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Definition
A typical or stereotypical example of something. |
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Term
Trait Paradigm Characteristics |
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Definition
1. Focusing on how a person is "defective". 2. Belief condition is something that is caused by genetics or disease 3. assumes condition is incurable 4. surrenders power to expert authority 5. Sees those with disabilities as childlike or subhuman 6. "disablist thinking" |
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Term
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Definition
Being prejudiced against those with disabilities. Disablism promotes differential or unequal treatment |
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Role Circularity (see Wolfensberger's Chart in our session 2 notes) |
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Definition
The idea that negative perceptions towards certain groups (homeless, disabled, etc) leads to devalued status in society and positive perception (wealthy, noble, etc) leads to a valued status in society. |
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Term
Problems with Trait Models |
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Definition
With trait models you run the risk of thinking of a person as "the disabled person" instead of a PERSON FIRST who has a disability. |
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Term
Expectation Cycle (chart, slide 9, session 2) |
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Definition
Negative Perceptions lead to Low Expectations which lead to Allocation of Few Resources which lead to Little Valued Activity Produced and then the cycle starts all over again with Negative Perception. |
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Term
Paradigm Shifts in Human Services |
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Definition
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Term
Characteristics of major human service paradigms |
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Definition
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Term
Constructivist perspectives on disabilities |
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Definition
That mild disability is a social invention or construction and labels are invented to "deal with" educational problems or for "political control" of minorities |
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Term
Sociological perspective on disability |
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Definition
Mild disability viewed as inability to meet own social or cultural norms and/or inadequacy of social supports. |
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Term
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Definition
He believed that a disabled persons level of functioning was determined by the amount of social services and resources that a society was willing to give to that person |
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Term
Developmental Disabilities |
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Definition
"Severe, chronic disability affecting people over 5 yrs old limiting 3 or more life activities and requiring extensive, interdisciplinary services" |
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Term
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Definition
First example of a community who gave community-based, support-oriented treatment to the mentally handicapped |
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Term
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Definition
provided homes for people with mental disabilities in religious monasteries. |
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Term
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Definition
Created a categorization of people with mental disabilities bases on functioning (Idiots and Imbeciles. |
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Term
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Definition
Student of Itard. Created the first Special Educational Methods, called the "physiological methods". Introduced his knowledge to the US |
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Term
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Definition
"First pioneer of Special Education". worked on Victor, the "Wild Boy of Averyon" |
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Term
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Definition
Study conducted by R.L. Dugdale that looked at the offspring of 5 sisters. Identified only on case of MR, but reported high levels of criminality and poverty. Asserted that MR and social evils were genetically linked |
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Term
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Definition
Director of a mental health institutions who traced two separate families who were fathered by the same man. One mother was a "feeble-minded tavern wench" and the other "an upstanding Quakeress". it was determined that the first family was full of social pests and the other of upstanding citizens. The conclusion was the "feeblemindedness" was the root of most "social sores" |
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Term
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Definition
"improving the Hereditary Qualities of Society through Selective Breeding" |
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Term
Three Eugenical solutions to fix the "Menace of the feeble-minded"? |
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Definition
euthanasia, colonization/segregation, sterilization. |
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Term
Principle of Normalization |
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Definition
The idea that we should try to give people with mental handicaps as normal and as mainstreamed a life as possible |
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Term
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Definition
Pioneer of the idea of "normalization" |
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Term
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Definition
Said in 1972 that "utilization of culturally valued means (methods) to achieve culturally normative outcomes. |
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Term
Natural perspective on disability |
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Definition
"Disability is a natural part of the human experience and in no way diminishes the rights of individuals to contribute to society...people have rights to employment and residential supports and access to assistive technology |
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Term
Four Steps in the Litigation-Legislation Cycle |
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Definition
1. Initiating Litigation 2. Original Legislation 3. Refining Litigation 4. Amended Legislation |
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Term
Right to education-initiating litigation |
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Definition
14th Amendment Due Process and equal Protection Clauses, Importance of education in mod. society, educability of children w/ MR, if states educate some, they must educate all, financial or admin inadequacies cannot bear more heavily on children w/ disabilities. |
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Term
Rights established after PARC |
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Definition
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Term
Rights established after Mills Case |
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Definition
Zero Reject, Due process, and Parental participation |
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Term
Rights established after Wyatt Case |
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Definition
Right to Treatment. IEP is created |
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Term
Rights established after Larry P. Case |
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Definition
nondiscriminatory testing |
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Term
P.L. 94-142 (THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT) |
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Definition
Labeled "The Education for All Handicapped Children Act of 1975", it includes two rights: 1. "appropriate education" 2. LRE |
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Term
Right to education-refining litigation |
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Definition
Legislation is amended and refined in response to dispute resolutions and in order to set new and clearer standards thru revised rules and regulations. |
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Term
Who are the students served in special education? |
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Definition
2/3 male, 1/3 female. Special education serves both the disabled and the gifted. Special education starts at birth in some states. Public school education goes all of the way up to age 22 in FL. 2/3s of students in special ed. have either an SLD (48%) or a speech or language impairment (19%). 10% have an intellectual disability |
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Term
Race and Gender that make up most of the Special Education teacher population? |
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Definition
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Term
Besides the teacher, what other occupations make up the special education field? |
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Definition
school social workers, OTs, PTs, teachers aides (paraprofessionals, psychologists, audiologists, Speech language pathologists, administrators, vocational teachers, etc. |
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Term
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Definition
: he is the guy who wrote the article "Special Education for the mildly retarded-Is much of it justifiable?" |
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Term
Cascade System of Special Ed. Services. |
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Definition
Gen. Ed. Classroom -> Resource Room -> Special Classes -> Special Schools -> Home-bound services -> Hospitals and Institutions. |
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Term
"Statue of Liberty" philosophy in Special Education |
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Definition
"Give me your defected, defeated, and unwanted and I will love and shelter them" |
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Term
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Definition
the cascade system of special ed services. She also thought that special education should be used as a development capital |
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Term
What are the Six Principles of IDEA |
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Definition
Zero Reject, nondiscriminatory evaluation, appropriate education, LRE, procedural due process, parental and student participation. |
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Term
4 Steps in "Steps Assessment Process" |
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Definition
Screening, pre-referral, referral, non-discriminatory eval |
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Term
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Definition
Accountability for results, school safety, parental choice, teacher quality, scientifically-based methods of teaching, local flexibility |
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Term
Two fed laws that prohibit discrimination against individuals based on disability |
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Definition
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Term
What are the goals of Spec Ed measured by? (3 things) |
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Definition
high school completion, post-school employment rates, overall satisfaction with life |
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Term
Differences in IDEA and NCLB |
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Definition
Look in the study guide, it's much easier to comprehend and memorize in chart form |
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Term
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Definition
"We are all born as a blank slate" |
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Term
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Definition
Children are "noble savages" |
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