Personal development is a vital requirement of counsellor development, and educators need to consider how best to promote and support students' personal development throughout training. 'Self-case study' can provide both learning and personal development opportunities for counselling students. This qualitative narrative study explores seven students' perspectives about their experiences of completing a self-case study as a learning requirement for a compulsory introductory course in cognitive therapy at undergraduate level. Unstructured individual interviews were used for data collection. Data analysis involved identifying themes and analysing the narrative structure of stories. The findings emphasized the view that self-case study provides useful learning opportunities in the areas of theory, practice and personal development. Most participants described transformational life changes resulting from completing a self-case study. This paper presents selected findings. The ethical issues and limitations of this study are discussed. Self-case study is recommended as a potentially effective education strategy.
In 1975, Congress enacted a law eventually known as the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), which ensures that children with disabilities receive a free, appropriate, public education. Since then, scholarly and popular debates about the effectiveness of inclusive education have proliferated and typically focus on the ability or inability of students with disabilities to succeed in so-called regular classrooms. These debates reflect widespread assumptions that the regular classroom is rightly the province of nondisabled students and a neutral, value-free space that students with disabilities invade and disrupt via their very presence and their costly needs for adaptation. But as many scholars in the field of Disability Studies in Education (DSE) have argued, these discussions often fail to recognize that the space of the regular classroom, far from neutral, is constructed for a nondisabled, neurotypical, white, male, middle-class "norm" that neither reflects nor accommodates the wide range of diverse learners within it, regardless of whether these learners have been diagnosed with a disability. A DSE perspective sees the educational environment, not students with disabilities, as the "problem" and calls for a Universal Design for Learning approach to education, or the design of instructional materials and activities that allows the learning goals to be achievable by individuals with wide differences in their abilities and backgrounds. Agreeing with this DSE perspective, this article uses an autoethnographic approach to reexamine inclusive education and to consider how university classrooms, pedagogy, and curricular materials can be improved in order to accommodate all students, not just those with disabilities. Ultimately, the article argues that Universal Design for Learning has the potential to radically transform the meaning of inclusive education and the very concept of disability.
This sample of GPs support improved accessibility, availability and affordability of psychological treatments and support services.
The present investigation was designed to examine the influence of dietary fibers with differing soluble fiber compositions upon the metabolism of lipids in a hyperlipemic animal model, the Zucker fatty rat. The response to fiber was examined using a diet supplemented with cellulose, oat bran, or pectin which have a soluble/insoluble fiber ratio of 0:100, 33=66, and 100=0, respectively. These fibers provided 10% of the total diet weight; the control diet contained no fiber. A rapid increase in plasma triglyceride concentration was observed in all animals given fiber-supplemented diets in correlation with the increased carbohydrate content of the defined diets relative to the prestudy diets. This increase in plasma triglyceride was due to increased production of triglycerides with no change in the rates of clearance. The plasma total cholesterol levels were relatively constant on all diets. However, after 7 weeks on the pectinsupplemented diet, rats showed a 39% elevation in HDL and a 44% reduction in LDL concentration. This diet also resulted in reduced weight gain, in spite of a caloric intake equivalent to the control diets. Our data suggest that the ability of dietary fiber to alter plasma lipoproteins might be predictable from the soluble fiber composition or the pectin content of a given dietary fiber in this model of genetic endogenous hyperlipemia. (Arteriosclerosis
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