1997
DOI: 10.1177/088572889702000101
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A Preliminary Validation of Strategies that Support the Transition from School to Adult Life

Abstract: The purpose of this study was to extend the empirical literature by identifying and socially validating strategies that support the transition from school to adult life. A three-step process was conducted: (a) reviewing 113 empirical articles that addressed secondary transition, (b) developing a candidate list of all support strategies that were empirically supported in the literature, and (c) conducting a national survey of 54 researchers who had published studies in the area of secondary transition (response… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Advocates, practitioners, and researchers (e.g., Kohler, 1996; Lindstrom & Benz, 2002; Morningstar, Turnbull, & Turnbull, 1995) espouse the important role parent involvement plays in the transition process, and emerging research indicates parent involvement is an evidence-based predictor of postschool employment (Test et al, 2009). Parents possess key information about the student (Chambers, Hughes, & Carter, 2004; Hughes et al, 1997; Morningstar et al, 1995), and students are greatly influenced by their parents, especially when choosing careers (Farkas & Grolnick, 2010; Lindstrom, Doren, Metheny, Johnson, & Zane, 2007; Morningstar et al, 1995). Legislation such as the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB, 2001) and the Individuals With Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEIA, 2004) support and mandate parent involvement to facilitate positive postschool outcomes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Advocates, practitioners, and researchers (e.g., Kohler, 1996; Lindstrom & Benz, 2002; Morningstar, Turnbull, & Turnbull, 1995) espouse the important role parent involvement plays in the transition process, and emerging research indicates parent involvement is an evidence-based predictor of postschool employment (Test et al, 2009). Parents possess key information about the student (Chambers, Hughes, & Carter, 2004; Hughes et al, 1997; Morningstar et al, 1995), and students are greatly influenced by their parents, especially when choosing careers (Farkas & Grolnick, 2010; Lindstrom, Doren, Metheny, Johnson, & Zane, 2007; Morningstar et al, 1995). Legislation such as the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB, 2001) and the Individuals With Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEIA, 2004) support and mandate parent involvement to facilitate positive postschool outcomes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another method for identifying “best practices” during this era was through stakeholder questionnaires. For example, Hughes, Hwang, et al (1997) surveyed 54 transition researchers to establish the social validity of a proposed list of student transition-support strategies. Their results indicated 10 strategies: (a) teach social skills; (b) teach self-management; (c) identify environmental independence objectives; (d) assess social acceptance; (e) identify counselor, peer, and family supports; (f) identify student preferences and choices; (g) monitor social acceptance over time; (h) identify natural supports; (i) match support to student needs; and (j) teach choice making and decision making.…”
Section: Where Have We Been?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, despite access to education and vocational training, persons with disabilities in Malaysia remain largely unemployed and socio‐economically disadvantaged (Ng, See and Tan, 2008a,b; United Nations Development Program, 2007). This poor employment outcome is not surprising: one study has found that less than 8% of students with a disability exit school with a job or are pursuing further education (Hughes et al ., 1997). According to the Commission on Excellence in Special Education (2002, p. 43) ‘.…”
Section: Policy and Advocacy Concerning Persons With Disabilitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%