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Jeremy W. Ford; Amanda M. Kern; Julia P. Gorman; Conor D. Mooney – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2024
Individualizing instruction is a time-consuming aspect of classroom practice. Testing multiple interventions, and monitoring each to see which is most effective for a student can be prohibitively time consuming. However, Brief Experimental Analysis (BEA) is an assessment procedure that can be used to quickly identify an intervention that is likely…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Intellectual Disability, Individualized Instruction, Intervention
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Griffin, Megan M.; Papay, Clare K. – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2017
Students with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD), such as autism spectrum disorder and Down syndrome, have more opportunities to go to college than ever before (Hart, Grigal, & Weir, 2010). Over the last decade, the issue of increasing access to college for students with IDD has gained much national attention, in part due to…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Developmental Disabilities, Access to Education, Higher Education
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Clouse, Diane E.; Bauer, Anne M. – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2016
Self-advocacy, self-management, self-regulation, and self-knowledge are complex terms, often considered forms of self-determination. Whatever term you may use, helping young adults with intellectual disability (ID) make authentic decisions about their own goals and behaviors often results in passive agreement. Even though advancing…
Descriptors: Self Advocacy, Self Control, Self Determination, Young Adults