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Publication Type
Showing 2,386 to 2,400 of 4,600 results
Peer reviewedCrowner, T. Timothy – Exceptional Children, 1985
A taxonomy of special education finance sets forth terms in four categories: bases, formula, types, and sources. Such a taxonomy can be used for comparative analysis, standard guidelines, and efficacy research. (Author/CL)
Descriptors: Classification, Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Financial Policy
Peer reviewedMesinger, John F. – Exceptional Children, 1985
The author responds to a previous article calling for the merger of special and regular education by emphasizing the need for more quality preservice teacher education programs. (CL)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Special Education
Peer reviewedLieberman, Laurence M. – Exceptional Children, 1985
The author responds to an earlier article calling for a merger of special and regular education by suggesting that special education must maintain its own separate identity. (CL)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Special Education
Peer reviewedStainback, Susan; Stainback, William – Exceptional Children, 1985
The authors respond to comments on their earlier article in which they proposed the merger of regular and special education. They address the following issues: (1) willingness and capabilities of regular educators; (2) regular and special educator differences; (3) handicapism; (4) adovocacy; (5) service availability; and (6) reality. (CL)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Special Education
Peer reviewedGreenburg, David – Exceptional Children, 1989
The United States Department of Education's tenth annual report on the implementation of Public Law 94-142 contains improvements but shows overdependence on reporting numbers of students without descriptions of evolutions in service delivery, and raises questions about the effectiveness of monitoring efforts carried out by the Office of Special…
Descriptors: Annual Reports, Disabilities, Educational Legislation, Federal Legislation
Peer reviewedWyche, Lamonte G., Sr. – Exceptional Children, 1989
Findings from the United States Department of Education's tenth annual report on the implementation of Public Law 94-142 are extrapolated to characterize Black and Hispanic students in learning disability classes and the issue of minority student high-school completion rates. In light of the findings, a comprehensive follow-up study is…
Descriptors: Black Students, Dropout Rate, Educational Diagnosis, Educational Legislation
Peer reviewedGerber, Michael M.; Levine-Donnerstein, Deborah – Exceptional Children, 1989
In this review of the "Tenth Annual Report to Congress on the Implementation of the Education of the Handicapped Act" (Public Law 94-142), data are cited concerning: current status of services, dropout rates from secondary special education, implementation of preschool special education services, and state variations in the classification of…
Descriptors: Annual Reports, Classification, Disabilities, Dropout Rate
Peer reviewedMercer, Jane R.; Denti, Lou – Exceptional Children, 1989
Described are efforts to integrate special and regular elementary-level students from two separate but adjacent facilities. Three years after the special school's opening, observational data and questionnaires revealed almost total segregation. Subsequently, an intensive intervention program generated promising, short-term movement toward…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Educational Cooperation, Elementary Education, Institutional Cooperation
Peer revieweddeBettencourt, Laurie U.; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1989
A comparison of 44 semi-rural learning-disabled postsecondary-age youth with 64 urban nonlearning-disabled same-age peers found significantly higher dropout rates and significantly lower basic skills competency levels among the learning-disabled youth. No differences were found between learning-disabled graduates and dropouts in terms of…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Comparative Analysis, Dropout Rate, Employment Level
Peer reviewedFox, C. Lynn – Exceptional Children, 1989
Low socially accepted learning-disabled intermediate-grade students (N=86) were paired with 86 high socially accepted, nonhandicapped classmates for 8 weeks in 4 groups: mutual interest group, cooperative academic task group, Hawthorne effect/control group, and classroom control group. Evaluated were changes in classmates' ratings of…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Group Activities, Intermediate Grades, Interpersonal Competence
Peer reviewedYell, Mitchell L. – Exceptional Children, 1989
The article explicates the rights and responsibilities of special educators and administrators in the suspension and expulsion of handicapped students from school. In addition to a discussion of Honig versus Doe, the article presents the common law principles that have been developed in federal litigation. (JDD)
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Administrator Role, Court Litigation, Disabilities
Peer reviewedSzymanski, Edna Mora; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1989
Differences between state and local special education programs and the state-federal vocational rehabilitation (VR) program are highlighted, through discussion of the history of the state-federal VR program, the differing definitions of disabilities, operation of the VR program, funding differences, and resultant differences in evaluation…
Descriptors: Agency Cooperation, Definitions, Disabilities, Federal Programs
Peer reviewedFradd, Sandra H.; Correa, Vivian I. – Exceptional Children, 1989
Specific interventions such as English language instruction and bilingual education are needed to enable limited-English-speaking students with disabilities to enter the mainstream. Obstacles include lack of awareness of needs and limited personnel training programs that include cross-cultural communication. Transdisciplinary teaming is a…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Bilingual Special Education, Disabilities, Educational Policy
Peer reviewedCummins, Jim – Exceptional Children, 1989
A theoretical matrix for conceptualizing issues within bilingual special education is outlined. Issues addressed include the difficulty of distinguishing learning disabilities from second-language-learning problems, nondiscriminatory assessment of language and intellectual skills, effects of bilingual interactions at home and school, and…
Descriptors: Bilingual Special Education, Bilingualism, Disabilities, Educational Theories
Peer reviewedRueda, Robert – Exceptional Children, 1989
A discussion of special education placement of language-minority students with mild disabilities focuses on current eligibility criteria, proposing that problems in assessment, diagnosis, and placement reflect problems with larger issues in special education, especially continuing reliance on the psychometric paradigm. Reform attempts are…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Diagnosis, Elementary Secondary Education, Eligibility


