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Showing posts from September, 2017

Teaching Students with ASD

                Autism Spectrum Disorder is becoming more and more prevalent. Trisha Sugita (2016) wrote, “Autism Spectrum Disorder is the fastest growing disability within the United States … The estimated growth of ASD has increased by 78% between 2002 and 2012.” With ASD growing, teachers need to find ways to help students with ASD academically and social emotionally. ASD teaching techniques are not a “one-size-fits-all” model. Students who have ASD are very different, and the significance of the disability changes from student to student.                 “With the rise of Autism rates, the field has also seen a significant need for an increase in ASD expertise and implementing evidence-based practices within schools” (Sugita, 2016). It is important the teachers become educated with a number of different methods so they can hel...

Enhancing Post-Secondary Outcomes for Students with Emotional and Behavioral Disabilities

Emotional Disability and Behavioral Disorders do not only affect a student within the school setting, they can affect the student with having career success post-high school. Huber and Swank (2013) state, “The National Longitudinal Transition Study-2 (NLTS2) was designed to examine the post-high school experiences of individuals with disabilities. Wagner, Newman, Cameto, Levine, and Garza (2006) reported that students within the emotional disturbances category had the lowest (56%) school completion rate, except for individuals within the categories of intellectual disabilities and multiple disabilities. Additionally, approximately 60% of individuals within the emotional disturbances category were employed at some point; however, only about half (30%) were employed after two years.” By law, schools are required to provide transition services as part of a student’s IEP. However, students who receive vocational rehabilitation are typically students who have more “extreme” dis...

A Connection Between Disobedient Behaviors and Students with Intellectual Disabilities

    The article I read this week was on a study conducted pertaining to disobedient behavior shown by students with intellectual disabilities. Many teachers tend to experience more behavioral issues with students with intellectual disabilities than their chorological aged peers. The study believes that this is due to teachers asking their students with intellectual disabilities to complete tasks that are too difficult for the student’s mental age. “We hypothesize that this contradiction arises from the frustration experienced by children with intellectual disability when faced with task inappropriate for their mental age” (Bierbaum, Henrich, Zigler, 2005). In order to prove this hypothesis, “a sample of 43 children comprised a total of three groups: an experimental group of children with intellectual disability of no known organic aetiology (intellectual disability group); a mental age comparison group (MA group); and a chronological age comparison group (CA group...

Strategies for Teaching Students With ADHD

Strategies for Teaching Students With ADHD The article I read was written by Lisa Medoff, a learning specialist. Lisa discusses her challenges working with a specific student, Baxter, who has ADHD. Baxter is a fourth-grade boy who Lisa would work with afterschool, one-on-one, twice a week. The focus of their meetings was to teach Baxter strategies for managing his ADHD. These strategies pertained to organization, planning ahead, checking details, writing essays, handwriting, and reading (Medoff 2016). At first, Lisa dreaded working with Baxter. She had a hard time connecting with him, and he did not enjoy working with her. At often times, he was rude to her and would walk away when he was not interested in what she was having him do. This seems typical of any fourth-grade boy. Having to do work after already being in school all day can be difficult for any elementary-aged student, especially one with ADHD. Lisa had to work on finding methods that would make working with Baxt...