Evidence Based Practices for Educating Students with Emotional and Behavioral Disorders

Höfundur Mitchell L. Yell; Nancy B. Meadows; Erik Drasgow; James G. Shriner

Útgefandi Pearson Education (US)

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9780132657990

Útgáfa 2

Höfundarréttur 2014

7.090 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Evidence-Based Practices for Educating Students with Emotional and Behavioral Disorders
  • Evidence-Based Practices for Educating Students with Emotional and Behavioral Disorders
  • About the Authors
  • Brief Contents
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • New to This Edition
  • Part I Foundations
  • 1 Introduction to Emotional and Behavioral Disorders
  • Focus Questions
  • DEFINITION OF EBD
  • Problems of Definition
  • An Alternative Definition
  • CLASSIFICATION OF STUDENTS WITH EBD
  • Psychiatric Classification
  • Dimensional Classification
  • PREVALENCE OF EBD
  • CHARACTERISTICS OF STUDENTS WITH EBD
  • Cognitive Characteristics
  • Academic Deficits
  • Language Deficits
  • School Discipline Infractions
  • Social Skill Deficits
  • Problem Behavior
  • HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE FIELD
  • CONCEPTUAL MODELS
  • Psychodynamic
  • Psychoeducational
  • Ecological
  • Humanistic
  • Biophysical
  • Behavioral
  • Cognitive
  • CAUSAL AND RISK FACTORS
  • Internal Risk Factors
  • External Risk Factors
  • Family Risk Factors
  • School Risk Factors
  • Community Risk Factors.
  • Peer-Related Risk Factors
  • INTERVENTIONS
  • Positive Behavioral Support
  • Academic Interventions
  • Academic Curriculum
  • Instructional Delivery
  • Behavioral Interventions
  • Behavior Enhancement Interventions
  • Behavior Reduction Interventions
  • Social Skills Training
  • PLACEMENT OPTIONS FOR STUDENTS WITH EBD
  • ALTERNATIVE EDUCATION PROGRAMS
  • JUVENILE JUSTICE
  • MENTAL HEALTH
  • Chapter Summary
  • 2 Legal Issues in Educating Students with Emotional and Behavioral Disorders
  • Focus Questions
  • THE INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES EDUCATION ACT
  • The Purpose of IDEA
  • The Major Principles of IDEA
  • Zero Reject
  • Protection in Evaluation
  • Free Appropriate Public Education
  • Related Services.
  • FAPE and the IDEA Reauthorizations of 1997 and 2004.
  • Least Restrictive Environment
  • Individualization.
  • Presumptive Right to an Integrated Education.
  • Appropriateness.
  • Options.
  • Procedural Safeguards
  • IDEA 2004 and Research-Based Practices
  • Implications for Administrators and Teachers
  • Understand Your Responsibilities Under IDEA
  • Involve Parents in the Special Education Process in Meaningful Ways
  • Understand and Implement Research-Based Practices
  • Develop Educationally Meaningful and Legally Sound IEPs
  • Summary of IDEA
  • SECTION 504 AND THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT
  • Discrimination Under Section 504 and the ADA
  • Identifying and Evaluating Students with Disabilities Under Section
  • Free Appropriate Public Education
  • The Section 504 Plan
  • Procedural Safeguards
  • Postsecondary Education and Section 504
  • Implications for Administrators and Teachers
  • Train Teachers on Their Responsibilities Under Section
  • Ensure That Parents Understand Their Rights Under Section
  • Guard Against Instances of Discrimination Against Students with Disabilities
  • Summary of Section
  • DISCIPLINING STUDENTS WITH EBD
  • Short-Term Disciplinary Removals
  • Providing Educational Services
  • Conducting FBAs and Developing BIPs
  • Determining When Disciplinary Sanctions Become a Change of Placement
  • Holding the Manifestation Determination
  • Long-Term Disciplinary Removals
  • Removal for 45 School Days
  • Interim Alternative Educational Settings
  • Problem Behavior and the IEP
  • Behavior Reduction Procedures
  • Seclusion/Isolation Time-Out
  • In-School Suspension
  • Implications for Administrators and Teachers
  • Implement a Schoolwide Discipline System
  • Include Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports in Students’ IEPs
