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Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
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Jenkins, Amelia – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2010
The content mastery center (CMC) model is responsive to the federal requirements of providing access to the general education curriculum for students with disabilities and allowing special education teachers to meet the highly qualified requirement by providing consultation and support services in the content areas. The CMC model has been…
Descriptors: Teacher Responsibility, Inclusive Schools, Mainstreaming, Program Implementation
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Braaten, Barbara; Quinn, Carol – Preventing School Failure, 2000
This program describes a program at one Minnesota elementary school that works to optimally include 32 students with emotional and behavioral disorders. The three special classes involve increasing amounts of time spent in mainstream settings with decreasing amounts of additional support. Key program characteristics include philosophy, goals,…
Descriptors: Behavior Disorders, Elementary Education, Emotional Disturbances, Inclusive Schools
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Fishman, Jordan M.; Goss, Barbara M. – Middle School Journal, 1996
Describes a successful cross-categorical inclusion program at Kosciuszko Middle School in Milwaukee (the program includes learning disabilities, cognitive disabilities, and emotionally disturbed.) Explores: (1) perceptions of regular education teachers; (2) greater support given to all students; (3) roles and responsibilities of exceptional…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Inclusive Schools, Mainstreaming, Middle Schools
Epstein, Trina; Elias, Maurice – Phi Delta Kappan, 1996
Deinstitutionalizing the mentally ill failed because proper implementation required large-scale societal changes. Dumping disabled kids into regular education without appropriate supports could mirror that fiasco. Inclusion can help create a sense of community through promoting acceptance and respect among classmates. The Social Awareness-Social…
Descriptors: Civil Liberties, Community, Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education
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Huxtable, Marion – Social Work in Education, 1997
Reports on an experimental attempt to provide an appropriate public education for all children without the disadvantages of special education. The program, Project Breakthrough, provides services in the mainstream using the regular education initiative without categorizing children. Staff collaborate to help students based on need rather than on…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Educational Strategies, Elementary Education, High Risk Students
California Univ., Los Angeles. Center for Mental Health Schools. – 1998
Inclusion is the practice of educating children who have disabilities in classes together with their peers who do not have disabilities. This packet on "least intervention" contains resource materials that help ensure appropriate inclusion. The first section of this packet contains discussions of appropriate inclusion and a description of the…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Inclusive Schools, Intervention
Klein, Evelyn R.; Geiss, Dana; Kushner, Robin; Hill, Donna – 2003
This experimental study examined the Early Childhood Inclusion Support Program (ECIS).The program uses empirically-based procedures to support effective strategies of inclusion in preschool, including training for program collaboration and implementation through direct services to students and through support for teachers, and through…
Descriptors: Community Programs, Developmental Delays, Early Childhood Education, Inclusive Schools
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Beloin, Kim S. – Rural Special Education Quarterly, 1998
Describes inclusive practices in four small, rural Wisconsin schools. These models focus on scheduling for cross-categorical programming, including students with challenging behaviors, coteaching, and practicing inclusion in high school. Includes philosophy of inclusion and program features for each model. Contains 24 references. (SAS)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Educational Practices, Elementary Secondary Education, Inclusive Schools
Winarski, Diana L. – Teaching Pre K-8, 1997
Describes the "sister school" partnership between the American School for the Deaf in West Hartford, Connecticut and nearby Braeburn, a public K-5 school. The reciprocal program, which allows several students from each school to spend time in the others' classes, emphasizes the commonalities of all students while still being aware of…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Cooperative Programs, Deafness, Elementary Education
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Slavin, Robert E. – Educational Leadership, 1996
Schools can reduce special-education and remedial instruction costs by helping students succeed in early grades. This article profiles several prevention and early intervention programs, including Success for All, Reading Recovery, Prevention of Learning Disabilities, the Carolina Abecedarian Project, Comer's School Development Program, and…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education, Family Programs
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Doelling, Jane E.; Bryde, Suzanne; Brunner, Judy; Martin, Barbara – Middle School Journal, 1998
Clarifies issues surrounding inclusion and describes the implementation of an appropriate educational program for an 11-year-old student with autism entering middle school. Discusses collaborative efforts of school staff, importance of shared leadership roles, adherence to appropriate due process, and analysis of the instructional environment in…
Descriptors: Autism, Developmental Disabilities, Inclusive Schools, Individualized Education Programs
Alberg, Joni Y. – 1992
This report describes a project to develop a tool to assist local schools and districts in choosing among various educational approaches to serving children and youth with disabilities in general education settings. The primary purpose of the study, its objectives, and the final product are described in the first chapter. The second chapter…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Delivery Systems, Disabilities, Educational Strategies
Owens, Martha; Rockett, Susan – 1995
This paper describes the "Every Child a Winner" curriculum that provides inclusion for special needs children in elementary classrooms. Key elements of the curriculum for all ability levels are: improved fitness and motor skills, and enhanced academics and self-esteem for every child. Early program development is described as growing out…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Curriculum Development, Disabilities, Elementary Education
Arguelles, Maria Elena; Hughes, Marie Tejero; Schumm, Jeanne Shay – Principal, 2000
As part of a statewide pilot program, Florida schools are implementing instructional delivery systems to mainstream more students with disabilities and develop more special/general educator partnerships. Effective coteaching models have common planning time, flexibility, risk-taking, defined roles and responsibilities, compatibility, communication…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Delivery Systems, Disabilities, Educational Benefits
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Giangreco, Michael F.; Smith, Carter S.; Pinckney, Elaine – Research and Practice for Persons with Severe Disabilities (RPSD), 2006
Many schools have increased their use of paraprofessionals as a primary mechanism to include more students with various disabilities in general education classes. Although intended to be supportive, service delivery that relies extensively on paraprofessionals has resulted in a host of challenges for public schools and questionable services for…
Descriptors: Program Descriptions, Disabilities, Inclusive Schools, Paraprofessional School Personnel
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