Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_B - Back To School Special Needs Students
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

41. PPI: Students Poorly Served By Special Education Program By Andrew Rotherham
Further, many school officials complain that they cannot as an attempt to roll back the program. while still seeking to help children with special needs.
http://www.ppionline.org/ppi_ci.cfm?knlgAreaID=110&subsecID=181&contentID=3888

42. ENC Online: Problems Of The Week Engage Students With Special Needs
t get enough of it, others are preparing for their GED or going back to school. in the distance and anonymity of PoW, just as students with special needs do
http://www.enc.org/features/focus/archive/special/document.shtm?input=FOC-003143

43. Orbit Magazine: OISE/UT's Magazine For Schools
Recreating Ourselves Drama with special needs students Kathleen Gould Museum educators put objects back where they Together to Create a school Arts Festival A
http://www.oise.utoronto.ca/orbit/arts_in_education_sample.html
Volume 32, No. 3
Arts in Education
Guest-edited by
Larry Swartz and
Suzanne M. Stiegelbauer
Editorial
Larry Swartz
The Relationship of Arts to Education:
What does art contribute to learning and where is its place in the curriculum?
Suzanne M. Stiegelbauer
Navigating Toward Good Work:
Commencement Address for OISE/UT Graduates, June 22, 2001
Howard Gardner Integrating the Arts in Education: Using drama, dance, music, and the visual arts as learning tools throughout the curriculum Jim Giles Can Creativity be Assessed? Why not allow an experience to be its own reward and, if anything, reflection will naturally result? Bob Phillips Why Can't I Hear Any Music?

44. Including Special-needs Students In Regular Classrooms . . . ByPeter Farley
may be denying elementary school special needs students the attention to integrate learningdisabled students into regular settings by cutting back on special
http://www.umass.edu/journal/car/studentwork/farley.html
Students' Work
Including special-needs students in regular classrooms seems to improve student academic performance, data show
by Peter Farley
AMHERST The inclusive-style classroom may be denying elementary school special needs students the attention they require and the education they deserve, according to some local teachers. But an analysis of available data gives a different picture. Now only one question remains: which method of grouping is most effective in helping students, with and without disabilities, to achieve their expected goals? IDEA requires that disabled students be placed in a setting that constitutes the "least restrictive environment." In other words, the government calls for disabled students to be educated with those who are nondisabled, to the maximum extent appropriate. However, teachers such as Mary Donovan, a fourth-grade instructor at Crocker Farm Elementary School in Amherst, say the law is often misinterpreted. The "least restrictive environment" isn’t always the regular classroom for special needs students, Donovan said.

45. Gifted Education - Identification
to meet special needs of these students. These include early entry to school; acceleration (year level or subject); an Individual Learning Plan. back to top.
http://www.sofweb.vic.edu.au/futures/bf_id&ass.htm
Identification Of Gifted Students
Why identify gifted students?
All students should be given the opportunity to achieve their full potential during their time at school. For most students this occurs in the course of the school day. These students are challenged and excited by the regular classroom teaching and material. But for some students special provision must be made in the regular classroom if they are to have the same exciting and challenging learning experiences as their classmates. back to top
In the classroom
Teachers need to use strategies in the classroom to address the continuum of student learning needs. This includes identifying the full range of gifted students from those who are bright through to the small number of students who are profoundly gifted. Checklists are a very useful starting point in identifying high potential learners. Teachers should be familiar with the range of appropriate checklists. Samples of these can be found in Bright Futures Resource Book - Education of Gifted Students Department of Education, Victoria. 1996

46. A Special Day For Kennedy School
special needs held a class reunion with a twist instead of just inviting students from one year, anyone who ever attended the school was welcome to come back
http://www.townonline.com/allston/arts_lifestyle/arts_lifestyle/eduabkennedyms05
LIFESTYLES RELATED ARTICLES
Flaherty wins Community Service Award

