2003
DOI: 10.1177/00224669030370030401
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What Is Special About Special Education for Students with Emotional or Behavioral Disorders?

Abstract: Although students with emotional or behavioral disorders have historically experienced poor school outcomes compared to other students with and without disabilities, a number of effective practices are available that can make special education for students with emotional or behavioral disorders special. Within the three broad intervention areas of inappropriate behavior, academic learning problems, and interpersonal relationships, we provide a brief overview of a number of empirically validated practices. We a… Show more

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Cited by 222 publications
(171 citation statements)
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“…In this respect, Landrum et al (2003) propose reinforcement, whether positive, differential, or negative, and precise requests as effective EBD interventions. Fletcher-Campbell and Wilkin (2003) advocate clear, unambiguous rules of conduct, continuous positive feedback when pupils follow the rules, and a hierarchy of sanctions for rule-breaking which is made clear to pupils at the outset.…”
Section: Instructional and Social-emotional School Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In this respect, Landrum et al (2003) propose reinforcement, whether positive, differential, or negative, and precise requests as effective EBD interventions. Fletcher-Campbell and Wilkin (2003) advocate clear, unambiguous rules of conduct, continuous positive feedback when pupils follow the rules, and a hierarchy of sanctions for rule-breaking which is made clear to pupils at the outset.…”
Section: Instructional and Social-emotional School Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In comparison with other special needs groups, pupils with EBD are less likely to graduate and have lower reading and mathematics scores (Groom & Rose, 2004). Pupils with EBD are twice as likely to drop out of the education system prematurely as pupils without EBD (Landrum, Tankersley, & Kaufmann, 2003). Children with serious conduct problems run a high risk of developing lifelong patterns of social maladjustment (Kauffman, 2005) and pupils with lower educational attainment run a significantly higher risk of breaking the law after leaving school (Cleary, Fitzgerald, & Nixon, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD) commonly engage in behaviors (e.g., verbal and physical aggression; social skills acquisition and performance deficits) that negatively influence both their ability to successfully negotiate peer and adult relationships and their educational experience (Cullinan and Sabornie 2004;Landrum et al 2003;Walker et al 1992;Walker et al 2004). Namely, when students are unable to negotiate social demands and meet teachers' expectations for school success , school becomes a formidable task.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Students with E/BD display both internalizing and externalizing behaviors such as, noncompliance, verbal and physical aggression, off-task behavior, and disruption. These persistent behaviors hinder a student's ability to benefit from vital learning opportunities (Gresham, Lane, MacMillan, & Bocian, 1999;Landrum, Tankersley, & Kauffman, 2003;Reid, Gonzalez, Nordness, Trout, & Epstein, 2004). On-task behavior is defined as the student looking at the teacher while s/he is talking, talking to the teacher about the assignment, talking to other students about the assignment during approved group work, or looking at and working on the assignment.…”
Section: Virtual Coaching With Videoconferencing For Special Educatiomentioning
confidence: 99%