Effective Direct Instruction Practices in Special Education Settings

Author:

Englert Carol Sue1

Affiliation:

1. Assistant Professor in the Department of Special Education at the University of Kentucky. She received her PhD from Indiana University. She has published several articles on teacher training and curriculum improvement. Currently, she is examining the development of children's organizational strategies in reading and writing.

Abstract

This study examined effective and less effective teachers of special education students as differentiated by their direct instruction practices. Twenty-eight teacher interns were equally divided into two effectiveness groups based on their students' achievement. Each group was observed teaching lessons to special education students. Analyses of teacher behavior indicated that more effective teachers maintained a brisker lesson pace, had higher student accuracy, and prompted rather than told correct answers following student errors. The results of the study support prior research in teacher effectiveness and the hypothesis that teacher behavior is an important factor contributing to student achievement.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Education

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1. Preparing Teachers to Facilitate Engagement in Reading Intervention Through Embedded Behavioral Supports;Intervention in School and Clinic;2022-10-18

2. Effects of reciprocal peer tutoring and direct learning environment on sophomores’ academic achievement in electronic and computer fundamentals;Education and Information Technologies;2018-09-25

3. Meta-Analysis of Single-Case Research Design Studies on Instructional Pacing;Behavior Modification;2016-07-27

4. “That’s My Job”;Teacher Education and Special Education: The Journal of the Teacher Education Division of the Council for Exceptional Children;2015-06-25

5. Dyspedagogia;Encyclopedia of Special Education;2014-02-07

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