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Colleges for Students with Learning Disibilities and ADD
Peterson’s Publishing

Colleges for Students with Learning Disabilities and ADD

This guide features comprehensive profiles of LD programs at more than 1,100 two- and four-year colleges in the U.S. and Canada. Program listings are categorized as structured/proactive programs or self-directed/decentralized programs for both two- and four-year schools.

Colleges That Change Lives: 40 Schools You Should Know About Even If You're Not a Straight-A Student
Loren Pope

Colleges That Change Lives: 40 Schools You Should Know About Even If You're Not a Straight-A Student

Pope discusses 40 colleges, mostly in the Northeast, South, and Midwest. What makes this book different from other guides is that it highlights schools that select students who have a wide range of abilities, not necessarily the cream of the crop academically, but who exhibit a desire to learn. The atmosphere at these institutions is collaborative rather than competitive and they feature close interaction between students and faculty.

Faking It: A Look Into the Mind of a Creative Learner
Christopher Lee, Rosemary Jackson

Faking It: A Look Into the Mind of a Creative Learner

Christopher Lee was the author’s student at The University of Georgia, and Faking It: A Look Into the Mind of a Creative Learner is the story of his struggle to come to terms with learning disabilities. Using modifications and accommodations and putting in lots of hard work, Christopher graduated in 1990, and this book was published in 1992. Christopher looked forward to graduating because he thought his major struggles with LD would end with school. However, he quickly realized that the world of work offered a whole new array of challenges. He has spent the last eight years reframing his disability into something positive and has learned how to use assistive technology to compensate for problems with reading, writing and spelling in the workplace.

Guiding Teens with Learning Disabilities
Arlyn J. Roffman, Ph.D.

Guiding Teens with Learning Disabilities

Parents of teens with learning disabilities face a wide range of questions and concerns regarding the education of their children. Periods of transition, particularly the movement through high school to the working world or to further education, can be particularly difficult to navigate. Guiding Teens with Learning Disabilities helps parents as their children shift from teenage life to adulthood. It includes sections on planning for transition, post-secondary education, vocational training, career preparation, and life in the community.

The K&W Guide to Colleges for Students with Learning Differences
Peterson’s Publishing

K&W Guide to Colleges for Students with Learning Differences

Hundreds of thousands of students with learning differences head to college every year. This comprehensive guide makes it easy for those students and their families and guidance counselors to tackle the daunting process of finding the school that fits their needs best.

This invaluable book for students, parents, and professionals includes:
- 325+ school profiles with targeted information on admissions requirements, updated test-optional changes, and graduation policies
- Lists of support services available at each college
- Policies and procedures regarding course waivers and substitutions
- Strategies to help students find the best match for their needs
- Advice from learning specialists on making an effective transition to college

Learning Disabilities/ADHD and the Law in Higher Education and Employment
Peter Latham, Patricia H. Latham

Learning Disabilities/ADHD and the Law in Higher Education and Employment

This 2007 book covers key legal topics — Who is a person with a disability under the ADA and Rehabilitation Act? What accommodations are required? What documentation is necessary? How do the ADA and RA apply in higher education and in the workplace? What are the courts deciding? What about state law? How to advocate for your position?

Self-Advocacy Skills for Students with Learning Disabilities
Henry B. Reiff

Self-Advocacy Skills for Students with Learning Disabilities

Filled with strategies, and resources, this book uses the author’s groundbreaking research about successful adults with learning disabilities, to promote self-advocacy. This work is brimming with useful and practical information. It is easily understood and embraced by students with learning disabilities, their parents, guidance counselors, and stakeholders in the fields of both higher education and special education.

Standardized Minds: The High Price of America's Testing Culture and What We Can Do to Change It
Peter Sacks

Standardized Minds: The High Price of America's Testing Culture and What We Can Do to Change It

In the well-researched and compelling Standardized Minds, former journalist and economist Peter Sacks launches an exhaustive attack on the national obsession with testing — and lands a few hits. If you think you’ve heard every argument against standardized tests, think again. Sacks methodically picks away at our feeble attempts to measure the mind, reaching back into the history of testing with unsettling revelations about the creation of the first intelligence test and its many flaws. He deftly illustrates how the belief of inferior cultures motivated the creator of the SAT college entrance exam and takes on all that standardized testing has wrought: ability grouping, gifted programs, state accountability efforts — even the effect on parents whose perceptions of their own children are often shaken by scores on a sheet of paper. Standardized Minds is a persuasive must-read for parents, educators, and lawmakers that challenges our basic assumptions about intelligence and pays homage to the talented minds we may have overlooked in our fervor to rate the human brain.

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