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Additional resources |
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The
articles included in Teaching How-tos are drawn from TEACHING
Exceptional Children (TEC), a publication of The Council for Exceptional
Children (CEC). TEC is published specifically for teachers and administrators
of children with disabilities and children who are gifted and features
practical articles that present methods and materials for classroom use
as well as current issues in special education teaching and learning.
All articles are offered in PDF and require Acrobat Reader software to download and view.
© Council for Exceptional Children. All articles are reprinted with permission.
What
Can I Do to Help Young Children Who Struggle With Writing?
Authors: Barbara Fink-Chorzempa, Steve Graham, and Karen R. Harris
In this article, we identify a variety of instructional adaptations that
teachers make for the struggling writers in their classroom.
PDF (3p, 81k)
No
More Friday Spelling Tests? An Alternative Spelling Assessment for Students
With Learning Disabilities
Author: Kelly A. Loeffler
This teacher found that, by using a spelling rubric
rather than a traditional spelling test, her students were able to more
easily find misspelled words, correct them, and use an appropriate spelling
strategy.
PDF
(4p, 136k)
Extra
Spelling Instruction: Promoting Better Spelling, Writing, and Reading
Performance Right from the Start
Authors: Steve Graham, Karen R. Harris, Barbara Fink-Chorzempa
The CASL Spelling Program contains 20-minute lessons
for word sorting, phonics warm ups, spelling patterns, short vowels, long
vowels, and a five-step study strategy. Teachers who participated in the
program found it effective.
PDF
(3p, 65k)
How
Adam Became a Writer: Winning Writing Strategies for Low-Achieving Students.
Author: Leigh Ann James, Mary Abbott, Charles R. Greenwood
This article describes a 9-week writing workshop in a fourth grade classroom.
The workshop included a process-writing model, graphic organizers, and
ongoing assessment using a six-trait writing assessment rubric. Although
both high and low scoring groups made significant progress, the low group
made the most progress.
PDF
(8p, 180k)
Spell
Checking: Making Writing Meaningful in the Inclusive Classroom
Author: Tamarah M. Ashton
This article describes the CHECK procedure for teaching students with
learning disabilities skills in the actual operation of a computer spell-
check. Students are urged to check the beginning sound, hunt for correct
consonants, examine the vowels, make changes, and keep repeating the process.
PDF (6p, 199k)
From
Illegible to Understandable: How Word Prediction and Speech Synthesis
Can Help
Author: Charles A. MacArthur
This article uses a case study of a third-grade student with a severe
learning disability and an attention deficit disorder to illustrate use
of word prediction and speech synthesis software to help students with
such tasks as communicating via dialog journals. Guidelines (such as using
a relatively small word list) and evidence of the method's effectiveness
are offered.
PDF
(6p, 70k)