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         International Disabled & Special Needs Schools:     more detail
  1. Expressive Arts in the Primary School (Special Needs in the Primary School)
  2. Pre-School Provision for Children With Special Needs (Special Needs in Ordinary Schools) by Brenda Robson, 1990-09
  3. The "Special Act" public school districts in New York state: helping children with special needs reach higher academic standards.(No Child Left Behind ... International Journal of Instructional Media by Jim Donlevy, 2004-03-22
  4. Education for children with special needs: difficult but possible.: An article from: UN Chronicle by Uma Tuli, 2006-03-01

1. Special Needs - Find Library Articles By Topic
Adopting an international Child with special needs. A guide to adopting an Charter schools. Public Images vs. Personal SelfEsteem. Need to focus on positive images of disabled people
http://library.adoption.com/information/Special-Needs/7/1.html
adoption.com local info forums photolisting ... Community you are here: adoption.com library by topic by topic ... submit content resources adoption encyclopedia adoption glossary adoption acronyms adoption laws ... lullabies
adoption forums choose one guatemala international adoptive parents support russia adoption adoptees birthparents community foster care sealed records adoptee support special needs
Special Needs
Additional Topics
Abuse Advocacy Alcoholism Allergies ... Visual Impairment
Articles
A Family for Every Child:
A mother of an adopted son with Down Syndrome shares her story.
A Quick Adoption and Special Needs Guide for Professionals

Special needs adoption for professionals.
Information regarding parents involvement with an IEP for their child.
About Developmental Disabilities

Information about developmental disabilities.
Abuse Can Permanently

Information regarding abuse and it's long-term affects.
Abused Children Susceptible to Psychiatric and Substance Abuse Problems as Adults
Information on child abuse and its long-term effects. Access to the General Education Curriculum for Students with Disabilities General education. Addiction: Breaking the Cycle Helping teens overcome addictions.

2. Homeschooling Children With Special Needs
languageimpaired or learning-disabled children. All homeschoolers are by The Davis Dyslexia Association international. It has links Find Home schools HomeWork special needs has a
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/8259/special.html
What's Inside? Home What is Homeschooling? How to Start Homeschooling Chats on the Web ... Homeschool Conferences Curriculum Support Classical Approach Montessori Education Unschooling Links Unit Studies ... Social Studies Software Support Educational Software Companies on the Internet Where to Find Software Reviews Places to Purchase Curriculum Used Curriculum Sites Homeschooling Magazines Places For The Kids Awards This Site Has Won
Homeschooling Children with Special Needs
ADHD has an online discussion group, The Christian ADD/ADHD Digest, and have begun placing archives online for general perusal, and info. on homeschooling the ADD/ADHD child. alt.education.home-school.disabilities
"I'm listowner of Aut-2B-home which specializes in homeschooling children n the autism spectrum. We've been around since 1996 supporting families walking in our shoes. Here's information about our list:
Subject: How to Subscribe Tammy Glaser
Parent(s) Name(s)
email address
Children's names, birthdates, DIFFability
Town, State, Country
Homeschooling methods, curriculums, expertise, general wisdom, questions.

3. Uniquely Gifted - Resources For Gifted/Special Needs Children
Online resources for families with gifted/special needs children (including learning disabilities, ADHD, Asperger Syndrome, etc.) gifted and learning disabled; however, Linda Silverman, Ph Letters to schools. Legalities of Gifted/special needs in the CEC) is an international professional organization dedicated
http://www.uniquelygifted.org/
IDEA Reauthorization News
www.ourchildrenleftbehind.com
. Get OurChildrenLeftBehind bulletins sent to you
Join the League for Special Education Voters
Uniquely Gifted
Resources for Gifted Children with Special Needs
(ADD/ADHD, Learning Disabilities (LD), Asperger Syndrome, etc.)
Compiled by Meredith G. Warshaw, M.S.S., M.A.
Special Needs Educational Advisor

