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Wang, Margaret C.; Birch, Jack W. – Exceptional Children, 1984
A study of 156 K-3 classrooms revealed that the Adaptive Learning Enviornments Model, an educational approach that accommodates, in regular classes, a wider-than-usual range of individual differences, can be implemented effectively in a variety of settings, and that favorable student outcome measures coincide with high degrees of program…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Mainstreaming, Models, Primary Education
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Brinker, Richard P.; Thorpe, Margaret E. – Exceptional Children, 1984
An investigation of the educational impact of integration of severely handicapped students revealed that over and above functional level, degree of integration, as measured by interaction with nonhandicapped students, was a significant predictor of educational progress, as measured by the proportion of individualized education program objectives…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Individualized Education Programs, Mainstreaming, Program Effectiveness
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Jenkins, Joseph R.; Mayhall, William F. – Exceptional Children, 1976
Descriptors: Conceptual Schemes, Elementary Education, Exceptional Child Research, Handicapped Children
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Handlers, Adele; Austin, Katherine – Exceptional Children, 1980
Twenty secondary students participated in a sociology class training program judged by them as successful in acquainting them with handicapping conditions and handicapped people, easing mainstreaming, and developing teaching materials for use in other classes. (CL)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Disabilities, Knowledge Level, Mainstreaming
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Zigmond, Naomi; Baker, Janice – Exceptional Children, 1990
This article reports the progress of 13 learning-disabled students after 1 year of planning and 1 year of implementing the "Mainstream Experiences for the Learning Disabled" (MELD) model in an urban elementary school. Students made no significant progress in reading or math and earned lower grades during the implementation year. (DB)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities, Mainstreaming
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Fuchs, Douglas; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1990
Comparison of short and long duration consultant-driven prereferral interventions with 60 general elementary educators, 60 pupils with special needs, and 22 consultants found that both variants were equally effective in improving teacher perceptions of their students and in decreasing referrals for testing and possible special education placement.…
Descriptors: Consultants, Elementary Education, Intervention, Mainstreaming
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Fuchs, Douglas; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1990
Forty-three general educators were assigned to one of three versions of the Behavioral Consultation model, to assess the model's effects on problem behavior of difficult-to-teach intermediate-grade students. Observations of student behavior indicated that more inclusive Behavioral Consultation versions exerted stronger effects than the least…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Consultation Programs, High Risk Students, Intermediate Grades
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Salisbury, Christine L. – Exceptional Children, 1991
This article focuses on integration of children with and without disabilities during the early childhood years, with specific attention devoted to the notion of how predictors of high-quality programs become integrated into service delivery systems. Indicators of program quality from general education, early childhood education, and early…
Descriptors: Delivery Systems, Disabilities, Early Childhood Education, Early Intervention
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Cantrell, Robert P.; Cantrell, Mary Lynn – Exceptional Children, 1976
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Emotional Disturbances, Exceptional Child Research, Handicapped Children
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Gersten, Russell; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1991
The study compared the effects of an intensive apprenticeship training experience provided to two consulting teachers with the standard training provided six consulting teachers. Significant differences were found in favor of the intensively trained teachers in all aspects of instructional improvement. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Consultants, Elementary Education, Inservice Teacher Education
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Guralnick, Michael J.; Groom, Joseph M. – Exceptional Children, 1988
The peer interactions and cognitive levels of play of mildly developmentally delayed preschool children were compared as they participated in mainstreamed and specialized settings. They engaged in substantially higher rates of peer-related social behaviors and constructive play when mainstreamed. Factors affecting early childhood mainstreaming…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Developmental Disabilities, Mainstreaming, Mild Disabilities
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Hundert, Joel; Houghton, Anne – Exceptional Children, 1992
This study of 14 children (ages 3-5) with disabilities participating in the Classwide Social Skills Program found that the program increased subjects' positive play and levels of teacher reinforcement, but these increases did not generalize to 3-month or 6-month follow-up periods nor to another play session in the day. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Generalization, Interaction, Interpersonal Competence
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Miller, Ted L.; Sabatino, David A. – Exceptional Children, 1978
The effect of two special education resource models (teacher consultant model and resource room model) on student achievement and on teacher and student behavior was contrasted, using 480 learning disabled and educable mentally handicapped children (mean age of eight years and four months). (BD)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Elementary Education, Exceptional Child Research, Learning Disabilities
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Naor, Margalit; Milgram, Roberta M. – Exceptional Children, 1980
Preservice training that provides for contact with different kinds of exceptional children as well as for lecture discussions about them was found to have an advantage over training limited to lecture discussions in the realm of attitudes and behavioral intentions, but not in factual knowledge. (SBH)
Descriptors: Conventional Instruction, Disabilities, Elementary Education, Exceptional Child Research
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Mills, Paulette E.; Cole, Kevin N.; Jenkins, Joseph R.; Dale, Philip S. – Exceptional Children, 1998
This study compared three levels of inclusion (special education only, integrated special education, and mainstream placements) on the cognitive and language development of 66 preschool children with disabilities. Analysis of pre- to postgains revealed that integrated special education produced gains that significantly exceeded the rate of normal…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Disabilities, Inclusive Schools