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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Putting the cart before the horse| Understanding the family assessment process in early intervention

Votava, Kristen M. 21 November 2013 (has links)
<p> The purpose of this study was to gain an understanding of six state-wide policies and procedures used in the family assessment process within early intervention services. This study looked at the administrative understanding of the family assessment federal regulations, state policies and procedures, and local implementation from the perspective of the Part C coordinator in his or her state. </p><p> This qualitative study utilized methodologies associated with a grounded theory approach through in-depth interviews. The participants in this study included six state Part C coordinators. Based on the findings of this study, two broad conclusions are offered: 1. There was a lack of specific policies and procedures regarding family assessment, which made family assessment difficult to implement with fidelity across a state system. 2. There was a lack of specific training around performance competencies of family assessment, which lead to a reliance on a state's family-centered philosophy and the IFSP process. </p><p> Recommendations were made for early interventionists, Part C coordinators, and researchers in the area of family assessment.</p>
2

Mainstreaming critical disability studies| Towards undoing the last prejudice

McDonald-Morken, Colleen Ann 24 June 2014 (has links)
<p> According to critical disability studies scholars, disablism may be the fundamental system of unearned advantaging and disadvantaging upon which all other notions of difference-as-deviance are constructed. If so, a deeply critical and intersectional investigation of enabled privilege/disablism prepares a grounding from which seeds of novel and effective approaches to social and educational justice may be cultivated. Whether or not disablism holds this pivotal position, the costs to us all in terms of personal, ethical, professional, and financial losses are too steep, have always been too steep. In this disquisition I begin by arguing for the prioritizing and centering of a radical emancipatory discourse&mdash;across and within all education venues&mdash;regarding disability. In Chapter 2, I explore models of disability and notice where awareness of enabled privilege has been absent in my own experience as an educator and call for all educators to consider what might it mean if awareness of enabled privilege and the harms of disablism were at the center of our daily personal, social, and institutional lives. Chapter 3 investigates the perceptions of post-compulsory education professionals regarding what constitutes disability allyship and identifies three unique viewpoints. Chapter 4 blends conceptualizations of allyship developed within various social justice literatures with those identified viewpoints of disability allyship to yield a model professional development approach focused on an intersectional analysis for social justice through disability justice. The dissertation concludes in Chapter 5 with a discussion of core assertions and findings and points to future research priorities.</p>
3

The impact of the self-fulfilling prophecy on black deaf male students

Amissah, Kojo 11 April 2014 (has links)
<p> This qualitative descriptive study purposed to explore the perceptions of a purposive sample of20 Black Deaf male students and alumni in postsecondary in Washington, District of Columbia to determine if the self-fulfilling prophecy theory contributed to their pedagogy. A qualitative survey was administered and the data was analyzed with Excel. Fifteen self-fulfilling prophecy themes emerged from the analysis: (a) syllabic expectations, (b) self expectations, (c) no-low-high expectations, (d) eye contact-acknowledgement, (e) attitudinal indifference, (f) public praise-positive-negative comments, (g) personalized one-on-one attention, (h) pop quiz reminders, (i) office hours-after class counseling, (j) team assignments, (k) verbal-written-positive-negative feedback, (1) private-public-verbal-written reinforcements, (m) probing, (n) reminders, and (o) self-motivation. The results indicated that Black Deaf male students and alumni perception about their educational experience in the classroom were positive, Galatea effects.</p>
4

Mouvement vers l’inclusion et évolution de la politique d’intégration scolaire au Québec : entre permanence et changement, une difficile légitimation de la mise en œuvre

Gris, Sandrine 08 1900 (has links)
Ces prolégomènes étudient l’évolution conceptuelle et politique de l’intégration scolaire comme introduction à l’analyse de la construction de la légitimité de la politique de l’adaptation scolaire. Ils s’intéressent d’abord au mouvement des courants de scolarisation des élèves handicapés ou en difficulté d’adaptation ou d’apprentissage (EHDAA) et à leurs mutations au regard de leurs fondements. Puis, ils les explorent dans le contexte du Québec, à partir de l’étude de l’évolution de la Politique de l’adaptation scolaire de 1978 à 1999 et des changements intervenus dans l’orientation, l’organisation des services et l’identification des catégories d’élèves concernés par cette politique. Ces changements sont également mis en perspective avec la question de la mise en œuvre de la politique par les acteurs scolaires, considérée comme un espace de redéfinition des problèmes et de légitimation de la politique. Il montre que l’évolution de la Politique de l’adaptation scolaire se situe entre la permanence et le changement dans la conception de scolarisation des élèves HDAA sous-tendus par une difficile mise en œuvre et légitimation de la politique. / These prolegomena inquire on the political and conceptual evolution of school integration as a mere introduction to the analysis of the making of a legitimized policy regarding special education. It first explore the different schooling trends, and their evolutive core, designed for students with handicaps, social maladjustments or learning disabilities; then situate it within three frame of reference unique to Quebec : the study of the evolution between 1978 and 1999 of the policies on special education and their positioning, the management of such services as well as the grouping and labeling of any student concerned by those policies. These variations are later questioned by the application of such policies by the different players, as their application is considered to be the mold for any problem diagnosis as well as a legitimising podium. Ultimately, the highlights of this particular evolution of policies on special education is positioned between changes and durability of the schooling approach for special students, and is underlained by a difficult implementation and legitimization.

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