Contributing Editor, 2e: Twice-Exceptional Newsletter
Welcome to my site – I hope you find it helpful. If this is your first visit, click here for a guide to the site. This site is named after the book Uniquely Gifted: Identifying and Meeting the Needs of the Twice-Exceptional Student , edited by Kiesa Kay. Twice-exceptional children (that is, intellectually gifted children with special needs such as AD/HD, learning disabilities, Asperger Syndrome, etc.) have a hard time of it in our education system - because their giftedness can mask their special needs and their special needs hide their giftedness, they are often labeled as "lazy", "unmotivated", "not trying". Many people don't even realize that a child can be both gifted and learning disabled; however, Linda Silverman, Ph.D., the director of the Gifted Development Center has found that fully 1/6 of the gifted children tested at the GDC have a learning difference of some type In addition to being special needs educational advisor for families with twice-exceptional children and Contributing Editor to the new publication

4. Printer Ready: IRC Program Brings Special Needs Refugee Children Into Camp Schoo
.com. international Rescue Committee. www.theirc.org Program Brings special needs Refugee Children Into Camp schools in Kenya visually impaired or mentally or learning disabled.
http://www.charitywire.com/charity80/print_04203.html
www.CharityWire.com International Rescue Committee
www.theirc.org Thursday, 31 July 2003
IRC Program Brings Special Needs Refugee Children Into Camp Schools in Kenya
Mohammed is a 17-year-old Somali refugee who lost his sight in a Mogadishu bomb blast. Soon after, he fled to the Kakuma Refugee Camp in Kenya, but did not enroll in a camp school because teachers there did not have the capacity to assist blind students. IRC's education staff members at the camp finally convinced the school to admit Mohammed, offering "special needs" support. Mohammed, who had little formal education, started the third grade last year. A trained teacher started teaching Mohammed to read and write Braille and he quickly excelled in his class work to the amazement of the school's staff and his fellow students. "Suddenly, I see my life as happy and now I have more friends," Mohammed told the IRC. "I am able to compete with them in school work, and even do better than some of the other students." The IRC has identified more than 800 special needs students at Kakuma, out of some 28,600 children enrolled in Kakuma Camp schools. They are either hearing impaired, physically handicapped, visually impaired or mentally or learning disabled. The IRC launched its special education program in 2000. Prior to that time these children had to either make do with teaching methods that were not disability friendly or forego school altogether. The children are now mainstreamed into the camp's "regular" schools-ranging from pre-primary to secondary schools-and are encouraged to attend the school nearest to their homes, where their siblings go.

5. Division Of International Special Education And Services - National Perspectives
the Division of international special Education and Services (DISES of a disabled child to special care and assistance provision of special needs education in inclusive schools.
http://www.cec.sped.org/intl/natlover.html
National Perspectives This page contains summaries of special education and services in particular countries, jurisdictions, or regions. BUILDING CULTURE IN THE CLASSROOM: THE ROLE OF ROMANY ASSISTANTS IN THE ROMANY CLASSROOM IN THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC
Presov University, Slovakia Note: "Romany" and "Roma" refer to the Gypsy populations
of Europe, located primarily in Eastern Europe. Systematic thinking about the changes in Roma communities is an urgent task in the Slovak Republic. Romanies represent 6.5 % of the Slovak population (Zelina, 2001). Solving the problem of Roma minority cultural compatibility with the non-Roma majority has taken various forms in the course of history. After 1945 when World War II ended and 1972, the procedures of the central bodies of the state administration of Czechoslovakia gradually advanced
as follows:
  • The concept of social assimilation of Roma - from 1958, when the central institutionalisation of the State solution began (i.e. the "Gypsy Question");
  • 6. Kuwait Information Page For People With Special Needs
    schools, clubs, associations, research centers and institutes which are concerned about people with special needs in Fund for the disabled and ISN Fawzia Sultan international School
    http://www.safat.com/
    This is a list of schools, clubs, associations, research centers and institutes which are concerned about people with special needs in Kuwait:
    Kuwait Autism Center
    Khalifa School
    Kuwait Dyslexia Association
    Kuwait Society for the Handicapped ...
    Kuwait Disabled Sport Club
    Books from Kuwait:
    To Bounce or Not To Bounce By Naif Al-Mutawa
    GESTUNO
    The World Wide Web is FULL of resources about different disabilities. It's really a Great place for parents, educators, health centers, service providers and researchers!
    Seaside's Disability Links
    are very good examples. NewsGroups are Great too! Here is a list of Disability-Related NewsGroups.
    Work and Design by Abeer Al-Bader, a member of the Kuwait University Disability Centre.
    Email: abeersb@yahoo.com

