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David J. Connor; Scot Danforth; Deborah Gallagher – Exceptional Children, 2025
The inclusion of students with disabilities with special education services into general education classes has been an integral part of education for over 3 decades. It is a worldwide movement that continues to grow. Yet, some Special Education researchers remain highly critical, even cynical, of inclusion, despite decades of research that have…
Descriptors: Special Education, Inclusion, Students with Disabilities, Activism
Allison R. Lombardi; Graham G. Rifenbark; Ashley Taconet – Exceptional Children, 2023
Secondary data analyses occur when new analyses are proposed for existing data. Although they are prevalent in special education research, there is little guidance on how to prepare secondary data analyses studies. Preregistration of secondary data analyses studies provides a nice opportunity and structure for fellow researchers to share…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Special Education, Educational Research, Longitudinal Studies
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Cumming, Michelle M.; Bettini, Elizabeth; Chow, Jason C. – Exceptional Children, 2023
High-quality systematic literature reviews provide a systematic process for identifying, synthesizing, and critiquing multiple studies and, in turn, inform theory, research, practice, and policy. With a focus on special education systematic reviews, we propose four core principles (i.e., coherence, contextualization, generativity, and…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Special Education, Literature Reviews, Educational Research
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Banks, Joy; González, Taucia; Mueller, Carlyn; Pacheco, Mariana; Scott, LaRon A.; Trainor, Audrey A. – Exceptional Children, 2023
Qualitative research (QR) has gained visibility and acceptance in the field of special education due to early efforts to identify quality indicators focused on technical and methodological aspects of QR. Whereas these indicators focused on credibility and trustworthiness of data, this article articulates additional QR quality indicators to enhance…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Educational Research, Special Education, Educational Indicators
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Ledford, Jennifer R.; Lambert, Joseph M.; Pustejovsky, James E.; Zimmerman, Kathleen N.; Hollins, Nicole; Barton, Erin E. – Exceptional Children, 2023
Single-case design has a long history of use for assessing intervention effectiveness for children with disabilities. Although these designs have been widely employed for more than 50 years, recent years have been especially dynamic in terms of growth in the use of single-case design and application of standards designed to improve the validity…
Descriptors: Research Design, Educational Research, Case Studies, Special Education
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Cook, Bryan G.; Lloyd, John Wills; Mellor, David; Nosek, Brian A.; Therrien, William J. – Exceptional Children, 2018
Scientific evidence should guide the selection of practice for individuals with disabilities. Scientific evidence, however, must be trustworthy to move special education toward greater empirical certainty and more effective policies and practices. Transparency, openness, and reproducibility increase the trustworthiness of evidence. We propose that…
Descriptors: Special Education, Trust (Psychology), Educational Change, Scientific Research
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Exceptional Children, 2016
The Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) supports educators with disabilities including faculty, teacher candidates, and teachers in classrooms, schools, and institutions of higher education. Within the CEC membership, members embody a wide range of disabilities including learning, sensory, physical, and emotional areas. CEC recognizes the…
Descriptors: Professional Associations, Educational Policy, Administrative Policy, Disabilities
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Exceptional Children, 2014
This report was commissioned by the Council of Exceptional Children (CEC) Board of Directors and a workgroup comprising seven special education researchers (Bryan Cook, Chair; Virginia Buysse; Janette Klingner; Tim Landrum; Robin McWilliam; Melody Tankersley; and Dave Test) who developed, vetted, and piloted the new standards for determining…
Descriptors: Special Education, Disabilities, Standards, Educational Practices
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Smith, Garnett J.; Schmidt, Matthew M.; Edelen-Smith, Patricia J.; Cook, Bryan G. – Exceptional Children, 2013
A tension exists between educational practitioners and researchers, which is often attributed to their dichotomous and oftentimes polarizing professional ideologies or Discourse communities. When determining what works in education, researchers tend to emphasize evidencebased practices (EBPs) supported by research that is rigorous and internally…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Special Education, Educational Research, Educational Researchers
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Klingner, Janette K.; Boardman, Alison G.; Mcmaster, Kristen L. – Exceptional Children, 2013
This article discusses the strategic scaling up of evidence-based practices. The authors draw from the scholarly work of fellow special education researchers and from the field of learning sciences. The article defines scaling up as the process by which researchers or educators initially implement interventions on a small scale, validate them, and…
Descriptors: Best Practices, Evidence, Special Education, Intervention
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Ford, Donna Y. – Exceptional Children, 2012
As the "land of opportunity" and arguably the greatest country in the world, the United States continues to change--culturally, racially, and linguistically. Reports abound regarding the changing demographics of the country and its schools. Over a 2-decade span (1989-2009), the percentage of "minority" students in public…
Descriptors: African American Students, Disproportionate Representation, Second Language Learning, Hispanic Americans
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Fuchs, Douglas; Fuchs, Lynn S.; Compton, Donald L. – Exceptional Children, 2012
During the past decade, responsiveness to intervention (RTI) has become popular among many practitioners as a means of transforming schooling into a multilevel prevention system. Popularity aside, its successful implementation requires ambitious intent, a comprehensive structure, and coordinated service delivery. An effective RTI also depends on…
Descriptors: Prevention, Response to Intervention, Delivery Systems, Program Effectiveness
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VanDerHeyden, Amanda M. – Exceptional Children, 2011
Perhaps the greatest value of response to intervention (RTI) as a decision framework is that it brings attention to variables (e.g., mastery of prerequisite skills, frequency of instructional corrective feedback, reinforcement schedules for correct responding) that if changed might make a meaningful difference for students (e.g., child rate of…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Intervention, Classification, Response to Intervention
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Anastasiou, Dimitris; Kauffman, James M. – Exceptional Children, 2011
Proponents of a social model of disability derive their arguments from social constructionism. They combine different disabling conditions under one term: disability. Subsequently, they apply the specific viewpoint of the disability rights social movement of people with physical disabilities to other conditions such as intellectual disabilities,…
Descriptors: Physical Disabilities, Educational Policy, Special Education, Inclusion
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Lichtenstein, Robert – Exceptional Children, 1982
The need for reliable, valid, and economical preschool screening measures to identify psychoeducational problems as mandated by P.L. 94-142 (the Education for All Handicapped Child Act) led to the development of the Minneapolis Preschool Screening Instrument (MPSI). (SW)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Disability Identification, Early Identification, Preschool Education
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