  • Document Disciplinary Actions and Referrals
  • Evaluate the Effectiveness of Behavior Reduction Procedures and Disciplinary Actions
  • Summary of Disciplining Students with Disabilities
  • MANAGING STUDENT RECORDS
  • Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act
  • Records Covered by FERPA
  • Parental Access Rights Under FERPA
  • Confidentiality of Student Records
  • Violations of FERPA
  • FERPA and IDEA
  • Implications for Administrators and Teachers
  • Train Special Education Teachers on Confidentiality Requirements
  • Ensure That Student Records Are Kept Confidential
  • Keep a Personal Notes File for Information Not Included in the Educational Records
  • Summary of Managing Student Records
  • REPORTING SUSPECTED CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT
  • Legal Requirements to Report Suspected Child Abuse and Neglect
  • Reporting Requirements
  • Immunity from Lawsuits
  • Liability for Failure to Report
  • Legal Action
  • Implications for Administrators and Teachers
  • Be Aware of the Signs of Child Abuse and Neglect
  • School Districts Should Develop Policies and Provide Training on Reporting Suspected Child Abuse and Neglect
  • Teachers Should Keep Thorough Records of Suspected Abuse and Neglect
  • Summary of Reporting Suspected Child Abuse and Neglect
  • SUPERVISING STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES
  • Tort Laws
  • Intentional Torts
  • Negligence Torts
  • The Teacher Had a Duty to Protect Students.
  • The Teacher Failed to Exercise a Reasonable Standard of Care.
  • The Teacher’s Negligence Was Causally Connected to the Student’s Injury.
  • The Student Was Injured by the Teacher’s Negligence.
  • Implications for Administrators and Teachers
  • School Districts Should Develop Policies and Provide Training on Standards of Care and Supervision
  • The IEP Team Should Address Potential Safety Risks and Plan for Them When Appropriate
  • School Officials Should Not Rely on Waivers
  • Teachers Should Keep Thorough Records
  • Summary of Teacher Liability for Student Injury and Misconduct
  • ADDRESSING BULLYING OF STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES
  • Disability-Based Bullying as a Violation of Section
  • Bullying as a violation of the IDEA
  • Implications for Administrators and Teachers
  • Develop and Implement Bullying Policies
  • Report Incidences of Bullying
  • Take Action to Address the Bullying or Harassment
  • Chapter Summary
  • 3 Assessment of Students with Emotional and Behavioral Disorders
  • Focus Questions
  • IDEA AND ASSESSMENT
  • Referral for Special Education
  • Procedural Safeguards and Assessment
  • Conducting the Assessment
  • Reevaluating Students in Special Education
  • ASSESSING STUDENTS IN SPECIAL EDUCATION
  • Achievement Tests
  • Norm-Referenced Testing
  • NRT Scores
  • Equivalent scores.
  • Percentile ranks.
  • Standard scores.
  • Criterion-Referenced Testing
  • Assessment Accommodations
  • ASSESSMENT AND INTERVENTION
  • Basics of Curriculum-Based Assessment
  • Curriculum-Based Measurement
  • Organizing Data
  • Performance Assessment
  • Data Sources for Behavioral Assessment
  • Rating Scales
  • Observational Procedures
  • Self-Report Measures
  • Interview Techniques
  • Situational Measures
  • Defining Behavior
  • The Concept of Multiple Gating
  • Assessing the Instructional Environment
  • Error Analysis
  • ACCOUNTABILITY IN SPECIAL EDUCATION
  • Chapter Summary
  • 4 Applied Behavior Analysis
  • Focus Questions
  • HISTORY
  • CHARACTERISTICS OF ABA
  • PRINCIPLES OF BEHAVIOR
  • Principles That Increase Behavior
  • Identifying Positive and Reinforcement Negative Reinforcement
  • Types of Reinforcers
  • Making Reinforcement Work
  • Immediacy
  • Contingency
  • Deprivation and Satiation
  • Characteristics of the Consequence
  • Schedules of Reinforcement
  • Ratio schedules
  • Interval schedules
  • Principles That Decrease Behavior
  • Extinction
  • Has the Reinforcer Maintaining the Problem Behavior Been Identified?