    7. WORLD LEISURE INTERNATIONAL POSITION STATEMENT ON LEISURE EDUCATION
    international POSITION STATEMENT ONLEISURE EDUCATION AND POPULATIONS OF special needs programs for disabled and other special needs children play in preschools, schools and camps to
    http://www.worldleisure.org/Commissions/Education/edcompospaper%populationsofspe

    8. CNIB Library: For Libraries And Schools - Resource Information Kit For Print Dis
    services with other national and international agencies that special needs programsin the educational system may Parents of print disabled students can find
    http://www.cnib.ca/library/for_libraries&schools/resource_kit/
    Home What's New Search Site Français
    Resource Information Kit for Print Disabled Students, K-12
    Canadian National Institute for the Blind (CNIB) Library for the Blind, November 2000 Contents: Directories: We welcome your comments or suggestions for additions to this information kit. Please notify: Shelagh Paterson, CNIB Library
    or e-mail: shelagh.paterson@cnib.ca Purpose of this Information Kit
    Each year we receive numerous queries regarding access to our collection of alternate format materials from parents and teachers responsible for serving the information needs of print disabled students who are not blind, visually impaired, or deafblind. As we are an organization charitably funded to serve Canadians who are visually impaired, and do not receive direct government funding, we are unable to deliver direct service to print disabled Canadians who are not visually impaired. This kit is intended to enable the parent or teacher to have an understanding of the process for gaining access to alternate format materials for students who are print disabled. We hope you will find the resources and options listed in this kit to be useful and welcome any additional resources you may know of.

    9. The Association Of School Business Officials International -- Legislative Alerts
    identification of children with special needs, decreasing the minorities, who areincorrectly labeled as disabled. in disputes between parents and schools.
    http://capwiz.com/asbo/issues/alert/?alertid=5850666&type=CU

    10. Welcome To NASEN - The National Association For Special Educational Needs
    services to discriminate against disabled people. Kingdom s National Association forSpecial Educational needs, establishes an international forum for the
    http://www.nasen.org.uk/
    If you require any information in an alternative format
    please contact NASEN's Office Manager on email:
    BeverleyW@nasen.org.uk
    or telephone
    NASEN
    NASEN House
    4/5 Amber Business Village
    Amber Close
    Amington
    Tamworth
    Tel: 01827 311500 Fax: 01827 313005 welcome@nasen.org.uk Welcome to The National Association for Special Educational Needs (NASEN) website, with over sixty branches and 11,500 members we are the leading organisation in the UK working in special needs. More about NASEN Join NASEN NASEN Membership NASEN Branches NASEN has branches throughout the country and we have now given them the opportunity to provide local information, including conference information, meetings, and a branch newsletter. Contact details will help you get in touch with your local NASEN branch. Branch newsletters Members please view the latest NASEN branch newsletters by logging in with your username and password here: Username: Password: Articles and Reports Disability Rights Commission From September 2002, the Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) 1995 (as amended by the Special Educational Needs and Disability Act 2001), will make it unlawful for providers of education and related services to discriminate against disabled people.

