Collaborating, Consulting, and Working in Teams for Students with Special Needs with Enhanced Pearson eText -- Access Card Package
Pearson
978-0-13-451772-8 (ISBN)
This package includes the Enhanced Pearson eText and the bound book.
A focus on collaboration in a variety of environments that emphasizes constructive ways to use educator differences to serve students with special needs.
This all-in-one resource gives educators a broad look at the history of collaboration, ways to structure and implement collaborative teams, important processes and practices that ensure effective co-educator partnerships, and the external support that makes collaborative school consultation successful. Collaboration, Consultation, and Teamwork for Students with Special Needs shows what it means to blend the professional perspectives and personal preferences of co-educators using real-life applications, and includes numerous examples of school-based situations in vignettes and case studies. Filled with new chapter-opening classroom scenarios and updated activities, the Eighth Edition prepares educators, school personnel, families, and community leaders with a strong knowledge base that celebrates the strengths in personal differences.
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Ann Knackendoffel is an assistant professor in the Department of Special Education, Counseling and Student Affairs, at Kansas State University. She earned her PhD in Special Education from the University of Kansas. Her interest in collaboration and consulting began with her dissertation research on collaboration between general and special educators and it has continued with her being lead author of a book on collaborative problem solving and in her role as co-author of the previous two editions of this book. Dr. Knackendoffel has been a teacher at both elementary and secondary levels and a special educator for students with learning disabilities, intellectual disabilities, and emotional and behavior disorders. She currently teaches a graduate-level course in consultation and collaboration for special educators at Kansas State University. She has also conducted numerous workshops and conference presentations on collaborative school consultation. She has authored online course materials used the introductory special education courses for general education majors and teaches a section of that course. Dr. Knackendoffel also teaches graduate courses for special education majors in academic interventions, assistive technology, and teaches an online course about students with disabilities for college advisors as part of an online graduate program in college academic advising. Her particular interests are in collaborative problem solving, educational technology, and the utilization and supervision of paraeducators. Peggy Dettmer is professor emeritus of Education at Kansas State University, where she earned an MS in Special Education and a PhD in Educational Psychology. For several years she chaired the Educational Psychology and Counseling Department and directed the College of Education honors program. Her 42 years of teaching experience includes teaching K-8, coordinating gifted programs for a special education cooperative, teaching and advising graduate and undergraduate students in teacher education, and directing federal and state grants for programs in education of gifted and talented. Her areas of teaching were educational psychology, assessment for effective teaching, education of gifted and talented students, creativity, professional development, and collaborative school consultation. She has written a number of books and articles for refereed journals and has conducted numerous professional development activities on these topics. She chaired the Professional Development Division of the National Association of Gifted Children (NAGC) and participated in construction of NAGC program standards for education of gifted, as well as state standards for special education in Kansas. Areas of professional interest include the constructive use of adult differences for teaching and collaborating; context-adaptive planning and assessment to enhance classroom teaching; and providing responsive environments for teaching and learning. Linda P. Thurston is a professor in the Department of Special Education, Counseling and Student Affairs, Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies, and Lydia E. Skeen Endowed Chair in Education at Kansas State University. In addition to teaching research and evaluation courses at the graduate level in the College of Education, she founded of a university-based evaluation center and led efforts to create a graduate certificate in social justice education. Thurston has published and taught in the areas of disabilities, gender, family, and issues related to social justice in evaluation and education. She served as a program officer in the Education and Human Resources Directorate at the National Science Foundation for several years.
Chapter 1: Working Together in Collaboration, Consultation, and Teams
Chapter 2: Working Together with Differing Perspectives and Preferences
Chapter 3: Structuring Collaborative Foundations and Teamwork
Chapter 4: Communicating Effectively for Collaboration and Teaming
Chapter 5: Using the Problem-Solving Process in Collaborative School Consultation and Teamwork
Chapter 6: Using Tools for Organizing, Managing and Evaluating Collaboration
Chapter 7: Collaborating as Instructional Partners and Teams
Chapter 8: Building Collaborative Relationships with Team Members from Diverse Populations and Contexts
Chapter 9: Engaging Families in Home-School Collaborations and Partnerships
Chapter 10: Working in Collaborative Teams with Paraeducators
Chapter 11: Collaborating through Leadership, Advocacy, and Community Partnerships
Chapter 12: Charting Your Course for Collaborative School Consultation
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 10.4.2017 |
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Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 189 x 238 mm |
Gewicht | 686 g |
Themenwelt | Sozialwissenschaften ► Pädagogik ► Sonder-, Heil- und Förderpädagogik |
ISBN-10 | 0-13-451772-5 / 0134517725 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-13-451772-8 / 9780134517728 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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