Synopses & Reviews
Instructor materials available. Enhance your courses with student activities, discussion starters, instructor notes, Power Point slides, and more!
The new generation of teachers needs a new kind of special education textbook—one that focuses on children, not labels. That's why Whitney Rapp & Katrina Arndt developed Teaching Everyone, the first text that fully prepares teachers to see past disability labels and work with all students' individual needs and strengths.
Accessible and forward-thinking, this inclusive special education text will get Kâ€"12 teachers ready to work effectively within today's schools and meet the learning needs of a wide range of students. Educators will:
- Align their teaching with the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Initial Content Standards. Each chapter clearly explains how the content helps students meet specific standards.
- Discover a truly progressive, inclusive approach to education. Breaking free of a categorical approach to disability, this text reveals how to stop relying on labels to access supports for students—and work with each child as an individual instead.
- Get comprehensive information in one volume.A thorough primer on inclusive special education, this textbook covers all the critical topics teachers need to know about (see below), for a fraction of the cost of similar textbooks.
- Learn effective teaching strategies for major academic content areas. Educators will get clear, research-backed strategies for teaching reading, writing, science, math, and social studies—including guidance on keeping students engaged and assessing their progress.
- Get a deep and personal understanding of student and teacher perspectives. With the case studies and narratives from teachers and people with disabilities, educators will have keen first-hand insights that will inform their teaching for years to come.
A foundational text for tomorrow's teachers—and a valuable reference for inservice teachers who want to sharpen and update their skills—this important volume will help usher in an era of truly inclusive classrooms where all children learn and thrive.
With cutting-edge information on
- differentiated instruction
- universal design for learning
- instructional strategies for academic content areas
- assessment and evaluation
- social and communication skills
- response to intervention
- early intervention policy and practices
- classroom management positive behavioral interventions and supports (PBIS)
- functional behavior assessment
- IEPs
- home-school collaboration
- teacher collaboration
- transition to adulthood
- special education legislation
- child and adolescent development
Click here to watch a recording of Dr. Rapp's webinar - Supporting Behavior in the Inclusive Class
Review
"Leaving behind limited categorical labels and concepts, this book does an amazing job of putting disability in its place: as only one of the many ways that students differ. I can't wait to use this book in my courses." Mara Sapon-Shevin
Synopsis
Aligned with CEC Initial Content Standards, Teaching Everyone is a core text that fully prepares teachers to see past disability labels and work with all children's individual needs and strengths. Includes teaching strategies for all major academic content areas.
Synopsis
Instructor materials available. Enhance your courses with student activities, discussion starters, instructor notes, Power Point slides, and more The new generation of teachers needs a new kind of special education textbook--one that focuses on children, not labels. That's why Whitney Rapp & Katrina Arndt developed Teaching Everyone, the first text that fully prepares teachers to see past disability labels and work with all students' individual needs and strengths.
Accessible and forward-thinking, this inclusive special education text will get Ka "12 teachers ready to work effectively within today's schools and meet the learning needs of a wide range of students. Educators will:
- Align their teaching with the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Initial Content Standards. Each chapter clearly explains how the content helps students meet specific standards.
- Discover a truly progressive, inclusive approach to education. Breaking free of a categorical approach to disability, this text reveals how to stop relying on labels to access supports for students--and work with each child as an individual instead.
- Get comprehensive information in one volume.A thorough primer on inclusive special education, this textbook covers all the critical topics teachers need to know about (see below), for a fraction of the cost of similar textbooks.
- Learn effective teaching strategies for major academic content areas. Educators will get clear, research-backed strategies for teaching reading, writing, science, math, and social studies--including guidance on keeping students engaged and assessing their progress.
- Get a deep and personal understanding of student and teacher perspectives. With the case studies and narratives from teachers and people with disabilities, educators will have keen first-hand insights that will inform their teaching for years to come.
A foundational text for tomorrow's teachers--and a valuable reference for inservice teachers who want to sharpen and update their skills--this important volume will help usher in an era of truly inclusive classrooms where all children learn and thrive.