    11. Special Educational Needs And The Foreign Service Child
    are adequately served in international schools, children with moderate to severedisabilities still encounter the requirements of special needs children.
    http://www.state.gov/m/dghr/flo/9856.htm
    [Print Friendly Version]
    Special Educational Needs and the Foreign Service Child
    There are unique challenges inherent in raising children with special needs, and this is especially so in the internationally mobile lifestyle of the Foreign Service. There has been a significant effort to increase the number of programs for children with special needs in American-international schools around the world. However, the quality of these programs varies greatly from school to school, and even from year to year. While more children who have mild learning disabilities are adequately served in international schools, children with moderate to severe disabilities still encounter major challenges. In addition to the lack of available programs overseas, very often there is also a lack of other support or therapeutic specialists to serve the requirements of special needs children. The Family Liaison Office strongly urges families to carefully research their options before bidding on and accepting an overseas assignment. There are several offices in the Department of State that work together to assist families of children with special needs. Special Needs Resource Information from the Department of State . Additionally, the Office of Overseas Schools offers the brochure

    12. The Foreign Service And Your Special Needs Child
    of State, the US Agency for international Development, the are needed for a childwith special needs, you may be meets the definition of a disabled child under
    http://www.state.gov/m/a/os/28253.htm
    [Print Friendly Version]
    The Foreign Service and Your Special Needs Child
    If your family is with the Department of State, the U.S. Agency for International Development, the Foreign Agricultural Service or the Foreign Commercial Service, the Department of State’s medical clearance process and its Standardized Regulations (DSSR) will govern the education allowances for your child. If you are employed by a government agency other than the ones listed above, check with your human resources division to find out if your agency also follows this clearance process. The Clearance Process
    The Office of Medical Services of the Department of State (MED) provides the medical clearance for personnel and families assigned overseas. This includes review of any special educational needs by the Employee Consultation Service (ECS), an office of Medical Services.
  • If your child has never been evaluated, ECS may ask that a diagnostic evaluation be completed. Funding for the evaluation will be provided by MED and the employee’s health insurance or by the special needs education allowance. If your child is found to have special educational, behavioral, or emotional needs, then the child will be given a Class 2 medical clearance. This means that before an assignment can be finalized, a suitable educational or medical setting must be found for the child with special needs. ECS consults with the regional medical officers (RMO) and/or regional medical officers/psychiatrists (RMO/P) on specialized programs and facilities overseas. ECS also consults with the Department of State’s Office of Overseas Schools regarding the adequacy of programs available at the schools at post. Although the Class 2 clearance means that the child is no longer available for worldwide assignment, the purpose of this policy is to assure that the child’s unique needs and requirements will be met
  • 13. EducationGuardian.co.uk | Schools Links | Special Needs
    teachers, national and international resources relating National Association for SpecialEducational needs people with Learning Disabilities Contains resources
    http://education.guardian.co.uk/netclass/schools/links/0,5607,70539,00.html

    Sign in
    Register Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs Life MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The weblog The informer The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Dating Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Information Living our values Newsroom Reader Offers Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Working at GNL Guardian Weekly Money Observer
    Schools news
    Schools links
    Special needs Accessing the Web

    Advice on good web design for visually impaired learners from the RNIB. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
    The ADD-ADHD Family Support Network site gives an explanation of the disorder and gives details of how to book free visits to teachers to promote awareness of the disorder. Attention Deficit Disorder in the UK
    This site is an ADD archive with links to useful web pages. There are also 50 handy tips on the management of ADD for parents and teachers, and a list of helpful UK contacts. Behaviour in Schools: A Framework for Intervention
    The New Outlooks Project looked at the whole range of issues affecting behaviour in schools including provision, prevention and support. Parents and teachers can read the report from the project at this site.

    14. SurfWax -- News And Articles On Special Needs Education
    Articles on special needs Education from newspapers and magazines around the world. Takes Up 2 000 disabled Children Dec 22, 2003 the international Association for special needs Education and
    http://disabilities.surfwax.com/files/Special_Needs_Education.html
      News and Articles on Special Needs Education
      Last update: Jan 06, 2004
      Debate transcript: Part 4
      Jan 06, 2004
      Wales joy at royal accolades
      Dec 31, 2003
      Orchestra conductor Owain Arwel Hughes also featured in the New Year's Honours List along with a conservationist, a special needs worker and a charity worker from North Wales. Mrs Wilkinson received the OBE for her services to local government (icNorthWales, UK).
      Kerry would reduce role of special interests
      Dec 31, 2003
      Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry said Wednesday that, if elected, he would immediately reduce the powerful hold special interests have on this country. "In 1984, I created the first PAC-free Senate race in America, and I am the only senator who has been elected four times without ever taking one dime of special interest money," Kerry said (Council Bluffs Daily Nonpareil, IA).
      New Year Honours
      Dec 31, 2003
      Malcolm Clayton, head teacher at Fred Nicholson School in Dereham. For services to special needs education. Maureen Cole, from Diss. ... (Norwich Evening News, UK)
      Inner-city head given knighthood
      Dec 30, 2003

