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  2. Individualized Education Program - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Individualized_Education...

    The IEP team is required to consider the student's communication needs. For example, if a student is blind or visually impaired, the IEP is mandated to provide instruction in braille unless an evaluation of the student's reading and writing skills, needs, and future needs indicate that this instruction is not appropriate for the student. If a ...

  3. Peer-mediated instruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer-mediated_instruction

    The peer tutors are chosen from the target students' classrooms, trained to mediate and closely observed during mediation. Among the advantages noted to the technique, it takes advantage of the positive potential of peer pressure and may integrate target students more fully in their peer group. Conversely, it is time-consuming to implement and ...

  4. Resource room - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_room

    This may be due to the familiarity with the resource room teacher, small group direct instruction or confidence within an area they are comfortable in. Researchers believe that explicit instruction that breaks tasks down into smaller segments is an important tool for learning for students with learning disabilities. [9]

  5. Special education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_education

    Students whose disabilities have been certified may be exempted from some standardized tests or given alternative tests. [39] Accommodations are responsive to students' needs; for example, students with visual impairments may take oral tests, and students with hearing impairments take written tests.

  6. Special education in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_education_in_the...

    The least restrictive environment is defined as "educating students with disabilities to the maximum extent appropriate with students without disabilities. It specifies that transferring learners from the general education environment may occur only when the nature or severity of the student's disability precludes satisfactory instruction in ...

  7. Peer instruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_instruction

    Peer instruction as a learning system works by moving information transfer out and moving information assimilation, or application of learning, into the classroom. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Students prepare to learn outside of class by doing pre-class readings and answering questions about those readings using another method, called Just in Time ...

  8. Inclusion (education) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inclusion_(education)

    Inclusion has different historical roots/background which may be integration of students with severe disabilities in the US (who may previously been excluded from schools or even lived in institutions) [7] [8] [9] or an inclusion model from Canada and the US (e.g., Syracuse University, New York) which is very popular with inclusion teachers who believe in participatory learning, cooperative ...

  9. Peer mentoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_mentoring

    Peer mentoring in education was promoted during the 1960s by educator and theorist Paulo Freire: "The fundamental task of the mentor is a liberatory task. It is not to encourage the mentor's goals and aspirations and dreams to be reproduced in the mentees, the students, but to give rise to the possibility that the students become the owners of their own history.