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McClanahan, Barbara – Preventing School Failure, 2009
In today's inclusive classrooms, general and even many special education teachers often do not feel confident that they know or are using methods and strategies that researchers have shown to be effective in the general education setting for students who struggle with grade-level reading regardless of whether educators have identified them as…
Descriptors: Special Education Teachers, Inclusive Schools, Mainstreaming, Teaching Methods
Tama, M. Carrol; Martinez, David H. – 1986
Designed to explore what is being done to help learning disabled (LD) readers develop comprehension skills, this paper reviews research in teaching reading comprehension to LD students and develops generalizations from the research to guide reading comprehension instruction for such students. The 10 generalizations presented and discussed in the…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Disabilities, Learning Strategies, Mainstreaming
Peer reviewedTama, M. Carrol; Martinez, David H. – Social Studies, 1988
Examines research about learning disabled (LD) students and presents an LD learning-style profile. Describes a learning activity, TELSQA, that social studies teachers can use to encourage reading comprehension. TELSQA asks students to identify title (T), examine material (E), look for important words (L), self-question (SQ), and answer…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Style, Exceptional Child Research
Peer reviewedMeese, Ruth Lyn – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1992
Possible adaptations of textbooks for children with learning disabilities include modifying the textbook (tape recording the text, using high-interest low-vocabulary materials); altering instructional procedures (teaching textbook structure, previewing, providing advance organizers, preteaching critical vocabulary); and teaching textbook reading…
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Elementary Secondary Education, High Interest Low Vocabulary Books, Instructional Materials

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