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Additional resources
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The
articles included in Teaching How-tos are drawn from TEACHING
Exceptional Children (TEC), a publication of The Council for Exceptional
Children (CEC). TEC is published specifically for teachers and administrators
of children with disabilities and children who are gifted and features
practical articles that present methods and materials for classroom use
as well as current issues in special education teaching and learning.
All articles are offered in PDF and require Acrobat Reader software to download and view.
© Council for Exceptional Children. All articles are reprinted with permission.
The Content Literacy
Continuum: A School Reform Framework for Improving Adolescent Literacy
for All Students
Authors: B. Keith Lenz, Barbara J. Ehren, and Donald D. Deshler
Researchers at the University of Kansas Center for Research on Learning
and the University of Oregon joined to conduct a series of research studies
under an umbrella project called the Institute for Academic Access. The
studies have focused on how to increase the success of high school students
with disabilities enrolled in rigorous academic courses. As this arena
was studied, several factors emerged as important to consider in developing
secondary literacy initiatives.
PDF (4p, 70k)
PROVE-ing
What You Know. Teaching Exceptional Children, 34(4), 50-54.
Author: Scanlon, D.
The PROVE Strategy provides students with a procedure for naming a concept,
providing evidence, and defending it. This learning strategy is designed
so students can self-cue when to use it and can monitor their own performance.
PDF
(7p, 85k)
Graphic Organizers
to the Rescue! Helping Students Link--and Remember--Information.
Author: Gloria A. Dye
This article describes using graphic organizers as a way of assisting
students with disabilities in the note-taking process and helping them
link the new information to their existing schema of knowledge. It discusses
the concept behind graphic organizers, graphic organizer activities, and
steps for creating a graphic organizer.
PDF (6p,
153k)
Don't Water
Down! Enhance Content Learning through the Unit Organizer Routine.
Authors: Daniel Boudah, Keith Lenz, Janis Bulgren, Jean Schumaker, Donald
Deshler
This article argues that teachers need instructional techniques that do
not simply water down content learning for students with disabilities,
but are effective. It describes one research-based teaching technique,
Content Enhancement and the Unit Organizer Routine. The article illustrates
instructional procedures, offers practical tips, and cites additional
resources.
PDF (9p,
139k)
Making Learning
Easier: Connecting New Knowledge to Things Students Already Know
Authors: Donald Deshler, Jean Schumaker, Janis Bulgren, Keith Lenz, Jean-Ellen
Jantzen, Gary Adams, Douglas Carnine, Bonnie Grossen, Betsy Davis and
Janet Marquis
This article discusses the challenge that students with disabilities face
in high-school settings in trying to succeed within the general education
curriculum. The Concept Anchoring Routine is profiled as a way to help
adolescents connect new information they are expected to learn to information
that is already familiar to them.
PDF
(4p, 212k)
What Curricular
Designs and Strategies Accommodate Diverse Learners?
Authors: Mack Burke, Shanna Hagan, Bonnie Grossen
This article describes six features of instruction that efficiently accommodate
and accelerate the learning of a diverse range of students in the general
education classroom. These six features are:
PDF (5p, 76k)
Working with
WebQuests: Making the Web Accessible to Students with Disabilities.
Author: Rebecca Kelly
This article describes how students with disabilities in regular classes
are using the WebQuest lesson format to access the Internet. It explains
essential WebQuest principles, creating a draft Web page, and WebQuest
components. It offers an example of a WebQuest about salvaging the sunken
ships, Titanic and Lusitania. A WebQuest planning form is included.
PDF
(10p, 312k)