YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Teaching Students With Learning Disabilities
Essays 271 - 300
(Berube, 2000). This type of teaching follows what could be called the linear thinking model (Berube, 2000). But....science is not...
In ten pages this paper examines the Americans with Disabilities Act in a consideration of student athletes. Ten sources are cite...
In twenty pages this paper examines the U.S. Individuals with Disabilities and Education Act and Regulation 504 in an argument tha...
In fourteen pages this paper discusses how motor learning can be taught and its motivation encouraged. Ten sources are cited in t...
In this paper consisting of fourteen pages a management strategy change is created to assist companies to evolve into a learning o...
In seven pages the teaching method known as drill and practice is explored in terms of the importance of repetition as a way of le...
This paper argues that writing is not an inborn talent but a skill that can be learned and mastered. It also argues that each spec...
In five pages specific curriculum effectiveness of such teaching strategies as Socratic dialogue, didactic instruction, and cooper...
In ten pages senior citizens are discussed within the context of health education and the problems that can exist with a considera...
In a study consisting of ten pages the hypothesis that teaching math by computer generates significantly higher learning outcomes ...
In five pages this essay considers the classroom observation of a certain teacher with process described, what was learned, and th...
In thirty pages this paper examines various educational theories in a discussion of academia problems and methodologies on improve...
In five pages the benefits of cooperative learning when applied to the teaching of mathematics are examined. Five sources are cit...
For decades, we have had lessons from sociologists and plain common sense that negative and violent shows can contribute to negati...
In sixteen pages this paper examines students with special needs and classroom inclusion in concept and in practices with research...
best instilled at a young age. Elementary and teachers have what amounts to an almost moral obligation to assure that the children...
In three pages a Journal of Remedial & Special Education article regarding the five step process involved in classroom inclusi...
In three pages this essay examines what the impacts of classroom inclusion and mainstreaming are on parents, teachers, and the stu...
they are working in the field now indicates that they understand the concepts and were successful in completing the ranges of stud...
21 to 64 year-old age group who have severe disabilities have even higher rates of unemployment - 73.9 percent (Hagner, McGahie an...
see overlaps with areas such as graphics, fine arts and sculpture. Generally the syllabus will involve several areas of study, in...
prevent those from receiving the special attention they need. Contrary to that opinion is how full inclusion will serve to drasti...
Children benefit a great deal from having both structure and order in their lives (Scarbro, 2004). They gain a sense of security (...
of homogeneously and heterogeneously grouped teams and the impact on gifted and talented students (Melser, 1999). Because the col...
speak English as a native language; rather, the extent to which focused training serves to mold an effective ESL instructor is bot...
greater I.Q.s than those with smaller brains but size is not all that matters ("Big," 2004). The question that should be asked: "I...
applications, as a means of explaining these struggles (Elder, 1995). Neville (1995) has argued that religion is not a static or ...
disabled and the non-disabled are to be best served. The educational arena presents a number of challenges in regard to the...
People can now in fact learn how to program with the use of multimedia. McMaster (2001) explains that if managers want their sal...
hydrocephalus impairs ones thinking processes - headache, vomiting, lethargy, change in head size, modifications in thinking, such...