Handbook of Educational Psychology and Students with Special Needs provides educational and psychological researchers, practitioners, policy-makers, and graduate students with critical expertise on the factors and processes relevant to learning for students with special needs. This includes students with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, other executive function difficulties, behavior and emotional disorders, autism spectrum disorder, intellectual disabilities, learning disabilities, dyslexia, language and communication difficulties, physical and sensory disabilities, and more. With the bulk of educational psychology focused on "mainstream" or "typically developing" learners, relatively little educational psychology theory, research, measurement, or practice has attended to students with "special needs." As clearly demonstrated in this book, the factors and processes studied within educational psychology—motivation and engagement, cognition and neuroscience, social-emotional development, instruction, home and school environments, and more—are vital to all learners, especially those at risk or disabled. Integrating guidance from the DSM-5 by the American Psychiatric Association and the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) by the World Health Organization, this book synthesizes and builds on existing interdisciplinary research to establish a comprehensive case for effective psycho-educational theory, research, and practice that address learners with special needs. Twenty-seven chapters by experts in the field are structured into three parts on diverse special needs categories, perspectives from major educational psychology theories, and constructs relevant to special needs learning, development, and knowledge building.
... 298–299, 298f Homework alternating treatment design (ATD) and, 617–618, 617f cooperative learning and, 509 mathematical learning and, 509 Homophones, 584–585 Honig v. Doe (1988), 52 Hybrid model for classification, 4, 45–47, ...
The Handbook of Educational Psychology, Second Edition provides an indispensable reference volume for scholars, teacher educators, in-service practitioners, policy makers and the academic libraries serving these audiences.
Reis,S. M., & Renzulli,J. S.(1986) The secondary triad model. InJ. S. Renzulli (Ed.), Systemsand modelsfor developing programs forthe gifted and talented (pp. 216–266). Mansfield Center, CT: Creative Learning Press.
The Handbook of Educational Psychology, Second Editionprovides an indispensable reference volume for scholars, teacher educators, in-service practitioners, policy makers and the academic libraries serving these audiences.
Essential reading for researchers and students of special education, this handbook brings together diverse and complementary perspectives to help move the field forward.
Research-Based Practices and Intervention Innovations Christopher J. Lemons, Sarah R. Powell, Kathleen Lynne Lane, ... students with learning disabilities to use model drawing strategy to solve fraction and percentage word problems.
... urban education, and in actuality mask the complicity of others, who are outside of the urban education context, in this problem. In this case, the problems of urban education are seen as di- rectly connected to larger patterns of ...
This edition brings together the field's latest developments in research and practice, highlighting domains in which there has emerged both growing consensus and vibrant cross currents of thought and analysis.
This comprehensive handbook reviews the major theoretical, methodological, and instructional advances that have occurred in the field of learning disabilities over the last 20 years.
The Second Edition of this essential handbook provides a comprehensive, updated overview of the science that informs best practices for the implementation of response to intervention (RTI) processes within Multi-Tiered Systems of Support ...