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E-grāmata: Current Issues in the Education of Students with Visual Impairments

Volume editor (Associate Professor, Special Education and Director of the Program in Visual Disabilities, Peabody College, Vanderbilt University, TN, USA)
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International Review of Research in Developmental Disabilities is an ongoing scholarly look at research into the causes, effects, classification systems, and syndromes of developmental disabilities. Contributors come from wide-ranging perspectives, including genetics, psychology, education, and other health and behavioral sciences.

The current volume, number 46, addresses current issues in the education of students with visual impairments. Topics covered include the expanded core curriculum for students with visual impairment; assistive technology; Braille reading comprehension; communication development; orientation and mobility issues, and more.

  • Provides the most recent scholarly research in the study of developmental disabilities
  • A vast range of perspectives is offered, and many topics are covered
  • An excellent resource for academic researchers

Papildus informācija

An ongoing scholarly look at research into the causes, effects, classification systems, and syndromes of developmental disabilities
Series Preface ix
Preface to Special Issue on Visual Impairment xi
Contributors xvii
1 Advancing the Education of Students with Visual Impairments Through Evidence-Based Practices
1(22)
Deborah D. Hatton
1 Introduction
2(1)
2 Education of Students with Visual Impairments
3(2)
3 Advancing Evidence-Based Practices
5(11)
4 Implications for the Future
19(4)
2 Assistive Technology for Students with Visual Impairments: A Research Agenda
23(32)
Derrick W. Smith
Stacy M. Kelly
1 Introduction
24(3)
2 Methods
27(2)
3 Results
29(12)
4 Discussion
41(7)
5 Conclusion
48(7)
References
49(6)
3 Teaching Skill Acquisition to Individuals with Blindness: A Systematic Review of Response-Prompting Procedures
55(46)
Sarah E. Ivy
Deborah D. Hatton
1 Introduction
56(8)
2 Method
64(5)
3 Results
69(21)
4 Discussion
90(11)
References
95(6)
4 Communication Development of Children with Visual Impairment and Deafblindness: A Synthesis of Intervention Research
101(44)
Amy T. Parker
Sarah E. Ivy
1 Introduction
102(5)
2 Method
107(3)
3 Results
110(20)
4 Discussion
130(8)
5 Conclusion
138(7)
References
138(7)
5 Unified English Braille in the United States: A Research Agenda for Transition and Instruction
145(32)
Frances Mary D'Andrea
Diane P. Wormsley
Mackenzie E. Savaiano
1 Introduction
146(5)
2 Method
151(1)
3 Results
152(13)
4 Discussion
165(12)
References
173(4)
6 Reading Comprehension for Braille Readers: An Empirical Framework for Research
177(30)
Mackenzie E. Savaiano
Donald L. Compton
Deborah D. Hatton
1 Introduction
178(5)
2 Method
183(5)
3 Results
188(10)
4 Discussion
198(9)
References
203(4)
7 Three Areas of the Expanded Core Curriculum for Students with Visual Impairment: Research Priorities for Independent Living Skills, Self-Determination, and Social Interaction Skills
207(46)
Sandra Lewis
Mackenzie E. Savaiano
Karen Blankenship
Kitty Greeley-Bennett
1 Introduction
208(5)
2 Method
213(1)
3 Results
214(22)
4 Discussion
236(11)
5 Research Priorities
247(6)
References
249(4)
8 Orientation and Mobility for Students with Visual Impairments: Priorities for Research
253(28)
Robert Wall Emerson
Tessa McCarthy
1 Introduction
254(1)
2 Background and Rationale for Review
255(2)
3 Method
257(4)
4 Results
261(10)
5 Discussion
271(10)
References
274(7)
Index 281(6)
Contents of Previous Volumes 287
Deborah D. Hatton, Ph.D., is Associate Professor of Special Education and Director of the Program in Visual Disabilities at Peabody College of Vanderbilt University. Her research interests include intervention research in visual impairment and behavioral phenotype research with students with fragile X syndrome. She received her bachelors degree in secondary education from Auburn University, her masters degree in visual disabilities from Florida State University, and her Ph.D. in special education from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Prior to arriving at Vanderbilts Program in Visual Disabilities in August 2009, Dr. Hatton was a senior scientist at the FPG Child Development Institute at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where she spent 15 years directing research and outreach projects funded by the U. S. Department of Education and the National Institutes of Health. Projects included The Early Intervention Training Center for Infants and Toddlers with Visual Impairments, Project Emerge: Understanding Early Literacy in Young Children with Visual Impairments, and The National Professional Development Center on Autism Spectrum Disorders. Prior to her work as a researcher and faculty member in the field of special education, Deborah was employed as a general education teacher, an itinerant teacher of students with visual impairments, and an administrator of programs for typically developing students, as well as programs serving students with visual impairments. She helped establish the statewide early intervention program for young children with visual impairments, ages birth to five years, at the Governor Morehead School (GMS) for the Blind in Raleigh, NC and later served on the board of directors at GMS for 12 years.