  • Can Access to Reinforcement Be Prevented?
  • Does the Behavior Need to Be Stopped Immediately?
  • Is the Behavior Likely to Get Worse Before It Gets Better?
  • Punishment
  • Positive Punishment
  • Negative Punishment
  • Making Punishment Work
  • Immediacy
  • Contingency
  • Deprivation and Satiation
  • Characteristics of the Punisher
  • Reinforcement of Alternative Behavior
  • Problems with Punishment
  • Summary
  • APPLYING THE PRINCIPLES OF BEHAVIOR
  • DEFINING AND DESCRIBING BEHAVIOR
  • Identifying the Target Behavior
  • Defining the Target Behavior
  • Writing Behavioral Objectives
  • ASSESSING BEHAVIOR
  • RECORDING SYSTEMS
  • Recording Method
  • Recording Instruments
  • Recording Schedule
  • GRAPHING DATA AND MAKING INSTRUCTIONAL DECISIONS
  • Graphing Data
  • Analyzing Graphed Data
  • Trend
  • Level
  • Variability
  • Making Instructional Decisions
  • USING POSITIVE REINFORCEMENT TO CHANGE BEHAVIOR
  • Differential Reinforcement Strategies
  • How to Use Differential Reinforcement
  • Specific Differential Reinforcement Procedures and Their Applications
  • Differential Reinforcement of Other Behavior (DRO)
  • Definition
  • Application
  • Example
  • Differential Reinforcement of Low Rates of Responding (DRL)
  • Definition
  • Application
  • Example
  • Differential Reinforcement of Alternative Behavior (DRA)
  • Definition.
  • Application.
  • Example.
  • Differential Reinforcement and Punishment
  • PROGRAMMING FOR GENERALIZATION
  • Antecedent Strategies
  • Train Loosely
  • Train Sufficient Exemplars
  • Program Common Stimuli
  • Behavior Strategies
  • Consequent Strategies
  • Introduce to Natural Maintaining Contingencies
  • Use Indiscriminable Contingencies
  • Mediate Generalization
  • Promoting Generalization
  • Chapter Summary
  • 5 Functional Behavioral Assessments, Behavior Intervention Plans, and the Collection of Data on Student Progress
  • Focus Questions
  • THE BASES OF FUNCTIONAL BEHAVIORAL ASSESSMENTS AND BEHAVIOR INTERVENTION PLANS
  • Conceptual Basis
  • Philosophical Basis
  • Legal Basis
  • Summary
  • FUNCTIONAL BEHAVIORAL ASSESSMENT
  • CONDUCTING THE FUNCTIONAL BEHAVIORAL ASSESSMENT
  • Indirect Methods
  • Referral Information and School Records
  • Behavior Rating Scales and Checklists
  • Interviews
  • Summary Hypothesis Statements
  • Indirect FBA Method Guidelines
  • Direct Observation Methods
  • Scatter Plot Assessment
  • A-B-C Observation
  • Experimental Methods
  • Functional Analysis
  • Structural Analysis
  • POSITIVE BEHAVIOR SUPPORT AND BEHAVIOR INTERVENTION PLANS
  • CHARACTERISTICS OF BEHAVIOR INTERVENTION PLANS
  • USING THE COMPETING BEHAVIOR MODEL TO BUILD POSITIVE BEHAVIOR INTERVENTION PLANS
  • Setting Event Strategies
  • Antecedent Strategies
  • Teaching Strategies
  • Consequence Strategies
  • IMPLEMENTATION FIDELITY
  • DATA COLLECTION
  • CRISIS MANAGEMENT
  • Chapter Summary
  • 6 Cognitive Behavioral Interventions
  • Focus Questions
  • COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTIONS
  • EFFECTIVENESS OF COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTIONS
  • PROCEDURES OF COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTION
  • Self-Management-Based Interventions
  • Self-Monitoring
  • Research on Self-Monitoring
  • Teaching Self-Monitoring
  • Self-Evaluation
  • Research on Self-Evaluation
  • Teaching Self-Evaluation
  • Self-Reinforcement
  • Research on Self-Reinforcement
  • Teaching Self-Reinforcement
  • Teaching Self-Management Skills
  • Verbal Mediation–Based Interventions
  • Self-Instructional Training
  • Theoretical Foundations and Research Base
  • Research on Self-Instructional Training and Problem Behavior
  • Research on Self-Instructional Training and Academic Problems
  • Teaching Self-Instruction
  • Alternate Response Training
  • Theoretical Foundation and Research Base
  • Teaching Alternate Responses
  • Problem-Solving Training
  • Theoretical Foundation and Research Base
  • Teaching Problem Solving
  • Anger-Control Training
  • Theoretical Foundation and Research Base.
