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1

Moores-Abdool, Whitney. "The Use of Curriculum Modifications and Instructional Accommodations to Provide Access for Middle School Students with Autism to the General Curriculum." FIU Digital Commons, 2011. http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/374.

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The number of students identified as having autism increased by 500% in the past 10 years (United States Government Accountability Office, 2005). All students with disabilities are required to be placed in least restrictive environments and to be given access to the general curriculum in the major subjects of math, reading, writing, and science as mandated by federal legislation such as the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA, 2004) and No Child Left Behind (NCLB, 2001). As a result of this legislation, an increasing number of students with autism are being educated in inclusive classrooms. Most studies on general education access and curriculum modifications and/or instructional accommodations center on students with intellectual disabilities (e.g. Soukup, Wehmeyer, Bashinski, & Boviard, 2007; Wehmeyer, Lattin, Lapp-Rincker, & Agran, 2003). Wehmeyer et al. (2003) and Soukup et al. (2007) found included students with intellectual disabilities had more access to the general curriculum than mostly self-contained students. This meant included students were more likely to be working on the general curriculum as mandated by NCLB than those in only self-contained classrooms. This study builds and expands the research of Wehmeyer et al., as well as Soukup et al., by examining how students with autism are given access to the general curriculum through curriculum modifications and instructional accommodations used by general education teachers in three schools. This investigation focused on nine inclusive classrooms for students with autism using a parallel mixed methods design (Newman, Newman, & Newman, 2011). Classroom observations using both an IEP related checklist and field notes, teacher interviews, an archival document review of the Individual Education Plan (IEP) for the selected students with autism were performed. Findings of this study were organized by interview questions and subsequent coding categories. Quantitative data were organized in a nominal scale. Participants asserted that their middle school students with autism functioned well in their classrooms, occasionally exhibiting behavioral differences. Most instructional accommodations on IEPs were being implemented by participants, and participants often provided additional instructional accommodations not mandated by the IEP. The majority of participants credited county workshops for their knowledge of instructional accommodations.
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Cole, Amanda Elizabeth. "Experiences of Postsecondary Students with Physical Disabilities with Online Learning." ScholarWorks, 2019. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/6985.

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Over one tenth of students in postsecondary education have a documented disability as defined by the Americans with Disability Act. However, faculty and course designers often lack understanding of these students' experiences, which leads to insufficient accommodations. The purpose of this basic qualitative study was to explore the experiences of students with physical disabilities (SWD) in online courses. The research was grounded in self-determination theory, which posits 3 basic needs for self-actualization: autonomy, competence, and relatedness. This theory in combination with universal design for learning provided a lens for exploring these experiences. Data collection included 8 interviews with postsecondary students with a physical disability. Data were coded using a combination of value codes and organized thematically. Major findings showed that SWD experience barriers in self-regulation, minimizing of their disabilities, pressure to overachieve, specific knowledge of available resources, isolation, and miscommunication. However, through proper online learning, SWD experience benefits in self-regulation, self-pacing, an increasing sense of confidence and pride, stamina, connection to peers, positive discussions, and advocacy for themselves and others. This research has implications for social change as an evidentiary tool for advocacy when exploring the benefits of taking online courses for SWD and as an awareness tool for teachers and other stakeholders in online education who wish to adapt to best practices.
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Baptiste, Belinda. "Examining the Relationship between Fidelity of Implementation of Accommodations for Students with Specific Learning Disabilities in Mathematics and Student Achievement in High School Algebra I Inclusion Classes." FIU Digital Commons, 2017. http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/3258.