    15. COPAA NewsWatch: MAINSTREAM STRUGGLE
    and history of excluding special needs students from to keep their disabled childrenin for a Baltimorebased international disability advocacy organization.
    http://www.copaa.net/newstand/fairfax1.html
    N EWS A RTICLES OF S PECIAL I NTEREST
    F ROM A ROUND T HE C OUNTRY
    MAINSTREAM STRUGGLE
    Mother fights schools for autistic daughter
    By HALLIE PICKHARDT
    Journal staff writer
    Layla Head, a 15-year-old eighth-grader, loves the freedom of middle school. She rides the bus to Herndon Middle School each day and walks the halls with mainstream students. For Layla, who is autistic and retarded, the social opportunities at Herndon Middle School are crucial to her development, said Leila Head, Layla's mother. But if Fairfax County school officials have their way, Head said, her daughter will be attending school an hour-and-a-half from home at Kilmer Center, a special school for students with moderate retardation, autism and severe disabilities. Instead of keeping Layla in special education classes at her neighborhood school, Head said, Fairfax wants to ``segregate'' her daughter at an isolated center. ``They're clinging to an old kind of paradigm that says you just keep kids with disabilities hidden away,'' Head said of Fairfax County schools. ``We would like to see more inclusion, and the county's gone the opposite way to Kilmer Center.'' Head said she was told by school officials in a December meeting that Layla could be better served at Kilmer Center. The recommendation came as a shock, said Head, who thought the meeting was to discuss her daughter's progress at Herndon Middle School.

    16. Studies - Study Programme Teacher...Special Needs School
    international students seeking entry into higher education programmes at needs EducationPsychology and Sociology of disabled Persons. special – needs Subjects
    http://www.uni-koblenz-landau.de/university/lehramtsonder-eng.html
    Direkteinstieg Koblenz Landau A-Z-Index Bibliothek Lehrangebot Weiterbildung Stellenanzeigen Studiengaenge
    Study Programme for Teacher Qualification for Sonderschulen ( Special - Needs Schools )
    Course Objectives
    The Study Programme provides an academic qualification for teaching at Special – Needs Schools, as well as for carrying out special training measures at Sonderschulen and other schools.
    Qualification
    The Programme of Study ends with the Ersten Staatsprüfung für das Lehramt an Sonderschulen (first State Exam for Teacher Certification for Special – Needs Schools).
    Conditions for Admission
    Acceptance into study programmes for Teacher Qualification Sonderschulen is conditional on possessing the Allgemeine Hochschulreife (Abitur) secondary school-leaving certificate. International students seeking entry into higher education programmes at a German university may do so only if their school-leaving certificate, or university qualifications are equivalent to the standards of the German 'Abitur' qualification. Admission to the subjects visual arts, music and physical education is dependent on passing aptitude tests for each subject.

    17. Assistive Technology For Students With Disabilities / Family Village School
    its bimonthly newspaper, annual international conference and web sites that focuson disability and technology students and youth with special needs in schools
    http://www.familyvillage.wisc.edu/education/at.html
    Assistive Technology for Students with Disabilities Articles
    • Assistive Technology: Becoming an Informed Consumer - NICHCY
      http://www.nichcy.org/pubs/newsdig/nd13.htm