  • Teaching Anger Control.
  • Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy
  • Theoretical Foundation and Research Base
  • Principles of REBT.
  • Cognitive Distortions and Irrational Beliefs
  • Research on REBT
  • Teaching REBT
  • IMPLEMENTING COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTIONS
  • Assessment
  • Program Planning and Implementation
  • Including CBIs in Students’ BIPs
  • Setting Event Strategies
  • Predictor Strategies
  • Teaching Strategies
  • Consequence Strategies
  • Teaching CBIs to Students
  • Generalization of Cognitive Behavioral Interventions
  • Chapter Summary
  • 7 Social Skills Instruction
  • Focus Questions
  • FORMAL SOCIAL SKILLS INSTRUCTION
  • Social Skills Assessments
  • Social Skills Rating Scales
  • Behavioral Interviews
  • Direct Observations
  • Cultural and Ethnic Considerations
  • Assumptions of Social Skills Instruction
  • Structured Learning Approach
  • Teaching of Presocial Skills
  • Social Skills Strategy Instruction
  • Published Social Skills Curricula
  • How to Choose and Implement a Social Skills Curriculum
  • INFORMAL SOCIAL SKILLS INSTRUCTION
  • Social Competence and Social Skills
  • Defining Social Competence
  • Social Validity
  • Social Tasks
  • Antisocial Behaviors
  • Important Social Skills in Educational Settings
  • Social Competence and Students with EBD
  • Challenges to the Development of Social Competence
  • At-Risk Variables
  • Affective Distortions
  • Cognitive Distortions
  • Language Disorders
  • Educational Environments
  • Classroom Management Encouraging Prosocial Behavior
  • Classroom Organization and Structure
  • Teacher–Student Relationships
  • Peer Relationships and Friendship Development
  • Behavior Management Techniques
  • Use of a Social Task Model
  • Social Situation or Context
  • Social or Behavioral Intent
  • Social Tasks Defined
  • Social Skills or Behaviors
  • Implications for Teaching Social Skills
  • Social Tasks as Curriculum-of-the-Moment Opportunities
  • Cooperative Learning and Social Skills
  • Chapter Summary
  • 8 Developing Educationally Meaningful and Legally Sound Individualized Education Programs
  • Focus Questions
  • LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
  • Procedural Requirements
  • Substantive Requirements
  • PROBLEMS IN IEP DEVELOPMENT
  • THE IEP PLANNING PROCESS
  • Referral and Assessment
  • The IEP Meeting
  • IEP Team Participants
  • The Student’s Parents or Guardians
  • A Representative of the Local Educational Agency
  • The Student’s General Education Teacher
  • The Student’s Special Education Teacher
  • A Person to Interpret the Instructional Implications of the Evaluation Results
  • The Student, Where Appropriate
  • Other Individuals at the Discretion of the Parent(s) or School
  • Related Services Personnel
  • Transition Services Personnel
  • The IEP Document
  • Contents of the IEP Document
  • A Statement of the Student’s Present Level of Academic Achievement and Functional Performance
  • Measurable Annual Goals
  • Benchmarks or Short-Term Objectives
  • How Student Progress Will Be Measured and Reported
  • Statement of the Special Education and Related Services
  • Statement of the Extent to Which the Student Will Not Participate with Nondisabled Children in the General Education Classroom
  • Statement Regarding the Student’s Participation in the Administration of State or Districtwide Assessments of Achievement
  • Projected Date for the Beginning of Services and Their Anticipated Frequency, Location, and Duration
  • Statement of Needed Transition Services
  • Special Considerations in IEP Development
  • Placement Decisions
  • IMPLEMENTING THE IEP
  • REVIEWING AND REVISING THE IEP
  • DEVELOPING EDUCATIONALLY MEANINGFUL AND LEGALLY SOUND IEPS