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Students with specific learning disabilities (SLD) are educated in general education classrooms. As a result, these students are faced with more challenging instructional curricula. Although some students with SLD perform as well in mathematics as students without disabilities, most perform below state standards despite being provided instructional and testing accommodations. Policy makers have envisioned the implementation of instructional accommodations as a primary means of ensuring an appropriate education (Mcleskey, Hoppey, Williamson & Rentz, 2004; Scalon & Baker, 2012) for students with disabilities in general education classrooms (Mc Guire, Scott, & Shaw, 2006). The researcher implemented a non-experimental ex post facto research design to investigate the research hypothesis to determine the relationship between the five most frequently used accommodations by general education teachers who teach students with SLD and student achievement in Algebra 1. At the beginning of the 2016 – 2017 school year, the collection of data began by emailing the Qualtrics Survey Software (V.23) to 185 general education mathematics teachers in Miami-Dade County Public Schools. Four main instructional accommodation constructs were assessed using a 15-item questionnaire. From the responses to the survey, the five of the most frequently used accommodations were determined. Nine general education Algebra 1 teachers from six high schools across the county who reported using similar accommodations and taught three or more students with SLD in mathematics participated in the study. The researcher and two peer researchers conducted in-class observations on the participants’ fidelity of implementation of accommodations (FOI) using a checklist during the period in which they taught students with SLD. An Algebra I test was used for pre- and post-testing to determine student mathematics achievement. The results of the survey indicated that teachers most frequently provided: (a) sample problems of varying levels, (b) guides or prompts or personal (teacher/peer) assistance, (c) extended access to instructional resources and equipment, (d) provided preferential seating and (e) additional time to complete assignment or class projects. Linear regression analysis revealed a significant positive relationship between teacher FOI of accommodations and student achievement (p < .05).
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Burton, Benetta A. "Teachers' knowledge, valuing, and accommodation of cultural differences in their instructional practices /." The Ohio State University, 1995. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1487862972136639.

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5

Loberg, Anne. "Differentiated instruction in the EFL Classroom : Accommodation for advanced students in Swedish Primary Education." Thesis, Högskolan i Gävle, Avdelningen för humaniora, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hig:diva-32449.

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Classrooms in Sweden are heterogeneous and this is acknowledged in the curriculum, stating that all students have an equal right to education at their own level. Teachers must, therefore, design their teaching plan taking this into account. Previous investigations have shown that the Swedish schools do not fulfill this completely for advanced students. The objective of this study was to examine how Swedish teachers differentiate their English as foreign language (EFL) lessons to reach the advanced English students in the lower grades, what challenges they experiences and how they assess the students’ learning outcomes. Information was obtained through a survey and semi-structured interviews with preschool class and grade 1-3 teachers. The survey and question about participation in an interview, was emailed to schools in 74 randomly chosen municipalities all across Sweden. A total of 156 answers to the survey and five interviews are included in the analyses. The results show that the majority of teachers with experience of advanced students differentiate instruction, by using several different strategies; they experience several challenges, the heterogeneous class room as the most common; and, they assess that differentiated instruction has a small positive effect on the advanced students’ learning outcomes in general.
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Frey, Terrell Kody. "CAT IN THE CLASSROOM: UNDERSTANDING INSTRUCTOR BEHAVIOR AND STUDENT PERCEPTIONS THROUGH COMMUNICATION ACCOMMODATION THEORY." UKnowledge, 2019. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/comm_etds/85.

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Adjusting one’s communication is a fundamental requirement for human interaction (Gasiorek, 2016a). Individuals adapt communication behavior according to the circumstances surrounding the situation, resulting in different patterns and forms of speech relative to spouses, family members, coworkers, or friends. Yet, researchers in instructional communication have not yet substantially applied adjustment as a theoretical lens for understanding instructor-student classroom interactions (Gasiorek & Giles, 2012; Soliz & Giles, 2014; Soliz & Bergquist, 2016). Apart from overlooking this useful theoretical approach, instructional communication scholarship can also be improved by accounting for 1) shifting group identities in higher education that change how instructors and students communicate, 2) incomplete conceptualizations of student perceptions in existing research, and 3) a consistent lack of concern for the hierarchical structure of educational data. This dissertation seeks to resolve these limitations through an application of one of the most prominent theories of adjustment: communication accommodation theory (CAT; Giles, 1973; Giles, Willemyns, Gallois, & Anderson, 2007a). The research specifically extends the CAT framework to an instructional setting by investigating how student perceptions of instructor nonaccommodation across several modes of communication (i.e., nonverbal, linguistic/verbal, content, support) influence information processing ability, relationships with instructors, and beliefs about instructors. Data were collected from 573 undergraduate students across 38 sections of a basic communication course (BCC). Students completed an online questionnaire assessing perceptions of the appropriateness of their instructor’s behavior (i.e., nonaccommodation), extraneous load, communication satisfaction, instructor-student rapport, instructor credibility, and instructor communication competence. The results first forward a nuanced measure for assessing nonaccommodation in a manner consistent with the theoretical propositions of CAT. Second, a series of analyses using hierarchical linear modeling (HLM; Raudenbush & Bryk, 2002) showed significant associations between perceptions of nonaccommodation across modes and students’ reported classroom outcomes. Interestingly, several of the individual, direct relationships disappeared when multiple modes of nonaccommodation were considered simultaneously, introducing the possibility that individuals may prioritize the appropriateness of certain behaviors within context. The data hierarchy (i.e., students enrolled in course sections) did exert some influence on the relationships between variables, yet the majority of variance accounted for across models occurred at the student level. Implications of the results related to both theory and practice within the basic communication course are presented in the discussion.
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Dallas, Bryan. "ATTITUDES OF TEACHING FACULTY TOWARD INCLUSIVE TEACHING STRATEGIES AT A MIDWESTERN UNIVERSITY." OpenSIUC, 2012. https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/dissertations/456.

