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Chen, Deborah; Dote-Kwan, Jamie – Young Exceptional Children, 2021
Approximately 65% of young children with visual impairments have another disability such as developmental delay, cerebral palsy, or hearing loss. Furthermore, cerebral/cortical visual impairment is the most prevalent visual condition among young children with severe visual impairment in the United States (Hatton et al., 2013). This article…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Visual Impairments, Comorbidity, Access to Education
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Taylor, Katie – Odyssey: New Directions in Deaf Education, 2020
In an ideal world, classrooms are not designed for and educators are not trained to teach the average student because the average student does not exist. Each student has unique measures, unique strengths, and weaknesses. Universal Design for Learning (UDL) allows teachers to easily accommodate every student; it blurs the lines of special…
Descriptors: Deafness, Hearing Impairments, Access to Education, Student Needs
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Lowenthal, Patrick R.; Greear, Krista; Humphrey, Michael; Lowenthal, Alison; Conley, Quincy; Giacumo, Lisa A.; Dunlap, Joanna C. – Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 2020
Accessibility is a hot topic in online education these days. Despite the increased focus on accessibility, most discussions of creating "accessible" online courses and elearning simply focus on adding alternative text to images and captions to video. In this article, we argue that online educators and workplace learning professionals…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Inclusion, Online Courses, Student Needs
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Campoy-Cubillo, Mari Carmen – European Journal of Special Needs Education, 2019
Genuine instances of communication are multimodal in nature. Thus, important aspects of effective communication such as gestures, facial expression, visual context, or interpersonal distance, are usually present in listening events and participate in the communicative act, creating a given multimodal message. The Common European Framework of…
Descriptors: Listening Skills, Interpersonal Communication, Interaction, Native Speakers
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Regalla, Michele; Peker, Hilal – Learning Languages, 2016
During the 2013-2014 school year, a charter school in Central Florida (which will be given the pseudonym "The Unity School") known for its practice of full inclusion launched an unconventional project. The Unity School, which serves children from preschool through grade five, began offering foreign language to all pre-kindergarten…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Preschool Children, Second Language Instruction, French
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Regional Educational Laboratory Southeast, 2011
Gifted students have unique educational needs. Although gifted students are as varied as other students in terms of their learning styles and preferences, all gifted learners have exhibited unusual performance or potential and they have distinctive characteristics, shared by most of these students, which require effective responses from educators.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Talent, Academically Gifted, Information Technology
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Grabinger, R. Scott; Aplin, Cary; Ponnappa-Brenner, Gitanjali – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2008
Educational Technology;Technology Integration;The field of education now faces an increasingly diverse student body that includes English as second language speakers, those with physical as well as psychiatric disabilities, and multiple representations of races, ethnicities, and religions. Traditionally, postsecondary faculty have thought of…
Descriptors: Mental Disorders, Postsecondary Education, Educational Technology, Technology Integration
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Tabor, Catherine – Mathematics Teacher, 2014
Inclusion and differentiation--hallmarks of the current educational system--require a paradigm shift in the way that educators run their classrooms. This article enumerates the need for techno-kinesthetic, visually based activities and offers an example of a calculator-based programming activity that addresses that need. After discussing the use…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Calculators, Teaching Methods, Learning Modalities
Spiridakis, John N. – 1981
The precise nature of learning styles has not yet been articulated by research; there are, however, several models and techniques to identify learning styles that appear to be especially suited for use by the bilingual classroom teacher. Three such models are presented: the Field-Dependence/Independence Model, the Educational Cognitive Style…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Bilingual Students, Cognitive Style, Elementary Education
Stone, Pete – Principal, 1992
After discovering at least 64 percent of their students were either tactile or kinesthetic learners, educators at North Carolina elementary school began grouping kids according to their tactile/kinesthetic or auditory/visual strengths and altered reading instruction schedules every three weeks so that each group had opportunities to learn at best…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Style, Educational Environment, Elementary Education
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Dunn, Rita; Dunn, Kenneth – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2005
This article discusses the evolution of teaching approaches in concert with the findings of over three decades of researches on student perceptual strengths. Confusing reports of successes and only limited successes for students with varied perceptual strengths suggest that combined auditory, visual, tactual, and/or kinesthetic instructional…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Underachievement, Cognitive Style, Teaching Methods
Horner, Vikki – Mathematics Teaching, 2002
Charlotte, the author's 11-year-old daughter, was born with Down syndrome, and is currently attending the local middle school. In terms of her disability Charlotte is developing very well and has a reading age of 9+, however her maths skills age is approximately 4 years. It is not necessarily the case that if a child has good language and literacy…
Descriptors: Down Syndrome, Numeracy, Number Concepts, Kinesthetic Perception
Brevil, Margarette – 1987
The use of microcomputers to help the learning disabled increase their arithmetic skills is examined. The microcomputer should be used to aid the learning disabled student to practice the concepts taught by the teacher. Computer-aided instruction such as drill and practice may help the learning disabled student because it gives immediate feedback…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Uses in Education, Drills (Practice)
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Britsch, Susan Jane; Heise, Kathryn A. – Science and Children, 2006
Children with special learning needs participate fully in the authors' science classes every day; their job as teachers is to bring about meaningful science connections for all students, including those who do not communicate their knowledge most effectively through the ways most typically associated with classroom learning (i.e., reading,…
Descriptors: Science Projects, Hands on Science, Science Instruction, Special Needs Students
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Negron, Elsy; Ricklin, Leslie Perfect – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 1996
Recounts the case of a learning disabled sixth grader mainstreamed into a social studies class. Describes a variety of instructional strategies and activities that capitalize on the student's strengths to facilitate learning. These include critical thinking maps, semantic maps, simulations, and kinesthetic learning. (MJP)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping, Cognitive Style, Creative Activities