  • COMPLETING THE IEP
  • Chapter Summary
  • Part II Classroom and Behavior Management
  • 9 Classroom and Behavior Management I: Preventing Problem Behavior in the Classroom
  • Focus Questions
  • THE CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT PROBLEM
  • PREVENTION AND CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
  • The Research of Jacob Kounin
  • The Curriculum of Control
  • PROACTIVE VERSUS REACTIVE CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
  • PRIMARY COMPONENTS OF A PROACTIVE CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
  • Teacher Behaviors and Attitudes
  • Building Positive Teacher–Student Relation-ships and Maintaining a Positive Classroom Climate
  • Communicating Positive Expectations
  • Praising Students
  • Enriching the Classroom with Incentives and Reinforcers
  • Summary of Teacher Behaviors and Attitudes
  • Teacher Authority and Credibility
  • Establishing Credibility
  • Monitoring Student Behavior
  • Withitness
  • Overlapping
  • Modeling Self-Discipline and Self-Control
  • Summary of Teacher Authority and Credibility
  • Classroom Structure
  • Designing the Physical Environment
  • Setting Up Classroom Seating Arrangements
  • Summary of Classroom Structure
  • Effective Teaching
  • Managing Classroom Time
  • Determining the Correct Level of Difficulty
  • Providing Clear Directions
  • Monitoring Student Attention
  • Holding Students Accountable
  • Managing Classroom Lessons
  • Maintaining Lesson Momentum and Smoothness
  • Providing Variety and Programming to Avoid Satiation
  • Summary of Effective Teaching
  • DEVELOPING AND IMPLEMENTING A PROACTIVE CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
  • Step 1: Develop Classroom Procedures and Teach Them to Students
  • Establishing Classroom Routines
  • Beginning the School Day
  • Keeping Early Finishers Busy
  • Planning Transition Times
  • Step 2: Develop Classroom Rules and Teach Them to Students
  • Step 3: Monitor and Acknowledge Correct Performance of Expected Behaviors
  • Step 4: Develop Clear and Consistent Procedures for Discouraging Problem Behavior
  • Teaching Consequences
  • Administering Consequences
  • Step 5: Collect Data on the Classroom Management System
  • Summary of Setting Up a Classroom Manage-ment System
  • Chapter Summary
  • 10 Classroom and Behavior Management II: Responding to Problem Behavior
  • Focus Questions
  • THE NATURE OF PROBLEM BEHAVIOR
  • INEFFECTIVE RESPONDING TO PROBLEM BEHAVIOR
  • Ignoring
  • Nattering
  • Yelling and Threatening
  • Issuing Commands When a Student Is Agitated
  • Engaging in Escalating Interactions with Students
  • PRINCIPLES TO FOLLOW IN RESPONDING TO PROBLEM BEHAVIOR
  • Principle #1: Emphasize Preventive Measures
  • Develop Classroom Rules
  • Minimize Student Downtime
  • Plan Lessons at the Appropriate Level of Diffi-culty
  • Monitor Student Behavior
  • Principle #2: Modify the Learning Environment
  • Principle #3: Use Pre-correction Strategies
  • Principle #4: Respond Privately Rather than Publicly If Possible
  • Principle #5: Respond Consistently and Fairly
  • Principle #6: Use Alpha Commands
  • Principle #7: Maintain a Student’s Dignity When Responding
  • Principle #8: Maintain a Calm Attitude and Demeanor
  • Principle #9: Develop a Game Plan for Responding to Student Problem Behavior
  • Principle #10: Provide Contingent Reinforcement for Appropriate Behavior
  • RESPONDING TO PROBLEM BEHAVIOR
  • Responding to Minor Problem Behaviors
  • Responding to Noncompliance
  • Types of Noncompliance
  • Variables That Affect Compliance
  • Precision Requests
  • Think Time
  • Responding to Severe Misbehavior
  • Ensure the Safety of Students and Staff
  • Call or Send for Assistance