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This study measured postsecondary faculty attitudes toward academic accommodations and an inclusive teaching method called Universal Design for Instruction (UDI). The purpose of the study was to help determine a readiness for change among faculty with regard to implementing UDI principles, compare differences between faculty groups, as well as add to the postsecondary UDI research agenda. UDI requires faculty instructional design and has the potential to reduce the need for individualized academic accommodations and increase the retention and graduation rates of students with disabilities. The study included an online survey e-mailed to 1,621 faculty at Southern Illinois University Carbondale (SIUC). Independent variables included: amount of teaching experience, teaching status (i.e., full-time, part-time), academic discipline, and amount of prior disability-related training. Results showed significant differences among faculty based upon amount of teaching experience, prior disability-related training, and academic discipline. Generally, faculty with more teaching experience and prior disability-related training had more favorable attitudes toward accommodations and UDI concepts. Faculty in the colleges of Applied Sciences and Arts (ASA), Education, and Mass Communication and Media Arts had more favorable attitudes toward multiple means of presentation than the colleges of Science and Liberal Arts. Faculty in the college of Education had more favorable attitudes toward providing accommodations than the college of ASA. The study effectively started a dialogue with SIUC faculty on their willingness to use UDI principles. Overall, faculty reported mostly positive attitudes toward UDI concepts and traditional academic accommodations. Results could be utilized when proceeding with targeted training for faculty on UDI in postsecondary settings.
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Grugan, Cecilia Spencer. "Disability Resource Specialists’ Capacity to Adopt Principles and Implement Practices that Qualify as Universal Design at a 4-Year Public Institution." Wright State University / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=wright1526997302503817.

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9

Werner, Dawn Heterick. "A Study to Determine the Relationship of the Direct Instruction Program Corrective Reading on Terra Nova Tests Scores in One School System in East Tennessee." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2005. https://dc.etsu.edu/etd/1029.

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The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship of the Direct Instruction program Corrective Reading on standardized achievement test scores specifically of reading scaled score gains in grade levels three through six in a selected school system in East Tennessee. The causal-comparative quantitative approach was the foundation for this study. Reading scaled score gains from the Tennessee Comprehensive Assessment Program (TCAP) achievement test Terra Nova given in the years 2001-2002 and 2003-2004 were analyzed by grade level using ANOVA and t tests to determine if the implementation of Corrective Reading had an impact on students' achievement. No statistically significant results (p = .05) were found between the year before implementation and the year after implementation with the exception of one grade level. Furthermore, no significant differences were found at any grade level between students participating in Corrective Reading and students not participating in Corrective Reading on the 2003-2004 TCAP Terra Nova test. In addition, gender, Title I status, Special Education status, and teacher status were analyzed for interaction between groups and Corrective Reading. Only one grade level, by gender, showed a significant difference in scaled score gains. There was a significant difference by Title I status at two grade levels. Special Education students had significant reading scaled score gains at two of the four grade levels with Special Education students who received special accommodations showing significant gains at two grade levels. Students who were taught Corrective Reading by a certified teacher showed significant reading scaled score gains at one grade level, whereas the other grade levels had no significant difference.
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Teaff, Teresa L. "Effect of Individualized Curricular Accommodations, Incorporating Student Interest and the Impact on the Motivation and Occurrence/ Nonoccurrence of Disruptive Behavior Displayed By Students with Emotional/behavioral Disorders." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2001. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc3025/.

