Teaching Students with Special Needs in Inclusive Settings, Canadian Edition, 5th edition
Published by Pearson Canada (July 27, 2015) © 2015
- Tom E. Smith University of Arkansas
- Edward A. Polloway Lynchburg College, Professor Emeritus
- James R. Patton University of Texas at Austin
- Carol A. Dowdy Emerita, University of Alabama, Birmingham
- Laureen McIntyre Lynchburg College
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With more and more schools implementing inclusive education models each year, Teaching Students with Special Needs in Inclusive Settings presents an inclusive education philosophy and offers practical teacher-oriented inclusion techniques, via a categorical chapter organization, to equip teachers for the modern inclusive classroom. Unlike other texts in the discipline, Teaching Students both highlights the similarities and differences across Canada and frequently contrasts the Canadian situation with that of the US so that students are best informed about current special education practices throughout all of North America. Well-written and easy-to-read, this text offers a balanced presentation of theory and practice that students enjoy using, with evidence-based teaching suggestions that are very clear and helpful.
Hallmark features
- Canadian approach to special education highlighted throughout the text, highlighting differences and similarities across 12 unique provincial and territorial education styles
- Inclusion of Canadian research, statistics, and prevalence with an updated perspective on multicultural and aboriginal education included to provide students with more current views on approaches to the diverse general education classroom
- Information on US approach to special education included and contrasted in addition to Canadian perspectives to best inform students about current special education practices throughout North America
- Diversity Forum boxes provide in-depth information about how a teacher in an inclusive classroom can meet the needs of the culturally diverse students of today.
New and updated features
- New material addressing ESL and ELL students in the context of language issues in chapter 3
- Increased Coverage of Teaching Indigenous Students in chapters 3 and 15
- Updated material to reflect changes from the DSM 5
- New Personal Spotlights on Canadian researchers and links to their research
- Updated Coverage of assistive technologies, including iPads and iPods in the classroom and SMART boards as teaching aids.
- Inclusive Education: An Introduction
- Designing Inclusive Classrooms
- Teaching Students with Communication Disorders
- Teaching Students with Learning Disabilities
- Teaching Students with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
- Teaching Students with Emotional or Bahavioural Disorders
- Teaching Students with Intellectual Disabilities
- Teaching Students with Autism and Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
- Teaching Students with Sensory Impairments, Traumatic Brain Injury, and Other Low-Incidence Disabilities
- Teaching Students with Special Gifts and Talents
- Teaching Students Who are At Risk
- Classroom Organization and Management
- Teaching Students with Special Needs in Elementary Schools
- Teaching Students with Special Needs in Secondary Schools
- Working with Families of Students with Exceptionalities
Tom E.C. Smith is currently Professor and Head of the Department of Curriculum and Instruction at the University of Arkansas. He has been on the faculties of the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Prior to receiving his Ed.D. from Texas Tech University, Tom taught children with intellectual disabilities, learning disabilities, and autism at the elementary and secondary levels. President Clinton appointed him to three terms on the President's Committee on Mental Retardation. He has served as the Executive Director of the Division on Developmental Disabilities of the Council for Exceptional Children since 1996. Tom's current professional interests focus on legal issues and special education.
Edward A. Polloway is a Professor of Education and Human Development at Lynchburg College in Virginia, where he has taught since 1976. He also serves as Vice-President for Graduate Studies and Community Advancement. He received his doctoral degree from the University of Virginia and his undergraduate degree from Dickinson College in Pennsylvania. He has served twice as president of the Division on Developmental Disabilities of the Council for Exceptional Children and on the board of directors of the Council for Learning Disabilities. He also served on the committee that developed the 1992 definition of mental retardation for the American Association on Mental Retardation. He is the author of 12 books and 100 articles in the field of special education, with primary interests in the areas of learning disabilities and mental retardation.
James R. Patton is an Educational Consultant and Adjunct Associate Professor at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his Ed.D. from the University of Virginia, and is a former high school biology teacher and elementary-level special education resource teacher. He has taught students who were gifted and some who were gifted/learning disabled. James's professional interests include transition, life skills instruction, adult issues related to individuals with special needs, behavioural intervention planning, and classroom accommodations. He has served on national boards of the Division on Developmental Disabilities, the Council for Learning Disabilities, and the National Joint Committee on Learning Disabilities.
Carol A. Dowdy is Professor of Special Education at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, where she has taught since receiving her Ed.D. degree from the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa. She was written eight books on special education and published 34 articles on learning disabilities. Carol has served on the national board of the Council for Learning Disabilities and the Professional Advisory Board for the Learning Disabilities Association of America, and she has worked closely with the federal department of Vocational Rehabilitation to assist in its efforts to better serve adults with learning disabilities.
Laureen J. McIntyre is an Associate Professor and Director of the Special Education Certificate program (an online teacher education program) in the Department of Educational Psychology and Special Education at the University of Saskatchewan. As an American- and Canadian-certified speech-language pathologist, Laureen worked in both community and school settings prior to completing her Ph.D. in Educational Psychology (specifically, Special Education) at the University of Alberta. Her research interests relate to how individuals with varied language and learning abilities are having their literacy needs met. Specific areas she explores related to this focus include: (1) how professionals' education, knowledge, and practice are impacting the language and learning abilities of individuals with exceptionalities; and (2) the development of language and literacy skills of individuals from diverse populations.
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