25 research outputs found

    Technology-Based Model to Support and Enhance Field Experience in Special Education Training Programs in Israel

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    Education initiatives emphasize the need to use evidence-based practices (EBPs) in general and special education classrooms. To ensure effective teaching it is essential that teachers gain knowledge of EBPs and implement these practices with fidelity. Ongoing changes in teacher training programs (TTPs) such as the reduction in field experience hours and the impact of COVID-19 require exploring new models to support and supplement preservice learning of EBPs. This paper discusses how technologies such as online training modules and coaching can support the training of preservice teachers, and specifically looking, as an example, at the practices in the state of Israel

    Introducing Preservice Teachers to Family-Centered Practices: A Scoping Review

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    Parental involvement in P-12 education could lead to social and academic success for students; however, parents often experience barriers to their involvement. Different or additional barriers exist for parents of children with a disability. School staff can positively influence parents to become involved in their children’s education. Family-centered practices, common in early intervention under special education law (Part C of IDEIA), may foster parent involvement in P-12 schools. In this scoping literature review, we examined 17 studies of teacher preparation programs (TPPs) in higher education in the US who have implemented programs to prepare preservice teachers (PSTs) to collaborate with parents/families. Studies varied by analytic method, participants, purposes, format, and measures. We present a synthesis of the included articles and discuss recommendations for teacher preparation programs

    Communication Repair of Young Children Who Lack Language: The Role of the Environment

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    111 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2004.Two children, 2--3 years old with developmental disabilities participated in the study. The study was divided into two different sections. The first section included a case study of each child and the second section included an analysis of each child's communication repair in naturalistic and structured contexts. The results of the study suggest that young children with developmental disabilities who lack language discriminated among variables in the environment (i.e., types of activities and breakdowns) and modified their repair behavior to accommodate these variables. In addition, findings from the case studies suggest communication partner behavior and physical environment might also be variables influencing children's communication.U of I OnlyRestricted to the U of I community idenfinitely during batch ingest of legacy ETD

    Communication Repair of Young Children Who Lack Language: The Role of the Environment

    No full text
    111 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2004.Two children, 2--3 years old with developmental disabilities participated in the study. The study was divided into two different sections. The first section included a case study of each child and the second section included an analysis of each child's communication repair in naturalistic and structured contexts. The results of the study suggest that young children with developmental disabilities who lack language discriminated among variables in the environment (i.e., types of activities and breakdowns) and modified their repair behavior to accommodate these variables. In addition, findings from the case studies suggest communication partner behavior and physical environment might also be variables influencing children's communication.U of I OnlyRestricted to the U of I community idenfinitely during batch ingest of legacy ETD

    Parent-Implemented Telepractice Autism Intervention: A Case Study of Maintenance and Generalization

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    The extent to which people maintain new skills and generalize those skills to new contexts without support are two aspects of intervention research that can be difficult to examine, especially over a sustained period of time and across a variety of contexts. In past research, we have explored teaching parents and caregivers to implement evidence-based communication strategies with their young children with autism who are minimally verbal. When a former research participant contacted us with a request to participate in our project again, four years later and with a different son, we used this as an opportunity to ask questions about her maintenance of the skills in using the targeted strategies, and her generalization of those skills to a different child. Using the data collected with her older son, Ali, and new data collected four years later with her younger son, Rami, we present a case study of this mother. We discuss the implications of the findings on interpreting the efficacy of the telepractice intervention’s programming for generalization, identifying opportunities for refining the intervention, and insights useful for other intervention research

    sj-docx-1-aut-10.1177_13623613241234413 – Supplemental material for It’s our job to bridge the gap: Perspectives of bilingual autism providers on heritage language care

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-aut-10.1177_13623613241234413 for It’s our job to bridge the gap: Perspectives of bilingual autism providers on heritage language care by Melanie R Martin Loya and Hedda Meadan in Autism</p

    sj-docx-1-bhd-10.1177_01987429231179890 – Supplemental material for Behavior Management Training for Newly Graduated Teachers: A Randomized-Controlled Trial

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-bhd-10.1177_01987429231179890 for Behavior Management Training for Newly Graduated Teachers: A Randomized-Controlled Trial by Stacy N. McGuire, Hedda Meadan and Yan Xia in Behavioral Disorders</p

    The Cascading Coaching Model for Supporting Service Providers, Caregivers, and Children

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    © Hammill Institute on Disabilities 2019. Teaching caregivers to support their young children’s language development is recommended as an effective early language intervention, and caregiver-implemented interventions are recognized as evidence-based. However, as the natural change agents for training and coaching caregivers, early intervention (EI) service providers are in need of professional development to effectively coach caregivers to use interventions with their child. The purpose of this study was to examine the Coaching Caregivers Professional Development program (CoCare PD) in which researchers train and coach EI service providers via telepractice in caregiver coaching, a set of skills useful in nurturing partnerships with families to support caregivers’ use of evidence-based practices with their young children with disabilities. A single-case research study across four EI service providers was conducted and findings support a functional relation between training and coaching EI service providers via telepractice and providers’ use of coaching practices with families on their caseload
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