McMullen Museum showcasing Massachusetts artists this summer

Education notes

RELATED SITES
Find a Job in ALLSTON

Find a Home in ALLSTON

Find an Apartment in ALLSTON

Yard Sales around ALLSTON
...
MCAS Rankings for ALLSTON

HERALD INTERACTIVE TOOLS Email this Article to a Friend Email the Online Staff Email the Newspaper Printer Friendly Version ... Subscribe to the Allston-Brighton Tab A special day for Kennedy School By Elizabeth Malloy / Correspondent Friday, May 14, 2004 As part of their 40th anniversary celebration, the Kennedy Day School for students with multiple special needs held a class reunion with a twist - instead of just inviting students from one year, anyone who ever attended the school was welcome to come back and party. "The school opened in 1963, so we've been celebrating our 40th birthday year this year and we have invited our alumni back, students and staff who've been here some time in the last 40 years to get back together again," said Bonnie Paulino, the school's director. "This has been kind of a home away from home for some of these folks, and a lot of people have very fond memories." The reunion was held last Friday in the school's gymnasium, which like the rest of the school is housed in the Franciscan Children's Hospital. In addition to spinning dance tunes and plenty of food, there were pictures and slides from the past 40 years, and a memory book where alumni and staff could write about their experiences at the Kennedy School.

47. University Of Cincinnati News: Researcher Explores Success Stories Of Students W
lap and computer strapped to the back of the worked closely with the high school teachers, getting always mean equal treatment for students with special needs.
http://www.uc.edu/news/bauer.htm
UC Researcher Goes Back to High School to Write New Book
Date: July 23, 2001
By: Dawn Fuller
Phone: (513) 556-1823
Archive: Research News A Cincinnati high school is the setting of a new book that examines how students can not only embrace their differences but also flourish in a diverse environment. The book, Adolescents and Inclusion - Transforming Secondary Schools , is co-edited by Anne Bauer, University of Cincinnati professor of teacher education, and Glenda Myree Brown, a UC adjunct professor of education. The book is the result of a two-year study conducted at Purcell Marian High School, a Catholic school that serves a general population in Cincinnati. The book features several academic success stories and the voices of 19 Purcell Marian teachers who participated in the research project. The student population is about 50 percent Euro-American and 50 percent African American. Bauer's research project focused on the triumphs of high school students at risk or who have disabilities. Those groups make up about 20 percent of the student population. She pointed out something the able-bodied may not consider...the effort it takes to navigate a high school when the student is using a wheelchair. "In a typical high school, classes run 50 minutes. For students, that involves seven moves a day. Purcell Marian went to block scheduling, so each student has only four classes a day. That reduced the number of class changes by half."

48. Inclusion Approach Opens Doors For Special Needs Students - GranvilleSentinel.co
if it would work, but now, looking back, her life all grade levels in the Granville school district, the The special education teacher adapts the lesson to the
http://www.newarkadvocate.com/granvillesentinel/news/stories/20031002/localnews/
Home News Classifieds Cars ... Customer Service /* You may give each page an identifying name, server, and channel on the next lines. */ var pageName="" var server="" var channel="Granville" var pageType="" var pageValue="" var product="" var prop1="" var prop2="" var prop3="" var prop4="" var prop5="" var prop6="news" var prop7="" var prop8="" var prop9="" var prop10="" var s_code=' ' Home News Licking County News Local Sports ...
Zanesville

Week of October 2 - 8, 2003
Local News
Inclusion approach opens doors for special needs students
Granville's award-winning program brings more students into mainstream By BRIAN MILLER
Sentinel Reporter Photo by Kevin Graff Samantha McMasters, left, and fellow-teacher Becky Bleeke help students in a class that they share as part of the inclusion program at Granville High School.
Tom and Patti Burkett were testing new ground 12 years ago when they enrolled their daughter Sarah, a special needs student, in a regular kindergarten class in the Granville schools. The previous year, 1990, Sarah was enrolled in a class for developmentally handicapped children from Granville and Heath. Although children like her with mental retardation and other educational handicaps were legally entitled to attend regular classrooms, the number of children who did so were few at that time.

49. CCM - Student Development
back to top. Several programs exist to meet the special needs of specific groups students (link to International students Association); Women returning to school;
http://www.ccm.edu/studentdev/counselserv.shtml

Counseling Center Programs

The Counseling Center offers a variety of programs for students, faculty and administrators. Back to top
Individual Counseling

Back to top

Some of the issues which bring students to the Counseling Center include:
  • Wanting greater self-awareness Uncertainty of career and educational goals in doing life planning Family problems Drinking "too much" Difficulty in concentration which affects studying Anxiety during tests Indecision about what to do after graduation Thinking of dropping out of school Concerns about returning to school after a number of years
Back to top
Counseling Workshops
Back to top
Crisis Intervention
The counselor may be called upon to help in a situation involving the emotional distress of any member of the campus community.

