an icon showing a delivery van Shulph delivers to United Kingdom.
Book cover for Instructional Practices with and without Empirical Validity, a book by Bryan G. Cook, Melody  Tankersley, Timothy J. Landrum Book cover for Instructional Practices with and without Empirical Validity, a book by Bryan G. Cook, Melody  Tankersley, Timothy J. Landrum

Instructional Practices with and without Empirical Validity

2016 ᛫


Powered by RoundRead®
This book leverages Shulph’s RoundRead system - buy the book once and read it on both physical book and on up to 5 of your personal devices. With RoundRead, you’re 4 times more likely to read this book cover-to-cover and up to 3 times faster.
Buy Book + eBook £121.24
Add to Read List


Instant access to ebook. Print book delivers in 5 - 10 working days.

  • Page count

    350 pages

  • Category

    Learning Difficulties

  • Publisher

    Emerald Group Publishing Limited

  • Ebook file size

Summary


It is important that stakeholders are aware of practices supported as effective for students with learning and behavioral disabilities in order to provide instruction that results in improved learner outcomes. Perhaps equally important, stakeholders should also know which practices have been shown by research to be ineffective (e.g., have no, small, or inconsistent effects on learner outcomes). Special education has a long history of using practices that, though appealing in some ways, have little or no positive impact on learner outcomes. In order to bridge the gap between research and practice, educators must be aware of which practices work (and prioritize their use) and which do not (and avoid their use). In this volume, each chapter describes two practices one supported as effective by research and one shown by research to be ineffective in critical areas of education for students with learning and behavioral disabilities. Chapter authors will provide readers guidance in how to do this for each effective practices and provide concrete reasons to not do this for each ineffective practice.