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Schipper, William – School Media Quarterly, 1979
Presents important concepts behind Public Law 94-142, including (1) individualized attention for each handicapped child, (2) freedom from erroneous classification, (3) parental involvement in the process, and (4) exposure of handicapped and nonhandicapped children to one another. (CMV)
Descriptors: Educational Principles, Federal Legislation, Handicapped Children, Mainstreaming
Wise, James H. – Education Unlimited, 1979
The author outlines six tactics which undermine the success of programs designed to mainstream handicapped students. Among the measures pointed out is failing to include regular education teachers in special in-service workshops. (SBH)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Failure, Handicapped Children, Mainstreaming
Zakariasen, Hazel – Education Unlimited, 1979
The condition is defined, and some of its manifestations are outlined, including petit mal epilepsy, psychomotor epilepsy, and grand mal epilepsy. Constructive ways to deal with epileptic students are suggested, including specific ways to handle a seizure, should one occur. (DLS)
Descriptors: Definitions, Epilepsy, Mainstreaming, Seizures
Boland, Sandra K. – Education Unlimited, 1979
The article briefly highlights a few of the experiences of a commerical food preparation teacher, an auto body teacher, and a special education aide, who all work together to provide a comprehensive vocational program for mainstreamed handicapped high school students at Plano High School in Plano, Texas. (DLS)
Descriptors: Handicapped Children, Mainstreaming, Secondary Education, Vocational Education
Brisenden, Simon – Adults Learning (England), 1990
A disabled person speaks about the culture of disability and the threat that this concept makes to the world of "normality." He stresses the need to recognize the inherent value of disabled people as persons and the importance of enabling disability culture to be one of the many strands in a multicultural society. (SK)
Descriptors: Cultural Isolation, Cultural Pluralism, Culture, Disabilities
Peer reviewedDarch, Craig – Research in Rural Education, 1989
Presents an alternative instructional approach for helping learning disabled high school students comprehend content area instruction in regular classrooms. Combines the use of direct instruction and advanced organizers. Also identifies and discusses general methods teachers can use to teach learning disabled students successfully in regular…
Descriptors: High Schools, Learning Disabilities, Mainstreaming, Teaching Methods
Peer reviewedJohnson, Linda K. – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1990
The article offers a classroom management technique, PASSWORD, that facilitates the smooth transition of handicapped students from the resource room to the regular class. Students are each asked a "code question," usually a review question, the answer to which is the password for leaving the resource room. (DB)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Disabilities, Mainstreaming, Resource Room Programs
Peer reviewedEdwards, Clark – Journalism Educator, 1992
Maintains that journalism educators must integrate the disabled student into their programs and that journalism professionals must integrate the disabled journalist into the newsroom. (SR)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Higher Education, Journalism, Journalism Education
Skoning, Stacey N. – TEACHING Exceptional Children Plus, 2008
Benefits to using creative movement and dance as teaching tools in the classroom include increased student understanding of content, improved classroom behavior, and the development of new forms of assessment. Integration of these activities within the instructional day will meet the needs of a variety of learners, especially kinesthetic learners,…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Dance, Emotional Disturbances, Learning Disabilities
Hartas, Dimitra – Educational Psychology in Practice, 2008
The nature of parental participation in children's education is changing rapidly. A growing body of research points to the positive effect that parental involvement has on outcomes of schooling and on children's well-being. This paper examines parental participation practices in terms of parents working together with a range of professionals,…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Childrens Rights, Advocacy, Parent School Relationship
Wilson, Gloria Lodato – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2008
Co-teaching, the pairing of general and special education teachers in a general education classroom, requires a high degree of expertise on the part of both teachers. Done well, it can be compared to a strong marriage--partners sharing and planning, reflecting and changing. Done poorly, it can be described as a blind date--co-teachers just waiting…
Descriptors: Inclusive Schools, Special Education Teachers, Team Teaching, Teacher Collaboration
Correa-Torres, Silvia Maria – RE:view: Rehabilitation Education for Blindness and Visual Impairment, 2008
Many students with deafblindness now are educated in less restricted educational environments with their hearing and sighted peers. However, that less restricted education setting does not guarantee deafblind students opportunities for communication and social interactions. The author observed 4 students with deafblindness and gathered information…
Descriptors: Deaf Blind, Inclusive Schools, Mainstreaming, Regular and Special Education Relationship
Lucas, Tamara; Villegas, Ana Maria; Freedson-Gonzalez, Margaret – Journal of Teacher Education, 2008
Students who speak languages other than English are a growing presence in U.S. schools. As a result, many mainstream classroom teachers are finding that they have English language learners in their classes. Unfortunately, most mainstream classroom teachers have had little or no preparation for providing the types of assistance that such learners…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Teacher Education Programs, Second Language Learning
Ntshangase, Sibusiso; Mdikana, Andile; Cronk, Candice – International Journal of Special Education, 2008
Participants in this study were twenty-nine adolescent boys (n = 29) between the ages of sixteen and eighteen years, who were attending an inclusive private school in the affluent suburb of Johannesburg. Fourteen participants had never been diagnosed with learning difficulties and had attended mainstream schools throughout their school careers.…
Descriptors: Special Schools, Private Schools, Inclusive Schools, Self Esteem
Connor, David J.; Gabel, Susan L.; Gallagher, Deborah J.; Morton, Missy – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2008
This paper serves as a broad introduction to Disabilities Studies in Education (DSE). The emergence of DSE over the last decade has resulted in a vibrant area of academic scholarship as well as a critical forum for social/educational advocacy and activism. First, the authors trace the roots of DSE in the growth of disability studies (DS) within…
Descriptors: Inclusive Schools, Disabilities, Foreign Countries, Educational Research

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