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As a result of the reauthorization of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act of 1997, schools must now consider positive behavioral interventions and strategies to address problem behavior of students with Emotional/Behavioral Disorders (E/BD). Given the poor behavioral, academic, and social outcomes for these students, there is a compelling need to identify effective, proactive interventions. Current literature has well established the ineffectiveness of traditional, punitive, and consequence-laden strategies to deal with behaviors. Research has shown the manipulation of antecedent stimuli, in the form of curricular adaptations, can provide a positive, proactive means of managing behavior. Specifically, curriculum modifications, based on student interest, are proposed as a positive, proactive strategy used to manipulate antecedent stimuli to improve the behavior of students with E/BD. The purpose of this study was to investigate the manipulation of antecedent stimuli through the implementation of individualized, curricular adaptations, based on student interest, to reduce the problem behavior of students exhibiting disruptive behaviors. A second purpose was to explore the effect of those adaptations on the behavior motivation of students with E/BD. In this study, curriculum modifications based on student interest were used to reduce disruptive behavior, increase desirable behavior, and effect change in the motivation for problem behavior among four elementary school boys with E/BD. Use of an ABAB reversal design, including interval data collection, and the use of a behavior rating scale and a motivation assessment scale were used to establish baseline data and determine effectiveness of the intervention. Results indicate that each student demonstrated a reduction in disruptive behavior, an increase in desirable behavior, and changes in motivation for behavior.
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Andrade, Lilian Regina Boarati de. "Efeitos de uma intervenção analítico-comportamental em familiares de portadores do Transtorno Obsessivo-Compulsivo sobre a acomodação familiar." Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, 2015. https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/16756.