50. Special
V. Encourage school administrators to seek help from ask students to paraphrase directions back to them can sometimes be a problem for special needs students.
http://www.acu.edu/~armstrongl/geography/spec.htm

51. Emerson (MO08) - Press Release - Back To School In Missouri
lightens the burden of annual backto-school out-of-pocket money for their students’ school supplies is for math, science, and special needs teachers working
http://www.house.gov/apps/list/hearing/mo08_emerson/col_030816.html
August 16, 2003
Weekly Column Back to School in Missouri Washington - You wouldn’t know summer is ending, but all over Southern Missouri teachers and students are returning to the classrooms.
It is a rite of August that plays out every year. Parents must purchase school supplies from the ever-longer list provided by the school. Filling the shopping basket: Colored pencils which will be used to fill in maps, calculators put to use on complex math problems, and pink erasers to correct the occasional mistake.
Aside from the supplies, there are school clothes to buy, carpools and bus schedules to arrange, and the normal anxiety over going back to school.
And for older students leaving for college, the prospect of saying goodbye, even for a few weeks, is extremely tough on a parent. No matter where our children are off to on the first day of school, sending them is difficult.
We don’t think of our students as going back to work, but that is exactly how it seems to them. Really, they are learning more about themselves than they could ever glean from books. Yet they will never get so much personal good out of a job as they can in a positive learning environment.
In Southern Missouri, creating that environment comes with its own set of challenges. Nationwide, nearly one quarter of America’s public schools are considered rural, and eight million children attend them.

52. Students Must Be 16 Years Of Age Or Older.
opportunities for students with special needs. back to special Information. OneStop Centers. A cooperative agreement among five school districts, three
http://www.orlandotech.ocps.k12.fl.us/Page_13.html
Students must be 16 years of age or older. Persons desiring to enroll at Orlando Tech should apply in person at the Central Admissions Office. A counselor will interview the applicant to help determine the applicant's educational goals. In addition, evaluation of basic skills of reading, language and mathematics is required prior to enrollment in the Adult Basic Education/General Educational Development preparation program and all technical training programs. Students are taught using the principles of competency-based instruction. Competency-based training is based on current job tasks which are made known to students before instruction. After appropriate instruction is provided, the student must demonstrate mastery under pre-specified conditions and according to pre-specified standards Students currently enrolled in secondary schools may participate in the DUAL ENROLLMENT PROGRAM. This program enables high school students to attend technical training programs on a part-time basis and earn elective credit toward graduation. Tuition is not charged to Dual Enrollment Students.

53. Learning Outside The Lines : Two Ivy League Students With Learning Disabilities
like my son, I also became the Chair of a Parent Organization for children with special needs, but even for years I had feared going back to school, a High
http://www.edu-books.com/Learning_Outside_The_Lines__Two_Ivy_League_Students_Wit
Learning Outside The Lines : Two Ivy League Students With Learning Disabilities And Adhd Give You The Tools F
Learning Outside The Lines : Two Ivy League Students With Learning Disabilities And Adhd Give You The Tools F

by Authors: David Cole , Jonathan Mooney
Released: 05 September, 2000
ISBN: 068486598X
Paperback
Sales Rank:
List price:
Our price: You save: Book > Learning Outside The Lines : Two Ivy League Students With Learning Disabilities And Adhd Give You The Tools F > Customer Reviews: Average Customer Rating:
Learning Outside The Lines : Two Ivy League Students With Learning Disabilities And Adhd Give You The Tools F > Customer Review #1: A Much Needed Voice!
Learning Outside The Lines : Two Ivy League Students With Learning Disabilities And Adhd Give You The Tools F > Customer Review #2: From a teachers point of view...

