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Best Practices for Inclusion

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I am a grad student at LaSalle U. in Pa. and will be doing a presentation on “Best practices in inclusion”. I would like to make this interactive, interesting, and informative. If anyone has any information, resources, tips, or strategies, I would really appreciate being notified about it. Also, is there some special way you can accomodate all the students with IEP’s? Is the information and modifications created in lesson plans or are you so familiar with each students needs that you can modify instruction as you go along? Please help, I am very interested to see what works! Thanks.

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 03/14/2001 - 5:00 AM

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: My own best practices are… no timed tests and often giving take-home tests. No memorization-based tests. Working to have required reading also available on tapes or sometime using three different levels of textbooks so better readers can read more complex work while less strong readers can be reading the same topic presented in a less reading complex way.Spelling doesn’t count. I don’t make kids copy notes from the board. I keep homework light and always do it myself first to have an idea of how long it takes an adult to do the work I assign which gives me an idea that it will take a student, particularly one with learning differences much longer.Rather than scatter these accomodations around to a few students, I find they serve the entire community of the classroom well. They help to level the playing field for the students with learning differences and do no harm to any student.The best practice of an inclusion classroom or any other is simply that… try to do no harm.Good luck with your presentation.I am a grad student at LaSalle U. in Pa. and will be doing a
: presentation on “Best practices in inclusion”. I would
: like to make this interactive, interesting, and informative. If
: anyone has any information, resources, tips, or strategies, I
: would really appreciate being notified about it. Also, is there
: some special way you can accomodate all the students with IEP’s?
: Is the information and modifications created in lesson plans or
: are you so familiar with each students needs that you can modify
: instruction as you go along? Please help, I am very interested to
: see what works! Thanks.

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 03/14/2001 - 5:00 AM

Permalink

: I am a grad student at LaSalle U. in Pa. and will be doing a
: presentation on “Best practices in inclusion”. I would
: like to make this interactive, interesting, and informative. If
: anyone has any information, resources, tips, or strategies, I
: would really appreciate being notified about it. Also, is there
: some special way you can accomodate all the students with IEP’s?
: Is the information and modifications created in lesson plans or
: are you so familiar with each students needs that you can modify
: instruction as you go along? Please help, I am very interested to
: see what works! Thanks.I am a graduate student at Georgia Southwestern State University and I am doing my directed study on inclusive environments. While doing my research, I came upon some articles that my be helpful to you. The articles are listed below.*Including Students withe Disabilities in General Education Classrooms. Eric DIgest #E521*Attitudes of Principles and Special Education Teacher Towards The Inclusion of Students with Mild Disabilities Critical Differences of Opinions*I Wanted to See if We Could Make It Work: Perspectivs on Inclusive Childcare*Integrating Children with Disabilites inot Preschool*Inclusive Assessment and Accountability Systems*Preparing for Children with Disabilites in Early Childhood Classrooms*Helpful Tips for Successful Inclusion*Research-to-Practice ijn Inclusive Early Childhood Education*Inclusion: What Progress Is Being Made Across Disability Catergories*Classwide Peer Tutoring: Teaching Students with Mild Mental Retardation in Inclusive Classrooms*When Students with Disabilities Participate in Cooperativ Groups*So What’s with Our Inclusion Program*Conversations About Inclusion*Assistive Technology and InclusionThe best source I found was on the internet at www.parrotpublishing.com. I hope that will give you some assistance.

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 03/14/2001 - 5:00 AM

Permalink

: My own best practices are… no timed tests and often giving take-home tests. No memorization-based tests. Working to have required reading also available on tapes or sometime using three different levels of textbooks so better readers can read more complex work while less strong readers can be reading the same topic presented in a less reading complex way.Spelling doesn’t count. I don’t make kids copy notes from the board. I keep homework light and always do it myself first to have an idea of how long it takes an adult to do the work I assign which gives me an idea that it will take a student, particularly one with learning differences much longer.Rather than scatter these accomodations around to a few students, I find they serve the entire community of the classroom well. They help to level the playing field for the students with learning differences and do no harm to any student.The best practice of an inclusion classroom or any other is simply that… try to do no harm.Good luck with your presentation.I am a grad student at LaSalle U. in Pa. and will be doing a
: presentation on “Best practices in inclusion”. I would
: like to make this interactive, interesting, and informative. If
: anyone has any information, resources, tips, or strategies, I
: would really appreciate being notified about it. Also, is there
: some special way you can accomodate all the students with IEP’s?
: Is the information and modifications created in lesson plans or
: are you so familiar with each students needs that you can modify
: instruction as you go along? Please help, I am very interested to
: see what works! Thanks.

Submitted by Anonymous on Wed, 03/14/2001 - 5:00 AM

Permalink

: I am a grad student at LaSalle U. in Pa. and will be doing a
: presentation on “Best practices in inclusion”. I would
: like to make this interactive, interesting, and informative. If
: anyone has any information, resources, tips, or strategies, I
: would really appreciate being notified about it. Also, is there
: some special way you can accomodate all the students with IEP’s?
: Is the information and modifications created in lesson plans or
: are you so familiar with each students needs that you can modify
: instruction as you go along? Please help, I am very interested to
: see what works! Thanks.I am a graduate student at Georgia Southwestern State University and I am doing my directed study on inclusive environments. While doing my research, I came upon some articles that my be helpful to you. The articles are listed below.*Including Students withe Disabilities in General Education Classrooms. Eric DIgest #E521*Attitudes of Principles and Special Education Teacher Towards The Inclusion of Students with Mild Disabilities Critical Differences of Opinions*I Wanted to See if We Could Make It Work: Perspectivs on Inclusive Childcare*Integrating Children with Disabilites inot Preschool*Inclusive Assessment and Accountability Systems*Preparing for Children with Disabilites in Early Childhood Classrooms*Helpful Tips for Successful Inclusion*Research-to-Practice ijn Inclusive Early Childhood Education*Inclusion: What Progress Is Being Made Across Disability Catergories*Classwide Peer Tutoring: Teaching Students with Mild Mental Retardation in Inclusive Classrooms*When Students with Disabilities Participate in Cooperativ Groups*So What’s with Our Inclusion Program*Conversations About Inclusion*Assistive Technology and InclusionThe best source I found was on the internet at www.parrotpublishing.com. I hope that will give you some assistance.

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