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Made available in DSpace on 2016-04-29T13:17:56Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Lilian Boarati.pdf: 937567 bytes, checksum: 249c79ca80dd5f923f0009bc3202d6b8 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2015-10-16
Participation in rituals is often observed in relatives of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) patients. Family members change their routine, contributing to the maintenance and the strengthening of ritualistic responses. This participation has been called Family Accomodation. According to the perspective of Behavior Analysis, both the behaviors of OCD patients as of their relatives are controlled by environmental variables. This study aimed to evaluate a family-directed intervention procedure in order to reduce family accommodation. The subjects were three dyads of adults patients with OCD and their mothers. Before the intervention procedure, interviews were performed separately with the two participants from each dyad, in order to screening the patients´ rituals and the mothers´ accommodation responses. Then, weekly meetings were held between the researcher and the mothers for 12 to 14 weeks. Mothers were instructed to record the daily rituals demanding their participation and if they had adhered to them or not. These records allowed the researcher to establish an order of family accommodation responses according to their frequency, from the lowest to the highest ones. After explaining to mothers how their behavior could be maintaining the ritualistic responses of their offsprings, the researcher instructed them not participate in rituals (Extinction) that occurred less often (supposedly easier eliminating) and to differentially reinforce any other class of responses (DRO). During the intervention, at each meeting, the researcher analyzed the records brought by mothers and if she realized that mothers had followed the instructions to extinguish the rituals and reinforce their offsprings´other responses, she provided them with praise. Once one class of accommodation responses was eliminated (measured by daily records of mothers), the researcher instructed the mothers to extinguish the next ritual following the order from low to high frequency. In weekly meetings, the researcher could also review with mothers the main difficulties faced in extinguishing the accommodation responses and provide guidance on how to act in everyday situations. The analysis of the agreement conducted in 30% of records between the researcher and an independent evaluator indicated a general agreement of 90.57%. The results showed that although the ritualistic and the accommodation responses presented by the three dyads were very different, mothers succeeded to eliminate most of their accommodation responses. At the xvii same time, there was also noted a reduction in requests from the OCD patients directed their mothers to take part of their rituals. An assessment carried out 21 days after the end of the intervention (follow-up) showed that two of the three mothers kept the complete elimination of their accommodation responses addressed in the intervention. The third mother presented the complete elimination of two classes of accommodation responses, decreased the average frequency of one class of accommodation responses and maintained the frequency of another class as that presented at the last week of the intervention. It was concluded that family accommodation can be changed by providing information on its role in maintaining the ritualistic responses of OCD patients associated with instructions for family to extinguish the rituals and by social reinforcement of family behavior change
A participação nos rituais do portador do Transtorno Obsessivo-Compulsivo (TOC) é frequentemente observada em familiares que mudam sua rotina, contribuindo para a manutenção e fortalecimento das respostas ritualísticas. Essa participação tem sido denominada Acomodação Familiar. De acordo com a perspectiva da Análise do Comportamento, tanto os comportamentos do portador do TOC quanto de seus familiares são controlados por variáveis ambientais em interação com o organismo. O presente estudo teve como objetivo avaliar um procedimento de intervenção dirigido a familiares com vistas a reduzir a acomodação familiar. Participaram três díades compostas de adultos portadores de TOC e suas mães. Antes de se aplicar o procedimento de intervenção foram realizadas entrevistas separadamente com os dois participantes de cada díade, com o objetivo de fazer um levantamento dos rituais apresentados pelos portadores e das respostas de acomodação familiar. Em seguida, foram realizados encontros semanais entre a pesquisadora e as mães durante 12 a 14 semanas. As mães foram instruídas a registrar diariamente as respostas ritualísticas de seus filhos que solicitavam sua participação e se haviam atendido a essas solicitações ou não. Estes registros permitiram que se estabelecesse uma ordem das respostas de acomodação familiar em termos de sua freqüência diária da menor para a maior. Depois de explicar para as mães como seus comportamentos poderiam estar mantendo as respostas ritualísticas de seus filhos, a pesquisadora instruiu as mães para que começassem a deixar de atender (Extinção) as solicitações de participação nos rituais nas situações que ocorriam menos frequentemente (supostamente mais fáceis de eliminar) e simultaneamente reforçassem diferencialmente qualquer outra classe de respostas diferente da ritualística (DRO). Durante a intervenção, a cada encontro, a pesquisadora analisava os registros trazidos pelas mães e ao perceber que estas haviam seguido as instruções de colocar em Extinção as solicitações de participação nos rituais e reforçar outras respostas dos filhos, fornecia-lhes elogios. Uma vez eliminada uma classe de repostas de acomodação (avaliada pelos registros diários das mães), a pesquisadora instruía as mães para que deixassem de atender a solicitação de participação no próximo ritual dos filhos, seguindo a ordem de menor para maior frequência. Nos encontros semanais, a pesquisadora também pôde xv analisar junto com as mães as principais dificuldades enfrentadas na tarefa de deixar de apresentar as respostas de acomodação e fornecer orientação de como agir nas situações cotidianas. A análise da concordância entre a pesquisadora e uma avaliadora independente realizada em 30% dos registros indicou um acordo geral de 90,57%. Os resultados mostraram que embora as classes de respostas ritualísticas e de acomodação das três díades fossem muito diferentes entre si, houve eliminação da maioria das respostas de acomodação apresentadas pelas três mães. Paralelamente, observou-se também uma redução nas solicitações dos portadores de TOC dirigidas às suas mães para que participassem de seus rituais. Uma avaliação realizada 21 dias após o término da intervenção (seguimento) mostrou que duas das três mães mantiveram a eliminação completa das classes de respostas de acomodação abordadas na intervenção. A terceira mãe apresentou a eliminação completa de duas classes de respostas de acomodação, diminuiu a freqüência média diária de uma classe de respostas de acomodação e manteve a mesma frequência média diária de outra classe em comparação com última semana da intervenção. Concluiu-se que a acomodação familiar pode ser alterada pelo fornecimento de informações sobre o seu papel na manutenção das respostas ritualísticas do portador de TOC associado com instruções para o familiar colocar em extinção as solicitações para participar dos rituais e a liberação de reforços sociais para a mudança de comportamento do familiar
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Rice, Diane. "Elementary General Education Teachers' Knowledge of and Experience Teaching Students with Disabilities in Science and Social Studies." ScholarWorks, 2016. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/2100.

