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    Home : Publications : Learning Disabilities: A Contemporary Journal
    Learning Disabilities: A Contemporary Journal

    Table of Contents
    Learning Disabilities: A Contemporary Journal
    March 2006 Volume 4, No. 1

    Improving Student Content Knowledge in Inclusive Social Studies Classrooms Using Technology-Based Cognitive Organizers: A Systematic Replication
    Richard T. Boon, Mack D. Burke, Cecil Fore, III, and Shanna Hagan-Burke
    The purpose of this study was to conduct a systematic replication of a previous study (Boon, Burke, Fore, & Spencer, 2006) on the effects of computer-generated cognitive organizers using Inspiration 6 software versus a traditional textbook instruction format on students' ability to comprehend social studies content information in high school inclusive social studies classes. A major goal was to strengthen the results of the previous study by using its control group as the treatment group and its treatment group as the control group in the current study. After ensuring that no carry-over effects from the previous study existed, the groups were "flipped," and using a quasi-experimental pretestposttest group design, 26 tenth-grade students in general education and 18 students with mild disabilities received instruction using a computerized cognitive organizer or traditional textbook instruction format. Dependent measures included a 45- item open-ended production pre-/posttest of declarative social studies knowledge to assess the effectiveness of the intervention. Results showed that students in the computerized cognitive organizer condition significantly outperformed students in the traditional textbook instruction condition.

    How Do Dyslexic Nursing Students Cope with Clinical Practice Placements? The Impact of the Dyslexic Profile on the Clinical Practice of Dyslexic Nursing Students: Pedagogical Issues and Considerations
    Geraldine A. Price and Anne Gale
    The safety of dyslexic nurses, and whether they are a danger to their patients, has been widely discussed. This empirical study sought to discover the impact of the dyslexic profile on clinical practice for nursing students. Two focus groups of third-year nursing students in higher education were set up: a control group and a dyslexic group. The findings were congruent with the literature, in that students provided evidence of literacy difficulties, memory problems, lack of automaticity skills, issues of self-esteem as well as specific skills deficits. While cognitive processing problems emerged, the findings also pointed to some strategies the students were using to compensate, as well as a significant underpinning ethos of ensuring patient safety. Finally, evidence of apparent disability discrimination, usually resulting from ignorance by nursing mentors who knew little or nothing about dyslexia, was also apparent. Pedagogical considerations for the support of dyslexic students in the academic setting have been well researched. However, it is apparent from this study that such methods do not always transfer to the clinical setting. The findings of the study have implications for pedagogy and support in the work setting for dyslexic nursing students.

    The Instructional Context of Inclusive Secondary General Education Classes: Teachers’ Instructional Roles and Practices, Curricular Demands, and Research-Based Practices and Standards
    Janis A. Bulgren, Janet G.Marquis, Donald D. Deshler, Jean B. Schumaker, B. Keith Lenz, Betsy Davis, and Bonnie Grossen
    The purpose of this study was to gain information about the high school general educational context for students with and without disabilities. A questionnaire was administered to general education teachers who taught required high school courses in which students with disabilities and students who were low achievers were enrolled. Instructional context was explored in terms of (a) teachers' instructional roles and procedures; (b) curricular demands; and (c) teachers' views of research-based practices and standards. Participants were 70 high school teachers employed in nine public high schools serving grades 9 through 12 in four states, who taught one or more core classes in which students with disabilities were enrolled. In terms of their instructional roles and practices, teachers indicated that they preferred showing students how to learn at the same time they taught content. Planning time was limited, and unit tests or daily assignments, homework and worksheets were the most common forms of assessment. Teachers reported a willingness to make accommodations in curriculum materials, but did not report a high degree of use of accommodations in actual instruction. In reporting curricular demands, teachers put more emphasis on the mastery of content knowledge for students without disabilities, but for students with disabilities, the emphasis was on mastery of basic skills and strategies. As expected, participants indicated more learning deficits and reported lower expectations for students with disabilities than for other students. Teachers' perceptions of their schools' support for the use of research-based instruction varied. Teachers believed that typically achieving students were more likely than students with disabilities to meet standards. Teachers had recommendations they believed were needed to ensure that students with disabilities would meet standards.

    A Model Incorporating the Rationale and Purpose for Conducting Mixed-Methods Research in Special Education and Beyond
    Kathleen M. T. Collins, Anthony J. Onwuegbuzie, and Ida L. Sutton
    This article provides a typology of reasons for conducting mixed-methods research in special education. The mixed-methods research process is described along with the role of the rationale and purpose of study. The reasons given in the literature for utilizing mixed-methods research are explicated, and the limitations of these reason frameworks are identified. We build on these frameworks by providing a comprehensive list of reasons for conducting mixed-methods research. The reasons provided in our model are operationalized in the context of special education and, thus, complement the goals of special education researchers. Finally, we present a four-dimensional Rationale and Purpose (RAP) model demonstrating how investigations can be designed according to the rationale for using mixed methods, purpose of mixing, stage of study where mixing occurs, and emphasis of approach derived from the research question(s).

     
     
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