54. AboutOurKids.org | Back To School For Kids With Special Needs
issue, or a stressful situation at home, school may present a special challenge. of children who might be a good match for after school activities. back to top
http://www.aboutourkids.org/aboutour/articles/backtoschool.html
Board of Directors Director's Corner Education Advisory Council Virtual Trophy Case ... Frequently Asked Questions
E-Mail to a Friend Printer Friendly Back to School for Kids With Special Needs
by Robin F. Goodman, Ph.D., A.T.R.-BC Introduction Understanding the child who is new to a school or area A parent's concern - a place to start Helping the child who is new to a school or area ... Helping the child who is precocious Introduction For some children, making the transition from summer to school requires more than having the right book bag or sneakers. When parents have particular concerns about a child advance preparation can smooth the way. This article describes some common child and family issues and offers parents suggestions for helping their kids. Back to top.
A parent's concern - a place to start Not all children are excited and eager about facing the first day of school. For the child with a less confident style, a learning problem, a mental health issue, or a stressful situation at home, school may present a special challenge. Yet with proper preparation the school year can be rewarding for child, parent, and teacher. Although no parent or child wants to be labeled by a particular problem, understanding a child's unique style or situation, recognizing his or her strengths and weaknesses, anticipating potential trouble spots, and communicating with educational staff can start things off on a positive note and avoid wasted time later in the year.

55. MY TEACHERS PAGE
and information for parents of students who need special education. (back to Table Of Contents articles about medication, parent coaching, school, legal issues
http://www.eagle.ca/~matink/teacher.html
Home Page Ontario Curriculum Libraries
Just For Kids
... Themes
TEACHER RESOURCES
During the year, I will be adding resources for teachers to this site. These resources will be teaching tools and topics that will cover many facets of education. If you have additional sites that you have found to be useful or any topics that you would like me to research and display the results here, please use the handy e-mail link to send them to me. I would also appreciate you letting me know if any of the listed links are no longer active in order for me to keep these pages as up-to-date as possible.
Table of Contents
Special Education General Special Education Sites Attention Deficit Disorder Behaviour Exceptionalities Communication Learning Disabled ... Holidays Page
Special Education
General Special Education Sites
  • Special Education - BC - On-line Documents

  • This site has several on-line resource documents for teachers. Topics include: Visual Impairments, Hearing Loss, Gifted Education, Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, etc.
  • CEC ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities and Gifted Education

  • ERIC EC gathers and disseminates the professional literature, information, and resources on the education and development of individuals of all ages who have disabilities and/or who are gifted. This site has a wealth of information!

    56. Special Needs
    back to CTEST Home. special needs testing in the News. Most of the states and many local school districts are actively pursuing the latest educational reform
    http://wwwcsteep.bc.edu/CTESTWEB/special/dis.html
    Standards-Based Reform and Students with Disabilities Back to Spotlight Issues Back to CTEST Home Introduction to the issue Official Documents regarding special needs students Special needs testing in the News Weblinks for further information
    Introduction to the Issues Most of the states and many local school districts are actively pursuing the latest educational reform initiative: the use of standards-based reforms. Many of these reforms have high stakes consequences for individual students, educators, or school districts. While there has been much discussion of standards-based reform, little attention has been paid to the participation of students with disabilities in these reforms. The educational policies and practices that focus upon common, standards-driven learning for all students conflict in many respects with policies and practices which promote a highly individualized approach to the education of students with disabilities. The reauthorization of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, the federal law governing special education, now requires that states and school districts include students with disabilities in education reform initiatives. This means that the individualized education program for these students must address issues concerning each student's participation in standards-based reform initiatives. Also, modifications in testing or assessments must be made to address disabilities.

    57. Back To School - Getting Reconnected With Students
    Get yourself and your students reconnected with this 'back to school' article. IcebreakersMotivating students to LearnOther back to school Resources Given contradictory needs or distractible
    http://7-12educators.about.com/library/weekly/aa081000a.htm
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Education Secondary School Educators Home ... Curricular How-To's for 7-12 Educators zau(256,152,145,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Curriculum and Lesson Plans Assessments Technology and Education Learning Theories ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb);
    Stay Current
    Subscribe to the About Secondary School Educators newsletter. Search Secondary School Educators Email to a friend Print this page Stay Current Subscribe to the About Secondary School Educators newsletter. Suggested Reading Beginning of the Year Teacher Strategies Handy Helpers for Teachers Daily Warm Ups Suggested Reading Icebreakers Motivating Students to Learn Other Back to School Resources Elsewhere on the Web Techniques for Classroom Discipline Most Popular Top Inspirational Quotes for Speeches Effective Speech Writing Top Ten Themes for Graduation Speeches civil war photographs - pictures of the american civil war ... Speech given to the National Honor Society induction - Examp... What's Hot Chinese history - mandate of heaven journal topics for self understanding - journals and educati...