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In Grades 3 to 5 at a suburban southeastern elementary school, the percentage of students with disabilities (SWDs) who do not meet state standards in science and social studies is greater than that of their nondisabled peers. To address this disparity, district administrators required that proficiency ratings increase for SWDs without providing general education (GE) teachers with training. A qualitative bounded case study was used to understand how GE teachers constructed their knowledge of and met SWDs instructional needs and to understand GE teachers' needs as they worked toward meeting the district goals. Piaget's constructivist learning theory served as the conceptual framework for this study. A purposeful sample of 6 GE teachers, 2 each from Grades 3-5 whose classrooms included SWDs, volunteered to participate in open-ended interviews. Qualitative data were analyzed using provisional coding and pattern coding. A primary finding was that the participants identified teacher collaboration and professional development necessary to accommodate SWDs in the GE setting. This finding led to a recommendation that school leaders provide ongoing professional development for GE teachers as well as ongoing opportunities for collaboration between GE and special education teachers. These endeavors may contribute to positive social change by providing GE teachers instructional strategies and accommodations for meeting the learning needs of SWDs to increase the number and percentage of SWDs who meet the state standards and district goals in science and social studies.
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de, Varona Amanda G. "The Response to an ESL Population Boom in the Beaufort County, South Carolina School System: A Case Study." FIU Digital Commons, 2014. http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/etd/1568.

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The purpose of this case study was to examine the why the English language learners (ELLs) in the Beaufort County, South Carolina school system have been so successful. This school system has recently experienced a boom in its ESL student population, and this population has performed very well on standardized tests. This study used critical theory as its theoretical framework and examined why the students have been successful rather than marginalized in Beaufort County schools. This phenomenon was investigated using semi-structured interviews with the ESOL Coordinator for Beaufort County, 4 ESL-lead teachers, and 6 mainstream teachers. Data were collected using semi-structured interviews with Sarah Owen, the Beaufort County ESOL, Gifted and Talented, and World Languages coordinator. Based on the results of her interview, 4 themes emerged that were used for the semi-structured interviews with ESOL and mainstream teachers. The interviews centered on the themes of ESL policy, ESL leadership, and teacher training. The ESL and mainstream teacher interviews also revealed several subthemes that included teacher attitude, why Beaufort County has been successful with the ELLs, and the teachers’ recommendations for other schools systems trying to successfully accommodate a large ESL student population in mainstream classrooms. The findings from the teachers’ interviews revealed that additional training for the teachers without ESL experience helped them become comfortable instructing ELLs. This training should be conducted by the ESOL teachers for those without ESOL certification or endorsement. As the teachers had more training, they had better attitudes about teaching ESOL students in their classes. Finally, those who utilized the additional ESOL training and ESOL accommodations saw better student achievement in their classes. Based on the finding of this study, the researcher proposed a model for other school systems to follow in order to replicate the success of Beaufort County’s ELLs. The implications of this study focus on other schools systems and why ELLs are not obtaining the same level of success as those in Beaufort County’s schools. Finally, recommendations for further research are provided.
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Paré, Mélanie. "Pratiques d’individualisation en enseignement primaire au Québec visant à faciliter l’intégration des élèves handicapés ou des élèves en difficulté au programme de formation générale." Thèse, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/6293.

