For course in Inclusion or Introduction to Special Education.
This popular, practical text prepares future teachers for the challenges of inclusion and gives them the background to work with a wide range of students in a variety of educational settings in the elementary and secondary classroom. Using an informal style, the text demonstrates how to identify pupils who have learning problems and provides the tools necessary to help these children succeed in general education classrooms. The book concentrates on techniques that will improve academic performance; classroom behavior; and social acceptance for students with disabilities, gifted and talented students, culturally and linguistically diverse students, and students at-risk.
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I really enjoy the readability of this text. Well done.
Terry K. Gillies, Sierra Nevada College
All the chapters are well written and easy to understand. Students’ stories are very interesting. These stories add strength to chapters. Very useful for general educators.
Rangasamy Ramasamy, Florida Atlantic University
In the 20 plus years of teaching this course, this is the beat professor friendly and student friendly text that I have used. It provides a nice balance between theory, research, and practice.
Marilyn B. Stepnoski, Palm Beach Atlantic University
Dr. Rena B. Lewis earned her Ph.D. at the University of Arizona, with a major in special education and minors in psychology and systems engineering. She began her work in special education as a teacher of children with mental retardation, although the majority of her experience has been with students with learning disabilities. She is currently a member of the faculty at San Diego State University in the Department of Special Education.
A frequent contributor to the professional literature, Dr. Lewis is interested in instructional adaptations for students with special needs, classroom assessment techniques, and applications of technology for individuals with disabilities. In addition to this book, she is author of Special Education Technology: Classroom Applications and co-author with Dr. James A. McLoughlin of Assessing Special Students (5th ed.). She was honored with an award by the International Reading Association for her report on research implications for teaching reading to students with learning disabilities.
Since the early 1980s, Dr. Lewis has coordinated the technology area of San Diego State's program for the preparation of special education teachers. Her current research interests center around the use of computers and other technologies to improve the literary skills of students with disabilities. Most recently, she was principal investigator of a research project investigating the effectiveness of hypermedia-based children's literature programs in improving the reading skills of students with learning disabilities. She has also investigated the usefulness of word processing tools such as word prediction for enhancing writing skills.
Dr. Donald H. Doorlag is now Professor Emeritus of Special Education. While with the Department of Special Education at San Diego State University, he coordinated a certificate program for teachers working with students with serious emotional disturbances. He also coordinated a program combining training in general and special education in which graduates earn teaching credentials in both areas simultaneously.
After receiving an undergraduate degree in secondary education, Dr. Doorlag worked throughout most of the 1960s as a teacher of students with emotional and behavioral disorders. He completed his doctorate at Michigan State University with major concentrations in the areas of emotional disturbance and special education administration and a minor in educational research. He joined the faculty at San Diego State University in 1970 where he chaired the Department of Special Education for a number of years. He has also been very active at local, regional, and state levels in contributing to the development and improvement of programs related to the training of special education teachers and the delivery of services to students with disabilities.
Dr. Doorlag's most recent publications and research interests and activities have focused on examining factors relating to the recruitment, retention, and training of special education teachers. In addition, he has worked with state agencies and professional organizations regarding the provision of educational programs for students with emotional and behavioral disorders and incarcerated youth with disabilities.
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