      This article provides tips on how to become an informed consumer of such technology, offers a parent's perspective on assistive technology, examines federal legislation, discusses effective use of technology with young children and how to integrate technology into a student's IEP, and suggests a process for funding technology. The article concludes with a list of readings and organizations that offer additional information on assistive technology.
    • Assistive Technology Guide for Students with Learning Disabilities
      This guide was prepared by the Frostig Center in Pasadena, California, which is devoted to children with learning disabilities. Marshall Raskind, Ph.D., Director of Research of the Center, was the project director and primary author. Dr. Raskind is an authority on technology and learning disabilities.
    • Assistive Technology for Individuals with Learning Disabilities
      http://www.ldanatl.org/factsheets/Assistive.html

    18. The Special Education Home Page
    Education; Med Support international; National Rehabilitation The Disability Connection;IBM special needs Software; for the Developmentally disabled; ABA Materials;
    http://specialed.freeyellow.com/
    DO YOU KNOW ALL THAT YOU SHOULD ABOUT SPECIAL EDUCATION?
    THE SPECIAL EDUCATION HOME PAGE
    Recent Topics:
    Notes: IGNORANCE IS OUR BIGGEST FOE!! Decide today to achieve your goal by understanding all there is to know about your particular area of interest in Special Education. Remember, if you're a parent, the most important thing to you should be your family! Make sure that you do everything possible to help your children live and succeed with the disabilities they may have. If you're a student, you must understand that there is NO secret potion or formula! Knowledge will help you comprehend what your disability is all about and Hard Work will help you to better live and succeed with it! These are the only ways you will achieve your goals!! Best wishes and good luck to everyone! 2003-2004 School Year
    Links To The Best Special Education Sites On The Net! Motivation is what gets you started, Habit is what keeps you going!"

    19. European Council Of International Schools
    The course will study the impact of disabilities on academic and social/emotional EDSE6. special needs Students in international schools (EDSE 501
    http://www.ecis.org/News3.htm
    FAST TRAIN - Preparing International Educators Special Education Professional Development Courses Starting in fall 2004, FAST TRAIN Programs will be offering professional development coursework in the area of special needs to meet the demand of teachers and educational professionals who need a foundation in this area to address the increasing demand of special education services for children in international schools. One of these courses will count towards the endorsement in special education in the State of Virginia (EDSE 501). Each course is 3 graduate credits. EDSE 501 will transfer into the Graduate School of Education in the special education program. The following two courses are offered on-line: EDSE 501: Introduction to Special Education for International Educators (fall) Course Description Provides a survey of current knowledge on individuals with disabilities within the context of human growth and development across the life span. Specific focus within each area of study will be related to connection to the unique needs within international teacher education preparation. Content includes historical factors, legislation, etiology, characteristics, needs, educational strategies (including existing and emerging technologies), assessment, and support services for individuals with disabilities ranging from mild, moderate to sever levels of varying disabilities. The course will study the impact of disabilities on academic and social/emotional performances. The course will be offered through on-line media, as this introduction to special education course is intended for students in overseas teaching placements.

    20. Special Education, Carnegie Library Of Pittsburgh Resource Guide
    to visual impairment are disabled by other that provide services to students withspecial needs. Children the largest international professional organization
    http://www.carnegielibrary.org/subject/education/k12/specialed.html
    Select Library Area: Ask a Librarian Careers at CLP Computer Classes Directions Employment Genealogy/History Homework Help Hours Kids' Site Library Subject Guide Locations Renew a Book Request a Book Research Databases Resource Guide Search Subject Departments Support the Library Teens' Site
    Subject Search:
    Web Site Catalog Internet Search
    Database Search

    Events Search

    Resource Guide:
    ... K-12
    Special Education
    Pittsburgh Region Pennsylvania United States International See also Disabled: Children and Disabled: Education
    Pittsburgh Region
    The Children's Institute
    http://www.amazingkids.org/
    Located in Pittsburgh, (formerly the Rehabilitation Institute), this is the region's leading comprehensive rehabilition facility dedicated to serving the special needs of children and young adults.
    DePaul Institute
    http://www.oraldeafed.org/schools/depaul/
    Where Deaf Children Learn to Speak. Located in the South Hills
    The Early Learning Institute
    http://trfn.clpgh.org/teli/ programs and services for children with developmental delays
    The Institute for Learning Abilities was created to help children and adults overcome serious cognitive and learning disorders.

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