With cutting-edge information on- differentiated instruction
- universal design for learning
- instructional strategies for academic content areas
- assessment and evaluation
- social and communication skills
- response to intervention
- early intervention policy and practices
- classroom management positive behavioral interventions and supports (PBIS)
- functional behavior assessment
- IEPs
- home-school collaboration
- teacher collaboration
- transition to adulthood
- special education legislation
- child and adolescent development
Click here to watch a recording of Dr. Rapp's webinar - Supporting Behavior in the Inclusive Class
About the Author
Dr. Whitney H. Rapp is an Associate Professor of Inclusive Education at St. John Fisher College in Rochester, New York, where she teaches courses on inclusive education pedagogy, assessment, classroom management, and diversity issues. She is currently serving as Associate Dean of the Ralph C. Wilson, Jr., School of Education. Dr. Rapp holds a B.A. in elementary education and psychology from the State University of New York at Potsdam and an M.A. and a Ph.D. in special education from Michigan State University. Prior to her 14 years of experience in teacher education programs, Whitney taught many different grade levels in a variety of settings, from fully inclusive classrooms to residential special education schools. All of these experiences reinforced her belief that all children can learn and that all children should learn together in inclusive settings. Whitney's current research interests include universal design for learning—particularly strategies to support executive functioning abilities. She presents often at local, state, and national conferences on differentiation of instruction and teacher education. Whitney's spare time is spent with her husband and three children, riding bikes, hiking, gardening, reading, watching movies, and enjoying Owasco Lake.
Dr. Katrina L. Arndt is an Associate Professor of Inclusive Education at St. John Fisher College. She teaches courses in the undergraduate and graduate programs in inclusive pedagogy, collaboration, assessment, classroom management, and diversity issues, and has supervised student teachers and graduate-fi eld placements. Before entering higher education, she was a preschool teacher, paraprofessional, and special education teacher in Minneapolis, Minnesota, for 10 years. She then worked as secondary English coteacher in the Rochester, New York, area.
Dr. Arndt holds a B.A. in philosophy from Grinnell College and an M.A. in educational psychology from the University of Minnesota. Her Ph.D. in special education and her Certifi cate of Advanced Study in disability studies are from Syracuse University. She joined the faculty of St. John Fisher College in 2005, and was a part of the group of faculty who voted to merge the Special Education, Adolescence Education, and Childhood Education Departments to become a single inclusive education department in 2010. Her research interests focus broadly on inclusive practices in schooling and narrowly on sharing the perspectives of children, youth, and adults who are visually impaired, blind, and deafblind. Katrina spends her free time enjoying the outdoors with her partner Lauren, visiting her many nieces and nephews, and hiking in the Adirondacks.
Table of Contents
About the Authors
Foreword
Douglas Biklen
Foreword
Susan Peters
Acknowledgments
Introduction: First Things First
I. Why Does Teaching Everyone Matter? The History of Special Education
- Construction of Ability and Disability, Intersections of Ability, Race, and Gender
Disability throughout History
How Race, Gender and Disability are Socially Constructed
The Social Construction of Disability Impacts Education and Schooling
- History of Special Education
Education in the United States
The Development of Special Education
What We Want to See
- Special Education Law and Legislation
The Road Traveled
Where We Stand
Current Context and Issues
The Trip Ahead
II. What Does Teaching Everyone Mean? The Educator's Role and Citizenship in the Classroom- Early Intervention
Martha Mock
Development of Policy and Practices of Early Intervention
Inclusive Early Childhood Education
Major Principles in Early Intervention and Early Childhood Special Education
Conclusion and Future Direction of Early Intervention
- Child and Adolescent Development
Theories of Child and Adolescent Development
Impact of Developmental Theories in Context of School
What Teachers Should Know About Child and Adolescent Development
- Classroom Management
Building Community
Classroom Management
- Differentiation
A Conceptual Framework for Successful Differentiation
Differentiation of Instruction
Considerations and Classroom Cases
- Universal Design for Learning
Definition of UDL
Why UDL?
Principles of UDL
A UDL Classroom
Case Example
- Assessment
Assessment in the Classroom
Evaluation for Special Education
Placement and the Individual Education Plan
- Collaboration
Collaboration Best Practices
Homeâ€"School Collaboration
Collaboration within the School
Collaboration between School and Agencies
- Transition from High School to Adult Life
Issues
Legislation and Processes
Community Connections
III. How Will I Teach Everyone? Instructional Strategies by Content Area- Management Strategies for All Students
Strategies for Management
- Reading Strategies for All Students
Reading Instruction and Access to Instruction
Least Dangerous Assumption
Digital Media, National Core Curriculum Standards and Response to Intervention (RTI)
Strategies for Engagement, Input, Output, and Assessment
- Writing Strategies for All Students
Components of Writing
Strategies for Engagement, Input, Output, and Assessment
- Social Studies Strategies for All Students
Strategies for Teaching Social Studies to All Students
Assessment
Math Strategies for All Students Strategies for Teaching Math to All Students
Assessment
- Science Strategies for All Students
Strategies for Teaching Science to All Students
Assessment
- Social and Communication Strategies for All Students
Strategies for Teaching Social and Communication Skills to All Students
Assessment
- Working with Special Area Teachers and Related Service Professionals
Working with Special Area Teachers
Appendix: Resources for Comprehensive Teaching
References
Name Index
Subject Index