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Banks, Joy; González, Taucia; Mueller, Carlyn; Pacheco, Mariana; Scott, LaRon A.; Trainor, Audrey A. – Exceptional Children, 2023
Qualitative research (QR) has gained visibility and acceptance in the field of special education due to early efforts to identify quality indicators focused on technical and methodological aspects of QR. Whereas these indicators focused on credibility and trustworthiness of data, this article articulates additional QR quality indicators to enhance…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Educational Research, Special Education, Educational Indicators
Curriculum-Based Assessment and Direct Instruction: Critical Reflections on Fundamental Assumptions.

Heshusius, Lous – Exceptional Children, 1991
This article argues that curriculum-based assessment and direct instruction are not models of assessment and instruction for human learning but isolated sets of measurement and control procedures. The paper advocates holistic understandings of assessment that directly emerge from human aspects of learning and teaching and from understandings of…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods, Holistic Approach, Measurement Techniques

Dixon, Robert C.; Carnine, Douglas W. – Exceptional Children, 1992
This commentary on a paper by L. Heshusius (EC 600 327) argues that, rather than rejecting empiricism, postmechanistic science embraces a more sophisticated view of empiricism and scientific method. The commentary also supports direct instruction with the use of multiple measures of educational progress, quantitative and qualitative alike. (JDD)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods

Gersten, Russell – Exceptional Children, 1992
This commentary on a paper by L. Heshusius (EC 600 327) describes key ideas of direct instruction and reflects on the original paper from a perspective that incorporates the realities of classrooms. The commentary calls for serious, systematic inquiry that explores instructional environments for special education students using constructs from…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods

Thompson, Verlinda P.; Gickling, Edward E. – Exceptional Children, 1992
In response to a paper by L. Heshusius (EC 600 327), this article clarifies fundamental concepts of curriculum-based assessment and discusses specific points of misrepresentation. The article concludes that Heshusius has created a narrow reductionistic view of reality instead of a dynamic evolving approach to assessment, curriculum, and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Disabilities, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education

Mosenthal, Peter B. – Exceptional Children, 1988
The definition of progress as applied to writing research and practice is examined, and three different approaches to understanding the writing of exceptional children are considered: a literal approach, an interpretive approach, and an evaluative approach. The scientific and social implications of each of the approaches are considered.…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods, Exceptional Persons

Rosenberg, Steven A.; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1987
The study evaluated developmental progress in three groups of infants (9-30 months) presenting Down syndrome (n=28), mild disability (n=16), or moderate/severe disabilities (n=16). To evaluate intervention impact, formulas that measure rate of development and change in rate of development were computed. Findings indicated rate change formulas were…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Programs, Developmental Stages, Downs Syndrome

Potter, Margaret L.; Wamre, Heidi M. – Exceptional Children, 1990
The paper outlines the rationale and development of curriculum-based measurement (CBM) and its empirical support; summarizes two reading models (Chall's stages of reading development and LaBerge and Samuels' model of automaticity); and discusses how CBM, with its use of oral reading rate measures, and the reading models may validate each other.…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods, Models

Koorland, Mark A.; Nelson, C. Michael – Exceptional Children, 1990
This critique discusses conceptual and practical issues raised in a paper by D. Marston (EC 210 837) on choosing the most technically adequate graph for measuring progress on individual education plans. The critique argues that the Standard Behavior Chart is a technically adequate and useful measurement tool. (JDD)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods, Graphs

Marston, Douglas; Deno, Stanley L. – Exceptional Children, 1990
This article responds to a criticism (EC 231 964) of a paper that discusses graphs for measuring progress on individual education plans (EC 210 837). It notes that the type of chart used is not a major issue; the important point is that teachers repeatedly gather data on educationally relevant tasks and evaluate intervention effectiveness. (JDD)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods, Graphs

Fuchs, Lynn S.; Deno, Stanley L. – Exceptional Children, 1991
Two approaches to measurement for instructional decision making (specific subskill mastery measurement and general outcome measurement) are described and illustrated with case studies. The paper concludes that measuring general outcome indicators can bridge traditional and contemporary assessment paradigms to form an innovative approach to…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Case Studies, Decision Making, Elementary Secondary Education

Parker, Richard I.; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1991
This study investigated the technical adequacy of 7 objective indexes of writing quality in monitoring the progress of 36 middle school students with mild disabilities over a 6-month period. Three indexes (such as "percent of legible words") were moderately correlated with holistic ratings but were not sufficiently stable over time. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Holistic Approach, Intermediate Grades, Junior High Schools

Heshusius, Lous – Exceptional Children, 1992
The author of a former paper (EC 600 327) responds to commentaries on her analysis of curriculum-based assessment and direct instruction in special education. The response focuses on the ideological basis of mechanistic thought in the study of human behavior, the shift toward holistic education, and use of scientific methodology. (JDD)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Scientific Methodology

Fuchs, Lynn S.; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1992
This study of 63 students (in grades 2-8) with mild to moderate disabilities found that students in classrooms using curriculum-based measurement (CBM) achieved better than controls on reading measures. The study also found that students of teachers who received CBM expert system instructional consultation achieved better than others on written…
Descriptors: Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Uses in Education, Consultation Programs, Elementary Education

Misra, Anjali – Exceptional Children, 1992
Three adult subjects with mild mental retardation were trained in individualized social skills and then taught to self-monitor their behavior, initially using a self-monitoring device. Self-monitoring assisted in generalization of trained social skills across settings and people; however, maintenance results were variable. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Adults, Generalization, Individualized Instruction, Interpersonal Competence
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