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9780805844481

Identification of Learning Disabilities: Research To Practice

by ; ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780805844481

  • ISBN10:

    0805844481

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2002-07-01
  • Publisher: Lawrence Erlbau

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Summary

Identification of Learning Disabilities: Research to Practiceis the remarkable product of a learning disabilities summit conference convened by the Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP) in August 2001 and the activities following that summit. Both the conference and this book were seen as important preludes to congressional reauthorization of the historicIndividuals With Disabilities Education Act(IDEA) scheduled for 2002 and subsequent decision making surrounding implementation. The OSEP conference brought together people with different perspectives on LD (parents, researchers, practitioners, and policymakers) and resulted in this book, which examines the research on nine key issues concerning the identification of children with learning disabilities. Coverage includes alternative responses to treatment, classification approaches, processing deficit models, and approaches to decision making. Chapter Structure-- Each of the first nine chapters is organized around a lengthy, issue-oriented paper, which presents the most current research on that topic. These primary papers are then followed by four respondent papers that reflect a variety of viewpoints on the topic. Summarizing Chapter-- A small group of researchers (listed in the final chapter) dedicated an enormous amount of time to summarizing the research and developing key consensus statements regarding the identification of children with learning disabilities. Their work is sure to have a tremendous impact on future discussions in this area. Expertise-- The following well-known scholars have helped summarize the vast amount of research presented in this book as well as the consensus statements derived therefrom: Lynne Cook, Don Deshler, Doug Fuchs, Jack M. Fletcher, Frank Gresham, Dan Hallahan, Joseph Jenkins, Kenneth Kavale, Barbara Keogh, Margo Mastopieri, Cecil Mercer, Dan Reschley, Rune Simeonsson, Joe Torgesen, Sharon Vaughn, and Barbara Wise.

Table of Contents

Forewordp. xix
Acknowledgmentsp. xxiii
Introductionp. xxv
Learning Disabilities: Historical Perspectivesp. 1
European Foundation Period (c. 1800 to 1920)p. 1
U.S. Foundation Period (c.1920 to 1960)p. 6
Emergent Period (c.1960 to 1975)p. 22
Solidification Period (c.1975 to 1985)p. 31
Turbulent Period (c.1985 to 2000)p. 38
Referencesp. 53
Endnotesp. 65
Response to "Learning Disabilities: Historical Perspectives"p. 69
Response to "Learning Disabilities: Historical Perspectives"p. 75
Response to "Learning Disabilities: Historical Perspectives"p. 81
Response to "Learning Disabilities: Historical Perspectives"p. 89
Early Identification and Intervention for Young Children with Reading/Learning Disabilitiesp. 99
Classroom Prevention Through Differentiated Instruction: Response to Jenkins and O'Connorp. 151
From an "Exploded View" of Beginning Reading Toward a Schoolwide Beginning Reading Model: Getting to Scale in Complex Host Environmentsp. 163
Early Identification and Intervention for Young Children With Reading/Learning Disabilitiesp. 173
Response to "Early Identification and Intervention for Young Children with Reading/Learning Disabilities"p. 179
Classification of Learning Disabilities: An Evidence-Based Evaluationp. 185
Redefining LD Is Not the Answer: A Response to Fletcher, Lyon, Barnes, Stuebing, Francis, Olson, Shaywitz, and Shaywitzp. 251
A Response to Classification of Learning Disabilities: An Evidence-Based Evaluationp. 263
The Sociopolitical Process of Classification Research: Making the Implicit Explicit in Learning Disabilitiesp. 273
Classification of Learning Disabilities: Convergence, Expansion, and Cautionp. 279
Learning Disabilities as Operationally Defined by Schoolsp. 287
A Look at Current Practicep. 335
A Meta-Research Commentary on MacMillan and Siperstein's "Learning Disabilities As Operationally Defined by Schools"p. 341
Leveling the Playing Field: Commentary on "Learning Disabilities as Operationally Defined by Schools"p. 351
Minority Overrepresentation: The Silent Contributor to LD Prevalence and Diagnostic Confusionp. 361
Discrepancy Models in the Identification of Learning Disabilityp. 369
There's More to Identifying Learning Disability Than Discrepancyp. 427
A Functional and Intervention-Based Assessment Approach to Establishing Discrepancy for Students With Learning Disabilitiesp. 437
Discrepancy Models in the Identification of Learning Disability: A Response to Kavalep. 449
Do Discrepancy Models Satisfy Either the Letter or the Spirit of IDEA?p. 457
Responsiveness to Intervention: An Alternative Approach to the Identification of Learning Disabilitiesp. 467
Three Conceptualizations of "Treatment" in a responsiveness-To-treatment framework for LD identificationp. 521
Responsiveness to Interventions: The Next Step in Special Education Identification, Service, and Exiting Decision Makingp. 531
Using Response to Treatment for Identifying Students With Learning Disabilitiesp. 549
On the Role of Intervention in Identifying Learning Disabilitiesp. 555
Empirical and Theoretical Support for Direct Diagnosis of Learning Disabilities by Assessment of Intrinsic Processing Weaknessesp. 565
Response to "Empirical and Theoretical support for Direct diagnosis of Learning Disabilities by Assessment of Intrinsic Processing Weaknesses"p. 615
A Commentary on "Empirical and Theoretical Support for Direct Diagnosis of Learning Disabilities by Assessment of Intrinsic Processing Weaknesses"p. 623
Blurring the Boundary: A Commentary on Torgesen's Argument for the Use of Process Markers in the Identification of Learning Disabilitiesp. 635
Learning Disabilities Is a Specific Processing Deficit, But It Is Much More Than Phonological Processingp. 643
Clinical Judgments in Identifying and Teaching Children with Language-Based Reading Difficultiesp. 653
Culture in Learning: The Next Frontier in Reading Difficulties Researchp. 693
Clinical Judgments in Identifying and Teaching Children With Reading Disabilities: Another Perspectivep. 703
Clinical Judgment in the Assessment of Learning Disabilitiesp. 713
Response to "Clinical Judgments in Identifying and Teaching Children with Language-Based Reading Difficulties"p. 725
Is "Learning Disabilities" Just a Fancy Term for Low Achievement? A Meta-Analysis of Reading Differences Between Low Achievers with and Without the Labelp. 737
Response to "Is 'Learning Disabilities' Just a Fancy Term for Low Achievement? A Meta-Analysis of Reading Differences Between Low Achievers With and Without the Label"p. 763
Response to "Is 'Learning Disabilities' Just a Fancy Term for Low Achievement? A Meta-Analysis of Reading Differences Between Low Achievers With and Without the Label"p. 773
Response to "Is 'Learning Disabilities' Just a Fancy Term for Low Achievement? A Meta-Analysis of Reading Differences Between Low Achievers With and Without the Label"p. 777
Response to "Is 'Learning Disabilities' Just a Fancy Term for Low Achievement? A Meta-Analysis of Reading Differences Between Low Achievers With and Without the Label"p. 783
Conclusionp. 791
Appendixp. 805
Name Indexp. 809
Subject Indexp. 831
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved.

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