Impact of Text Reader Training and Teacher Strategies on a Six-week Reading ProgramWhite, D. Heather 20 November 2013 (has links)
This study investigates the effects of intensive remediation in reading and assistive technology skills combined with the use of a computer based text to speech reader in a six-week intensive reading program for junior-age students with reading disabilities. The study reports on the strategies used by the teachers, week-by-week student progress, and the results of a criterion-referenced reading assessment. Other themes include student attitudes towards the technology and barriers to implementation. Findings indicate that a computer based text to speech reader provides significant compensatory support, resulting in improved fluency and comprehension scores. Students using technology were able to access paper and on-line text at a higher level. A model which builds on the work of Dyck and Pemberton (2002) and Edyburn (2004b, 2007) is proposed which provides a theoretical framework to assist schools in decisions about remediation or compensation for struggling readers in primary, junior, intermediate, and senior grades.
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Further Than Pluto: A Novel and Compendium Based on a Real Case of a Young Woman's Struggle with Autism, Communication, and the Paradox of Simultaneously Inviting in and Shutting out the WorldJohnson, Sigrid 30 November 2011 (has links)
This thesis is divided into three texts. The first is a compendium, which situates the major themes of the second text (a fictitious novel) into a scholarly context and delves into the broader academic questions that arise from it regarding the treatment and care of people with special needs. Those themes are put into a context that enables special education teachers to expand thier notions about communicating with and understanding their autistic and special needs students. It not only examines my own autobiographical connection to the novel (by the fact that I have a sister with a combination of Down Syndrome and autism) but also extends the themes into a broader context, and looks at typical expectations in families with mentally handicapped members and the various methods and approaches of communicating with them. The third text elaborates on specific aspects of these themes in an endnote format.
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Further Than Pluto: A Novel and Compendium Based on a Real Case of a Young Woman's Struggle with Autism, Communication, and the Paradox of Simultaneously Inviting in and Shutting out the WorldJohnson, Sigrid 30 November 2011 (has links)
This thesis is divided into three texts. The first is a compendium, which situates the major themes of the second text (a fictitious novel) into a scholarly context and delves into the broader academic questions that arise from it regarding the treatment and care of people with special needs. Those themes are put into a context that enables special education teachers to expand thier notions about communicating with and understanding their autistic and special needs students. It not only examines my own autobiographical connection to the novel (by the fact that I have a sister with a combination of Down Syndrome and autism) but also extends the themes into a broader context, and looks at typical expectations in families with mentally handicapped members and the various methods and approaches of communicating with them. The third text elaborates on specific aspects of these themes in an endnote format.
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Special Education Instruction in the Jewish Ultra Orthodox and Hassidic Communities in TorontoBenayon, Marcus 10 December 2012 (has links)
The purpose of the present study was to examine the state of special education programs in selected Jewish Ultra Orthodox (Haredi) community schools in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), and the attitudes and perceptions about special education of the Melamdim (rabbis/teachers) teaching in those schools. A Special Education course, modeled on OISE’s additional qualification program available to in-service teachers in the public sector, was administrated to 28 Melamdim. Throughout the 12 weeks, course data was collected through observations and dialogues with course participants. The impact of the special education course on classroom practices by those who engaged in the course was also assessed. In addition, a collection of pre-course and post-course data from participants (Melamdim) on attitudes and perceptions in regards to special education through a self-administrated questionnaire, took place. Four additional questionnaires were administered, examining demographic characteristics, general attitudes and behaviors, and well-being. Finally, a pre-selected group of 8 Melalmdim was interviewed as representatives of their home school and the denomination of Judaism they belong to. The results showed significant changes in attitudes of Melamdim toward the inclusion of students with Learning Disabilities (LD in regular classrooms. In addition, the positive change in attitudes could be attributed to the special education course in which participants engaged. During in-class observations changes to the Melamdim’s own practice was recorded.
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The impact of new teacher induction programs on feelings of burnout of special education teachersVeatch, Julie M. January 1900 (has links)
Doctor of Education / Department of Special Education / Robert H. Zabel / This study investigated the effects of new teacher induction programs on feelings of burnout of 69 newly hired special education teachers from two Midwestern, metropolitan school districts. The central research question was whether there was a significant difference in feelings of burnout between new teachers in a district that uses a special education instructional resource teacher as a key feature of their induction program and teachers in a district that uses a more traditional induction model. Participants’ scores on the Maslach Burnout Inventory – Educators Survey provided the dependent measures. There were, on average, no statistically significant differences (p < .05) in feelings of burnout of newly hired special education teachers in the two school districts. There were, on average, no statistically significant differences between the two groups. These findings suggest that, at least in these districts, special education teachers are staying in the field longer than originally expected, newly hired special education teachers are coming to the job better prepared, and deliberate and responsive induction programs did not influence feelings of burnout. The influence of participant demographic characteristics, particularly the amount of experience and licensure status, is discussed. Implications of these findings for special education teacher induction programs are suggested. Among these are the examination of supports from various sources, the availability of resources, and the structure of the induction program itself to meet the needs of more experienced teachers.
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