  • Attempt to Defuse the Situation
  • Use Physical Restraint If Absolutely Necessary
  • Keep Thorough Records of the Incident
  • Notify the Student’s Parents or Guardians
  • DEVELOPING CRISIS MANAGEMENT PLANS
  • AN ALGORITHM FOR RESPONDING TO PROBLEM BEHAVIOR
  • Chapter Summary
  • 11 Classroom and Behavior Management III: Intervening with Problem Behavior
  • Focus Questions
  • CONSIDERATIONS WHEN INTERVENING TO ADDRESS STUDENT PROBLEM BEHAVIOR
  • BEHAVIOR ENHANCEMENT PRINCIPLES
  • Identifying Reinforcers
  • Types of Reinforcers
  • BEHAVIOR ENHANCEMENT INTERVENTIONS
  • Token Economies
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of Token Economies
  • Setting Up a Token Economy
  • Summary of Token Economies
  • Level Systems
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of Level Systems
  • Setting Up a Level System
  • Summary of Level Systems
  • Behavioral Contracting
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of Behavioral Contracting
  • Setting Up a Behavioral Contract
  • Summary of Behavioral Contracting
  • Group-Oriented Contingencies
  • Types of Group-Oriented Contingencies
  • Dependent Group-Oriented Contingencies
  • Independent Group-Oriented Contingencies
  • Interdependent Group-Oriented Contingencies
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of Group-Oriented Contingencies
  • Setting Up a Group-Oriented Contingency Sys-tem
  • Summary of Group-Oriented Systems
  • BEHAVIOR REDUCTION PROCEDURES
  • IMPLEMENTATION GUIDELINES
  • BEHAVIOR REDUCTION INTERVENTIONS
  • Response Cost
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of Response Cost
  • Setting Up a Response-Cost System
  • Summary of Response Cost
  • Time-Out
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of Time-Out
  • Setting Up a Time-Out System
  • Summary of Time-Out
  • Overcorrection
  • Advantages and Disadvantages of Over-correction
  • Setting Up an Overcorrection System
  • Summary of Overcorrection
  • ADMINISTRATIVE AND LEGAL GUIDELINES WHEN USING BEHAVIOR REDUCTION INTERVENTIONS
  • Chapter Summary
  • Part III Teaching Students with EBD
  • 12 Teaching Students with EBD I: Effective Teaching
  • Focus Questions
  • DO TEACHERS OF STUDENTS WITH EBD USE EFFECTIVE INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES?
  • PRINCIPLES OF EFFECTIVE INSTRUCTION
  • Principle #1: Maximize Academic Engaged Time
  • Increasing Academic Engaged Time
  • Preteach Content
  • Plan Lessons That Maximize Academic Engagement
  • Use Time Efficiently
  • Improve Classroom Management Skills
  • Reinforce Students for Increasing Academic Engaged Time
  • Monitoring Rates of Student Academic Engaged Time
  • Principle #2: Ensure High Rates of Correct Academic Responding
  • Increasing Correct Academic Responding
  • Increase Opportunities to Respond
  • Ensure That Students’ Responses are Correct
  • Monitoring Rates of Student Correct Academic Responding
  • Principle #3: Maximize the Amount of Content Covered
  • Increasing Content Coverage
  • Monitoring Content Coverage
  • Principle #4: Match Assignments to Student Ability
  • Completing a Task Analysis
  • Assessing Student Abilities
  • Principle #5: Teach Academic Content Explicitly
  • Using Teaching Functions
  • Teaching Function #1: Daily Review
  • Teaching Function #2: Presentation
  • Advance Organizers
  • Brisk Pacing
  • Clarity
  • Demonstration
  • Enthusiasm
  • Feedback
  • Teaching Function #3: Guided Practice
  • Teaching Function #4: Corrective Feedback
  • Teaching Function #5: Independent Practice
  • Teaching Function #6: Weekly and Monthly Reviews
  • Teaching Functions and the Missouri Mathematics Effectiveness Project
  • Principle #6: Scaffold Student Instruction
  • Using Scaffolds in Instruction