    58. Increasing The Participation Of Special Needs Students In NAEP: A Report On 1996
    students were oversampled in national S2 and S3 schools, and all back to top. results, based on the combined data from all special needs students, include the
    http://nces.ed.gov/programs/quarterly/vol_2/2_1/q10-1.asp
    site index ED.gov View Quarterly by This Issue Volume and Issue Topics Vol 2, Issue 1, Topic: Methodology Increasing the Participation of Special Needs Students in NAEP: A Report on 1996 NAEP Research Activities By: John Mazzeo, James E. Carlson, Kristin E. Voelkl, and Anthony D. Lutkus This article was originally published as the Executive Summary of the Research and Development Report of the same name. The sample survey data are from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) 1996 Mathematics and Science Assessments.
    Research and Development Reports are intended to
    • Share studies and research that are developmental in nature.
    • Share results of studies that are on the cutting edge of methodological developments.
    • Participate in discussions of emerging issues of interest to researchers.
    These reports present results or discussion that do not reach definitive conclusions at this point in time, either because the data are tentative, the methodology is new and developing, or the topic is one on which there are divergent views. Therefore, the techniques and inferences made from the data are tentative and are subject to revision.
    Introduction This study grew out of concerns about the under- representation of students with special needs in the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) assessments. The term "special needs students" is sometimes used to include both students with disabilities and students who are limited English proficient (LEP).In the 1996 NAEP assessment samples, 10 percent of 4th-graders, 9 percent of 8th-graders, and 5 percent of 12th-graders were identified by their schools as students with disabilities. In the same assessment year, 4 percent of 4th-graders and 2 percent of 8th- and 12th-graders were identified by their schools as students with limited English proficiency (

    59. Teachers-special Education
    it, to meet the child’s individual needs. Most special education teachers instruct students at the elementary, middle, and secondary school level, although
    http://www.bls.gov/oco/ocos070.htm
    Skip Navigation Links Latest Numbers U.S. Department of Labor
    Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook www.bls.gov OOH Search/A-Z Index BLS Home Get Detailed Statistics ... Find It! In DOL Printer-friendly version ( HTML PDF
    Nature of the Work
    Working Conditions ... Sources of Additional Information
    Significant Points
    • Excellent job prospects are expected due to rising enrollments of special education students and reported shortages of qualified teachers.
    • A bachelor’s degree, completion of an approved teacher preparation program, and a license are required to qualify; many States require a master’s degree.
    • Many States offer alternative licensure programs to attract people into these jobs.
    Nature of the Work About this section Back to Top Special education teachers work with children and youths who have a variety of disabilities. A small number of special education teachers work with students with mental retardation or autism, primarily teaching them life skills and basic literacy. However, the majority of special education teachers work with children with mild to moderate disabilities, using the general education curriculum, or modifying it, to meet the child’s individual needs. Most special education teachers instruct students at the elementary, middle, and secondary school level, although some teachers work with infants and toddlers. The various types of disabilities that qualify individuals for special education programs include specific learning disabilities, speech or language impairments, mental retardation, emotional disturbance, multiple disabilities, hearing impairments, orthopedic impairments, visual impairments, autism, combined deafness and blindness, traumatic brain injury, and other health impairments. Students are classified under one of the categories, and special education teachers are prepared to work with specific groups. Early identification of a child with special needs is an important part of a special education teacher’s job. Early intervention is essential in educating children with disabilities.

    60. Back To School: P&A's Advocate Across The Board For Students With Disabilities
    back To school P A s Advocate Across the Board in 1997 suggests that the special education identification likely to receive counseling at school, less likely
    http://www.napas.org/I-3/I-3-f/back to school.htm
    Back To School: Students With Disabilities
    by Diane Smith
    Disability Advocacy Specialist

    • Comment on regulations and policies proposed by government agencies. • Form coalitions of disability groups and national working groups of special education advocates and attorneys in order to strategize or to solve a particularly difficult problem.
    • Serve on the steering committee of state self assessment teams which prepare the reports that the Department of Education (DOE), Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP) uses when monitoring states to see if they are complying with IDEA and Section 504.
    1) an evaluation of how he would actually use the chair in his day to day life, both at home and at school; 2) a training program on the use of the wheelchair, including if necessary, one-to-one aides to provide the training; 3) a physical therapist to create the professional physical therapy goals, objectives, and services he needs to operate the chair; 4) any other services he needs to meet his communication and independent mobility needs, so that he can be included in the regular classroom; and 5) one full year of compensatory education.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

    free hit counter