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Bestseller!

Meeting the Needs of Students of ALL Abilities

How Leaders Go Beyond Inclusion
Second Edition
By: Colleen A. Capper, Elise M. Frattura

Promote high achievement for all students through equitable, integrated school services!

This step-by-step handbook provides the foundation for leaders seeking to shift from costly special learning programs for a few learners to excellent, inclusive educational services for all students, including those who have special needs. This second edition includes current research, examples of successfully integrated and socially equitable schools, a greater focus on social justice and standards, and a new equity audit questionnaire. The strategies detail:

  • Transitioning from separate programs to inclusive services
  • Establishing standards for student success
  • Understanding legal and financial considerations
  • Preparing for change

Full description


Product Details
  • Grade Level: K-12
  • ISBN: 9781412966955
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2008
  • Page Count: 192
  • Publication date: November 30, 2008
Price: $41.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

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Description

Description

"Provides a clear road map for everyone interested in changing schools to be responsive to ALL students. School personnel, school boards, and individual educators will be challenged to think courageously about how schools should operate for every student who comes through the classroom door."
—Darin Drill, Executive Director of Secondary Programs
North Clackamas School District, Milwaukie, OR

"Offers specific strategies for creating environments where children can work together and learn from each other regardless of their abilities."
—Cathleen J. Chamberlain, Assistant Superintendent
Oswego City School District, NY

Promote high achievement for all students through equitable, integrated school services!

This step-by-step handbook provides the foundation for school leaders who want to shift from costly special learning programs for a few learners to excellent, inclusive educational services for all students, including English language learners and those with special needs such as learning disabilities and disadvantaged backgrounds.

This useful guide covers school policies, reform, and restructuring, and demonstrates how to establish standards for physical and emotional safety, student behavior, and quality instruction and learning. Based on current research, this second edition places a greater emphasis on social justice and standards, offers a new equity audit questionnaire, and includes examples of success from schools that have used the book to implement change. Readers will find practical strategies, reproducible handouts, and self-assessments for:

  • Transitioning schools from separate programs to inclusive services
  • Establishing broad standards as prerequisites for student success
  • Understanding legal and financial considerations for meeting student needs
  • Preparing for the process of change

Meeting the Needs of Students of ALL Abilities provides a realistic portrayal of how leaders can create and sustain excellent, integrated, socially just schools, and ensure success for all.

Author(s)

Author(s)

Colleen A. Capper photo

Colleen A. Capper

Colleen A. Capper is professor in the Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Analysis at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She has authored or coauthored five books (published or in-press) and refereed journal articles related to educational leadership and equity. Capper has served as a special education teacher, administrator of special programs, and founding director of a nonprofit agency for preschool children and adults with disabilities in the Appalachian region of Kentucky. Capper works with individuals in school districts, nonprofit, and for-profit agencies across the country on ways to integrate social justice, equity, and spirituality into their daily work.
Elise M. Frattura photo

Elise M. Frattura

Elise Frattura is an assistant professor in the Department of Exceptional Education and Educational Administration and associate dean for the School of Education at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She teaches courses in administration of student services, organizational leadership, and special education law. Frattura researches and publishes in the area of nondiscrimination law, integrated comprehensive services for all learners, and the theoretical underpinnings of educational segregation. Coauthor of Meeting the Needs of All Learners: How Leaders Go Beyond Inclusion (Corwin Press 2000), Frattura works with school districts across the country to assist in the movement from programs to services for all learners.
Table of Contents

Table of Contents

List of Handouts

Preface to the Second Edition

Acknowledgments

About the Authors

Introduction

Part I. Shift From Programs to Services


1. Setting the Stage: The Social and Legal Impetus for Services Rather Than Programs in Integrated, Socially Just Schools

2. Shifting From Programs to Services: Where to Begin?

First Stage: Ask Necessary Questions

Second Stage: Establish a School Service Delivery Team to Initiate Change

Third Stage: Shift Personnel Roles to Meet Student Needs

3. Leading for Social Justice at the School and District Levels

Primary Leadership Characteristic: Inclusive Social Justice and Equity Are the Leader's Core Identity

Leading for Social Justice at the District Level

Traditional Roles of Central Office Administrators Impede Change

Transforming From Centralized Leaders to Social Justice Leaders

Part II. Establish Standards for Integrated, Socially Just Schools and Districts


4. Standards for Physical and Emotional Safety: Prerequisites for Student Success

Standard 1: Make Physical and Emotional Safety Central to All Aspects of the School

Standard 2: Establish a Culture of Inclusivity and Visibility

Standard 3: Take Harassment Seriously

Standard 4: Cocreate Antiharassment Policy and Strategies

Standard 5: Integrate Antiharassment Into the Curriculum

Examples of an Antiharassment Policy in Practice

5. Standards for Student Behavior

Standard 1: Be Conscious of How We Label Students; Student Behavior Is Relative

Standard 2: Hold High Expectations for Student Behavior in a Context of Care

Standard 3: Develop and Consistently Implement Schoolwide Discipline Policies That Have Individually Designed Consequences and Positive Incentives

Standard 4: Provide Early Intervention

Standard 5: Involve Students in All Aspects of Intervention

Standard 6: All Staff Must Understand That All Behavior Is an Attempt to Communicate

Standard 7: All Staff Must Have Similar Expectations and Strategies for Student Behavior

Standard 8: View Teaching and Learning Appropriate Behaviors as a Long-Term Process

Standard 9: Staff Must Use Proactive Strategies for Students Who Need More Intense Support

6. Quality Instruction and Assessment: The Foundation for Integrated, Socially Just Schools

Strategy 1: Focus on Instruction: Ensure That ALL Students Have Access to Quality Teaching

Strategy 2: Get It Right the First Time: Interventions and Programs Are Not the Answer

Strategy 3: Develop Teacher Capacity/Hiring

Strategy 4: All Teachers Are Experts and Shall Teach All Kids, No Magic in Student Services

Strategy 5: Reduce Student-to-Teacher Ratios and Class Size

Strategy 6: Configure Class Grouping to Meet Student Needs Without Labeling

Strategy 7: Make Early Literacy a Priority

Strategy 8: Provide Early Intervention and Prevention Without Labeling

Strategy 9: Make Curriculum Accommodations but Not as a Substitute for Skillful Teaching

Strategy 10: Use Teaching Assistants With Caution

Strategy 11: Begin With the End in Mind

Frequently Assess to Measure Student Progress and to Inform Instruction

Dos and Don'ts When Addressing High-Quality Instruction

Part III. Leverage Law, Funding, and Student Differences Toward Critical Transformative Change


7. Leveraging the Law and Funding Toward Integrated, Socially Just Schools

How Educators Can Use the Law to Leverage an Integrated, Socially Just Education

Reallocating Resources for Integrated, Socially Just Schools

8. Toward Integrated, Socially Just Schools: A Framework for Change

Determining the Locus of Control

A Dual Approach to Change

One Framework for Equity and Social Justice Change

Resource A: Equity Audit Data Collection and Analysis

Resource B: Reference Material for Service Delivery Teams

Resource C: Malcolm Shabazz City High School

References

Index

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Reviews

Price: $41.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

Review Copies

This book is not available as a review copy.