  • Principle #7: Use Direct Instruction
  • Principle #8: Monitor Student Progress
  • MAINTAINING EFFECTIVENESS
  • Keep Up with Peer-Reviewed Research
  • Read the Professional Literature
  • Join a Professional Organization
  • Participate in Professional Development Opportunities
  • Self-Evaluate
  • Chapter Summary
  • 13 Teaching Students with EBD II: Evidence-Based Instructional Procedures
  • Focus Questions
  • TEACHING READING
  • Components of Effective Reading Instruction
  • Phonemic Awareness
  • Phonics
  • Fluency
  • Vocabulary
  • Comprehension
  • Teaching Procedures
  • Direct Reading Instruction
  • Critical Features of Direct Reading Instruction
  • Monitoring Progress in Direct Instruction Programs
  • Peer-Assisted Learning Strategies (PALS)
  • Summary
  • TEACHING WRITING
  • Models for Teaching Written Expression
  • Product Approach
  • Process Approach
  • Skills Approach
  • Teaching Procedures
  • Avoid Instructional Practices That Do Not Improve Students’ Writing Performance
  • Allocate Time for Writing Instruction
  • Create an Atmosphere Conducive to Writing
  • Teach Writing Directly
  • Summary
  • TEACHING MATHEMATICS
  • Teaching Mathematics to Students with EBD
  • Classroom Scenario 1
  • Designing an Effective Math Lesson
  • General Review of Research on Effective Instruction
  • Math-Specific Instructional Components
  • Basic Fact Fluency
  • Mathematics Vocabulary
  • Recode the New Vocabulary Term
  • Relate Keywords to Symbols
  • Retrieve New Definitions
  • Classroom Scenario 2
  • Considering New Instructional Practices in Mathematics
  • Student-Directed Strategies
  • Classroom Scenario 3
  • Teacher-Directed Strategies
  • Peer-Mediated Interventions
  • Computer-Assisted Instruction
  • Summary
  • TEACHING STUDY SKILLS
  • Listening Skills
  • Test-Taking Skills
  • Reference and Research Skills
  • Thinking Skills
  • Memory Skills
  • Note-Taking Skills
  • Summary
  • Chapter Summary
  • 14 Teaching Students with EBD III: Planning Instruction and Collecting Data to Monitor Student Progress
  • Focus Questions
  • THE NATURE OF INSTRUCTIONAL PLANNING
  • PLANNING WHAT TO TEACH
  • Using IEP Goals to Guide Instruction
  • Using Assessment to Guide Instruction
  • Using State Standards to Guide Instruction
  • States and the Common Core Standards
  • PLANNING HOW TO TEACH
  • USING THE SYSTEMATIC TEACHING AND RECORDING TACTIC
  • Developing Long-Range Plans
  • Writing Daily Lesson Plans
  • Instructional Objectives
  • Characteristics of an Instructional Objective
  • Components of an Instructional Objective
  • Instructional Activities
  • Materials and Time
  • Evaluation
  • MONITORING STUDENT PROGRESS
  • What Is Progress Monitoring?
  • Characteristics of Progress Monitoring Measures
  • Progress Monitoring Measures for Reading
  • Developing, Administering, and Scoring Reading Probes
  • Select the Reading Passages
  • Develop the Reading Probes
  • Administer the Reading Probes
  • Score the Reading Probes
  • Progress Monitoring for Written Expression
  • Developing, Administering, and Scoring Written  Expression  Probes
  • Develop a Set of Story Starters
  • Administer the Written Expression Probes
  • Score the Written Expression Probes
  • Progress Monitoring for Math Computation
  • Developing, Administering, and Scoring Mathematics  Probes
  • Develop the Computation Probes
  • Administer the Computation Probes
  • Score the Computation Probes
  • Implementing Progress Monitoring
  • Distributed and Intermittent Progress Monitoring for Assessing Reading
  • MODIFYING INSTRUCTION USING START
  • Chapter Summary
  • Appendix Psychopharmacological Medications1
  • References
  • Name Index
  • Subject Index

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