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Benson, Jeffrey – Educational Leadership, 2017
Regular education teachers and special educators shouldn't view their jobs as mutually exclusive, writes Jeffrey Benson in this article. He argues that all students benefit when both teachers form collaborative partnerships. Drawing on his four decades of experience in schools, Benson details how regular education teachers can incorporate ideas…
Descriptors: Teacher Collaboration, Regular and Special Education Relationship, Inclusion, Social Influences
Wolter, Deborah – Educational Leadership, 2017
The author argues that to truly help young students who struggle with reading and writing--including those with identified disabilities or conditions that effect building literacy--teachers should avoid the approach of focusing on a student's deficits and creating labels for him or her (dyslexic, English language learner, and so on). A rush to…
Descriptors: Labeling (of Persons), Disabilities, Special Education Teachers, Reading Teachers
Jung, Lee Ann – Educational Leadership, 2017
What's the difference between accommodations and modifications, and why does the distinction matter? In this article, professor Lee Ann Jung explains that accommodations "provide access to the general curriculum but do not fundamentally alter the learning goal or grade level standard." For instance, if the purpose of an assessment is to…
Descriptors: Academic Accommodations (Disabilities), Adaptive Testing, Access to Education, Disabilities
Medoff, Lisa – Educational Leadership, 2016
"Baxter pushed me away every moment that we worked together, He was rude, sarcastic, and often downright mean. He got up and walked away every time I asked him to do something he didn't want to, which was ... everything." That's how Lisa Medoff describes the 4th grade boy whom she tutored twice a week to help him manage his ADHD. Despite…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Elementary School Students, Grade 4, Teacher Student Relationship
Dack, Hilary; Tomlinson, Carol Ann – Educational Leadership, 2015
All people are shaped by the culture in which they live, but it can be difficult for all of us to grasp that people shaped by other cultures will see and respond to the world differently than we do. These cultural differences can cause teachers to misunderstand students. For example, an educator might assume that quiet students have a language…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Cultural Awareness, Guidelines, Classroom Techniques
Armstrong, Thomas – Educational Leadership, 2012
This article discusses how a neurodiversity perspective can help educators create learning environments in which all students flourish. The basic premise of neurodiversity is that there is no "typical" mental capacity--no "normal" brain to which all other brains are compared--and because this is the case, educators should look at students with…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Behavior Disorders, Autism, Special Needs Students
Benson, Jeffrey – Educational Leadership, 2012
One hundred repetitions--100 "useful" repetitions. This notion has guided the author's work in alternative education programs for almost 20 years, dealing with the most challenging students, from addicts to conduct-disordered adolescents to traumatized 5th graders. There are no magic tricks. The role of educators is to align with the healthy…
Descriptors: Caring, Nontraditional Education, Teacher Role, Grade 5
Jung, Lee Ann; Guskey, Thomas R. – Educational Leadership, 2010
Teachers often grapple with the challenge of giving report card grades to students with learning disabilities and English language learners. The authors offer a five-step model that "offers a fair, accurate, and legal way to adapt the grading process for exceptional learners." The model begins with a high-quality reporting system for all students…
Descriptors: Report Cards, Student Needs, Grades (Scholastic), Learning Disabilities
Schwarz, Patrick A. – Educational Leadership, 2007
No student should have to earn his or her way into the general education classroom, writes the author. The inclusive education model recognizes every student's right to be educated in the least restrictive environment, as provided under special education law. Yet many school districts still place students with special learning needs in separate…
Descriptors: Special Education, Inclusive Schools, General Education, Mainstreaming

Ray, Brian D. – Educational Leadership, 2002
Describes why home school is a natural environment for customizing instruction to meet the individual needs of students, especially those with special needs and talents. (Contains 19 references.) (PKP)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted, Home Schooling, Special Needs Students

Zylstra, Elizabeth – Educational Leadership, 2001
Teacher describes yearlong experience with the inclusion of an autistic boy in her second-grade class, including his effect on classmates. Offers advice to other teachers. (PKP)
Descriptors: Community, Diversity (Student), Elementary Education, Inclusive Schools
Giangreco, Michael F. – Educational Leadership, 2007
Giangreco helps teachers answer one of the hardest questions in including students with disabilities in mainstream classes: How can teachers include students who function substantially below grade level? Giangreco describes a teacher who must help a boy working at kindergarten level participate in the academic work of her 5th grade class. He…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Special Needs Students, Communication Skills, Disabilities

Hardiman, Mariale M. – Educational Leadership, 2001
Identifies and discusses five dimensions of recent brain research related to learning and links them to suggestions for improving teaching. The five dimensions are positive attitudes, acquiring and integrating knowledge, extending and refining knowledge, using knowledge meaningfully, and habits of the mind. Draws implications for teaching…
Descriptors: Brain, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education, Knowledge Level

Merritt, Sandy – Educational Leadership, 2001
Veteran first-grade teacher describes her 2-year inclusion experience with three special-education students. Offers other teachers suggestions for planning and implementing inclusion. (PKP)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Teachers, Inclusive Schools, Planning
Friend, Marilyn – Educational Leadership, 2007
Students with special needs are more likely to spend most or all of the school day in a typical classroom than they did in the past, when separate classrooms were the norm. As a result, teachers are faced with the challenge of teaching students with a wide array of learning needs. Marilyn Friend suggests that coteaching, a partnership in which a…
Descriptors: Special Needs Students, Special Education Teachers, Team Teaching, Teacher Collaboration