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Au Québec, des ressources considérables sont investies pour assurer la réussite scolaire des élèves handicapés et en difficulté, tant au plan des apprentissages, de la socialisation que de la qualification. Pour des raisons évoquées d’équité et d’accès à la formation générale, les politiques éducatives privilégient l’intégration de ces élèves en classe ordinaire (Ministère de l'Éducation, 2008; Ministère de l'Éducation du Québec, 1999, 2004a). Ces politiques appellent de profonds changements dans l’organisation scolaire et conduisent inévitablement les enseignants à adopter des pratiques d’individualisation de leur enseignement. En dépit de l’importance de l’individualisation de l’enseignement pour favoriser la réussite des élèves intégrés, les pratiques pédagogiques mises en œuvre par les enseignants québécois demeurent méconnues. Cette étude vise à obtenir un portrait de ces pratiques. Plus spécifiquement, cette étude vise à obtenir des données sur la fréquence d’utilisation de certaines pratiques, à étudier leur compréhension conceptuelle et appliquée par les enseignants, ainsi qu’à identifier des facteurs personnels et organisationnels pouvant expliquer les différences entre les enseignants. Sur la base de la littérature disponible, une typologie des pratiques d’individualisation a été produite, regroupant quatre pratiques : la différenciation pédagogique, l’enseignement de stratégies, l’accommodation et la modification. Puis, un questionnaire élaboré aux fins de cette étude, permettant d’évaluer empiriquement la prégnance de ces quatre pratiques, a été rempli par 138 enseignants provenant de 35 commissions scolaires du Québec. Parmi ces enseignants, treize ont été sélectionnés et interviewés sur la base des exemples de leurs pratiques mentionnées dans les questions ouvertes du sondage. Fondée sur un devis mixte de type concourant et imbriqué (Creswell, 2003), cette recherche combine une stratégie d’analyse quantitative des données issues du questionnaire à des analyses de contenu des entrevues, de nature qualitative. Les résultats convergent vers trois niveaux de prise en charge de l’hétérogénéité en classe: nuancée, mécanique et réactive. Seuls les enseignants qui ont une prise en charge nuancée démontrent une compréhension et une utilisation des pratiques conformes au cadre conceptuel. Suivant cette hypothèse formulée à partir des données d’entrevue, les résultats d’une ANOVA ont permis de conclure que le tiers des répondants au sondage (n=41) utilisant le plus fréquemment la différenciation pédagogique fait une utilisation significativement peu fréquente de la pratique de la modification. Enfin, des analyses de régression ont révélé que parmi les autres facteurs prédisant l’utilisation des pratiques se trouvent la participation à des activités de formation continue, le niveau d’enseignement, le nombre d’élèves dans le groupe et le nombre d’élèves en difficulté avec des plans d’intervention. Les résultats de cette recherche indiquent un niveau de connaissance inégal des pratiques étudiées chez les enseignants, ainsi qu’une mise en œuvre déficiente des ressources nécessaires à l’intégration scolaire des élèves handicapés ou en difficulté.
Along with the growing number of students with disabilities in regular education classrooms came the need for developing specialized interventions in this setting. Many studies showed that regular education teachers are using only a few individualized adaptations for those children, and that, therefore, many of these students with disabilities don’t have access to curriculum content. This raises the questions of defining appropriate individualized teaching practices, which can be used in regular education class. A review of the literature indicates many individualization options ranging from differentiated instruction to curriculum modification. The aim of the study was to obtain a portrait of use of those practices in the province of Quebec in Canada. The conceptual framework built for this study encompasses four identified individualization options. A web survey along with interviews were conducted to identify individualization practices found in French-language primary schools of Quebec. Carried out using concurrent nested strategy (Creswell, 2003), this mixed method research presents findings regarding frequency and diverse uses of the individualization options by regular teacher. Factors explaining variations were also studied. Study results indicate that the individualization practices most frequently used are those closely resembling regular classroom teaching. Three distinct profiles of teacher response to classroom heterogeneity were identified in the study: nuanced, mechanical and reactive. Only a few teachers among those interviewed had a good conceptual grasp of individualisation practices and were able to use those practices coherently. Results of ANOVA on survey data indicated that teachers who used differentiated instruction frequently—weekly or daily—were significantly less inclined to curriculum and teaching modifications. Regression analysis pointed to in service training as a predictor of frequent use of diffenreciated instruction. Grade level, classroom size and the proportion of students with disabilities were predictors of the use of strategic instruction, accommodation and modification.
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B, La Grenade Carole. "Représentations sociales des enseignants et pratiques pédagogiques en contexte d'inclusion des étudiants en situation de handicap non visible au collégial." Thèse, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/20061.

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