The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of e-mailed specific performance feedback that included progress monitoring graphs on induction-level teachers’ ratios of positive-to-negative communication behaviors and their use of behavior-specific praise in classrooms for students with emotional and behavioral disorders, mild intellectual disabilities, and learning disabilities. We also examined the effects of teachers’ communication behavior on students’ academic task engagement. Results indicate that the e-mailed performance-feedback intervention increased teachers’ use of positive communication behaviors and decreased their use of negative communication behaviors. These effects resulted in higher positive-to-negative ratios. Furthermore, the teacher praise became more behavior-specific for academic and social behaviors, and students’ level of task engagement improved and became more stable.
Financial, legislative, and philosophical support for postsecondary education (PSE) programs for individuals with intellectual disability has resulted in great increases in the number of such programs across the country. Directors of new PSE programs have few research-based guidelines to provide direction for integrating programs within colleges or universities. In this study, we survey administrators of PSE programs for individuals with intellectual disability across the United States in order to identify perceptions of supports and barriers encountered during program development. We also investigated if these supports or barriers changed over time or varied according to type of program. Results suggest that most perceived barriers and supports, with the exception of funding issues, improved over time. Further, there was a significant difference in perceived support from six of the nine identified institutions of higher education IHE collaborative partners from the inception of the program to the present time.
Sixty-four 12-year-old students identified as learning disabled poor readers were participants in a study designed to test the efficacy of using an imposed keyword strategy to teach 50 word meanings. Based on a measure of receptive language, 32 students with “high” and 32 with “low” receptive vocabularies were assigned randomly to one of four conditions: keyword-image, picture context, sentence-experience context, or control. Seven learning disabilities teachers were responsible for instructing all four methods to appropriate students. Vocabulary items were presented 10 at a time over a 5-week period, and definition recall was assessed during four time phases on a multiple-choice test. Results of the three-way ANCOVA indicated that keyword condition students significantly outperformed students assigned to all other conditions. In addition, students taught via the keyword method recalled significantly more word meanings during the initial time phase and maintained significantly higher levels of vocabulary achievement 10 weeks after treatment had ended.
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