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Including students with developmental disabilities in schools : instructional strategies and educational outcomes in typical and "multiple intelligences" elementary school classroomsKatz, Jennifer 11 1900 (has links)
Previous research has demonstrated that specific instructional contexts, techniques,
and service delivery models that provide opportunities for peer interaction and active
engagement in instructional activities promote positive social and academic outcomes for
students with and without disabilities (Bulgren & Carta, 1993; Fisher et al., 1995; Grenot-
Scheyer, 1994; Kamps, Leonard, Dugan, Boland, & Greenwood, 1991; Lee & Odom, 1996;
Logan et al., 1998). It has been suggested that Multiple Intelligences (MI) theory provides a
framework that includes many of these inclusive pedagogies and techniques (Armstrong,
1994; Hoerr, 1996). The present study was intended to explore the extent to which MI theory
and instruction facilitates the inclusion of participants with developmental disabilities.
Ten elementary school students (ages 6-12) with developmental disabilities
participated in this study. The students were included in two types of general education
classrooms: those in which MI pedagogy, instruction, and assessment were implemented, or
those in which no specific educational theory or pedagogy was applied.
Data were collected using ecobehavioral assessment, which is designed to reveal
interrelationships between environmental variables (e.g., instructional activities and
groupings) and child behavior (Greenwood, Schulte, Kohler, Dinwiddie, & Carta, 1986). An
online version of MS-CISSAR (Greenwood, Carta, Kamps, Terry, & Delquadri, 1994) was
used to gather and analyze data regarding students' instructional experiences, engaged
behavior, and peer interactions. A matched-subjects design was used to compare the
experiences of participants in the two types of classrooms; specifically, the relationships
between types of task and instructional groupings and students' social interaction and
engaged behaviors were examined.
Results suggested that the experiences of the participants in both typical and Mt
classrooms were more alike than different. Participants in both types of inclusive classrooms
were frequently involved in whole-class or independent seatwork and paper-and-pencil
activities. Thus, rates of overall engaged behavior and social interactions were essentially
equivalent. However, participants in MI classrooms were more frequently observed to be
involved in activities that allowed for multiple methods of responding and in small group
structures. In contrast, participants in typical classrooms had high rates of one-to-one,
separate activities from those of their typical classmates, as well as relatively high rates of
non-instructional time (i.e. "down time" or transition time). Perhaps as a result, participants
in MI classes were observed to interact with their typical peers more frequently and to be
actively engaged in learning more often, while participants in typical classrooms were
observed to interact more with adults and to be more passively engaged. The results are
discussed in terms of their educational and research implications, limitations, and suggestions
for further research. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
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The Effects of PECS Training on Symbolic Matching Skills in Learners with AutismCranmer, Elizabeth 05 1900 (has links)
This study evaluated whether picture exchange communication system (PECS) training would result in the development of conditional relations among corresponding pictures, objects (reinforcers) and spoken words used in PECS training with learners with developmental disabilities. Three participants with autism and mental retardation were trained to use PECS. Match-to-sample procedures were used to assess all possible conditional relations among stimuli before, during, and after PECS training. None of the three participants in this study acquired conditional discriminations involving the pictures, reinforcers, and spoken words used in their PECS training.
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Assessment of social and recreational needs for children and teenagers with developmental disabilitiesMartin-Walton, Millee 01 January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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An evaluation of early intervention efforts with severely and profoundly retarded infants and young childrenStacy, Theresa A. 01 January 1995 (has links)
This project explores the impact of the services provided by the "Early Start" program at Inland Regional Center. Text includes cover letter, survey form, and informed consent form in Spanish and English.
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A follow-up of transitioning students with mild disabilitiesMonroe, Carolee Ann Novicky 01 January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Using environmental education to integrate persons with mental illness into the communitySandoval, Kathryn Jean 01 January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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A proposal for using a literature-based functional curricula for primary moderate cognitively delayed learnersRisley, Robert Michael Kevin 01 January 2000 (has links)
The goal of this project is to suggest a way to combine a functional curricula (domains) with literacy experiences.
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Maternal parentification of siblings in families with or without a child with a developmental disabilityBenitez, Christine Paras 01 January 2004 (has links)
The lives of family members of a child with a developmental disability are typically influenced by acute as well as chronic stressful events. These families are compared to families of typically developing children. In order for a family with a child with a developmental disability to function as effectively as possible, it may be necessary to renegotiate and reassign traditional family roles of parent, spouse, brother and sister.
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Endogenous Constructivist Implications for Methodology : Focus on Young Children with Developmental Delay in the Social and Emotional DomainsMcCrary, Donna E. (Donna Evelyn) 12 1900 (has links)
The Ecologically-Based Activity Plan (EBAP) is proposed as a method to create a transition between special education and general education. It serves as a tool to help classroom teachers assess the environment of the class and as a method for embedding instruction within the naturally occurring context of the endogenous constructivist classroom. In this study the EBAP was used to reduce aggressive behavior and increase prosocial behavior among five children who displayed developmental delays in the social and emotional domains.
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Comparison of two receptive language tests (PPVT and TACL) used with the developmentally delayedLamb, Paul H. 01 January 1980 (has links)
The purpose of this investigation was to compare the results as recorded in mental ages of the PPVT and TACL when used with developmentally delayed children. One aspect was to observe how well the mean mental age from each test would compare with the mean mental age obtained from psychometric testing (WISC-R or SB-LM results). Another aspect was to determine how well the data from the PPVT and from the TACL would correlate with the psychometric testing results.
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