Daily Archive for June 8th, 2006

Effectiveness research

Over on D-Ed Reckoning there is a post about an odor emanating from education research. The item was picked up in a post on NCLBLog: Let’s Get it Right, a product of the American Federation of Teachers, and I dropped a comment on that one about the evidence about effectiveness in special education practices.

Faithful readers of Teach Effectively (both of you!) know that I champion the idea that effectiveness can be assessed with strong empirical research and that data coming from those studies can be aggregated to assess relative effectiveness of educational practices. I’m republishing here parts of a Web site I created in the ’90s on this topic.

If you’re comfortable with the idea of meta-analysis, jump to the section labeled “Practices.” For a review of how to make those evaluations, please consult the links in “Introductory Materials” (in sequence).

Please review the published papers that examine this same literature (see Forness, Kavale, Blum, & Lloyd, 1997; Lloyd, Forness, & Kavale, 1998). There are many other meta-analyses that I’ve not had a chance to drop into this format. I need to create a new template and update the contents…arrrgh.

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Inclusion for all

Over on I Speak of Dreams Liz Ditz has expressed concern about whether inclusion is appropriate for all students. Liz comments on the series of three articles about inclusion, one of which I covered here on Teach Effectively a couple of days ago. In these articles Rachel Powell Norton argues for full inclusion, meaning “Students with disabilities spend all of their time in general education, receiving supports and modifications to help them participate in the class work to the fullest extent possible.”). Liz simply wrote, “I am not sure that full inclusion is always in the best interest of the child.

Link to Part I, Part II, and Part III of Ms. Norton’s promotion of full inclusion.

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