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Maag, John W.; Kauffman, James M. – Critical Questions in Education, 2022
The controversy over the use labels for students who receive special education services under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act has been raging for decades. Do labels really serve an educational purpose? Do they stigmatize students? Do disabilities really exist? Are they just part of the normal distribution of human characteristics,…
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Emotional Disturbances, Labeling (of Persons), Language Usage
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Kauffman, James M. – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2015
Problems in defining emotional and behavioural difficulties of all types, including bullying, are discussed. Interactions among seeing, naming and communicating about these phenomena are considered. School and community characteristics of students with emotional and behavioural difficulties are touched upon. Major problems in definition and…
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Emotional Disturbances, Bullying, Institutional Characteristics
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Forness, Steven R.; Freeman, Stephanny F. N.; Paparella, Tanya; Kauffman, James M.; Walker, Hill M. – Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Disorders, 2012
Prevalence of children with emotional or behavioral disorders (EBD) is a critical component in the discussion of underidentification of children served in special education. This discussion has previously focused almost exclusively on point prevalence or the number of children with EBD presumably needing services at any single point in time.…
Descriptors: Emotional Disturbances, Behavior Disorders, Incidence, Children
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Wiley, Andrew L.; Kauffman, James M.; Plageman, Kristen – Exceptionality, 2014
Underidentification of students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD; emotional disturbance or ED in federal language) is a critical issue, perhaps explainable in part by causal attributions of problem behavior associated with conservatism. Conservatism in 58 counties in the state of California was measured by finding the percentage of…
Descriptors: Disability Identification, Behavior Disorders, Emotional Disturbances, Special Education
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Kauffman, James M.; Badar, Jeanmarie – Behavioral Disorders, 2013
The authors note that identification as having emotional or behavioral disorders (EBD) is generally acknowledged to be stigmatizing. The stigma associated with identification as needing special education for EBD (or any other disability) could be reduced by talking in readily understood language about differences, accepting the reality of…
Descriptors: Special Education, Emotional Disturbances, Behavior Disorders, Social Attitudes
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Kauffman, James M. – Behavioral Disorders, 2010
Instruction is the most important variable in special education, but it is often overlooked. Special instruction is what makes special education work, yet it is often neglected. We need to know more about how to teach both academic and behavioral skills more effectively, how behavioral and academic skills are interrelated, and how to choose those…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Special Education, Teaching Methods, Identification
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Kauffman, James M. – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2008
Comments on the nature of special education as an enterprise and judgment of its progress are offered. Five independent but necessary and sufficient criteria for judgment of progress in special education for students with emotional or behavioral disorders are suggested. Comments are made on each of the articles in the series, and concluding…
Descriptors: Emotional Disturbances, Behavior Disorders, Special Education, Educational Practices
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Anastasiou, Dimitris; Kauffman, James M. – Exceptional Children, 2011
Proponents of a social model of disability derive their arguments from social constructionism. They combine different disabling conditions under one term: disability. Subsequently, they apply the specific viewpoint of the disability rights social movement of people with physical disabilities to other conditions such as intellectual disabilities,…
Descriptors: Physical Disabilities, Educational Policy, Special Education, Inclusion
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Kauffman, James M.; Landrum, Timothy J. – Exceptionality, 2009
The civil rights movements involving skin tone, gender or gender orientation, disability, and other physiognomic features remain important in securing the legal rights of individuals to equal treatment and equal opportunities regardless of their personal characteristics of color, origin, gender, and so on. Unfortunately, these welcome civil rights…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Behavior Disorders, Disability Identification, Disproportionate Representation
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Kauffman, James M.; Simpson, Richard L.; Mock, Devery R. – Behavioral Disorders, 2009
Objective data provide overwhelming evidence that children and youth with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD) are underidentified and underserved. This was the central argument in our November 2007 Forum article to which Harry, Hart, Klingner, Cramer, and Sturges responded. In this rejoinder, we continue to assert the dramatic need to offer…
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Emotional Disturbances, Student Needs, Access to Education
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Kauffman, James M.; Mock, Devery R.; Simpson, Richard L. – Behavioral Disorders, 2007
Data suggest that students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD) are underidentified and underserved for a variety of reasons. In response to this problem, the authors identify misinformation and provide evidence-based information regarding prevalence; discuss the role of stigma and exclusion from the EBD category and appropriate responses…
Descriptors: Students, Behavior Disorders, Emotional Disturbances, Negative Attitudes
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Nelson, C. Michael; Kauffman, James M. – Beyond Behavior, 2009
The authors' association goes back more than 40 years, when they were both starting doctoral studies in special education for students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD) at the University of Kansas. In this article, the authors provide a balanced (albeit biased) account of the good and the bad, including some of the many achievements…
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Emotional Disturbances, Personal Narratives, Behavioral Science Research
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Kauffman, James M. – Behavioral Disorders, 1998
This introduction to a special issue on postmodernism and behavior disorders discusses problems with the definition of postmodernism, including the trend for people to label whatever they wish as postmodern, the inability to separate postmodern from the modern, and the subjectivity of defining which ideas are about "reality" or "truth." (CR)
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Classification, Definitions, Educational Theories
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Sabornie, Edward J.; Kauffman, James M. – Behavioral Disorders, 1985
Forty-three mainstreamed behaviorally disordered (BD) students were lower than nonhandicapped controls in regular classroom sociometric status on the Ohio Social Acceptance Scale. BD Ss were as well known as their peers and rated fellow BD Ss in the same classes higher than handicapped raters. (CL)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavior Disorders, High Schools, Peer Acceptance
Kauffman, James M.; And Others – B. C. Journal of Special Education, 1985
Eight key areas (philosophy, goals, definition of population, entry criteria and procedures, curriculum materials and methods, exit procedures and criteria, evaluation and operational procedures) are considered necessary for a well conceptualized program description. (Author/CL)
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Emotional Disturbances, Program Descriptions, Program Development
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