Social Effects of Integrated Classrooms and Resource Room/Regular Class Placements on Elementary Students with Learning Disabilities
- 1 August 1990
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Learning Disabilities
- Vol. 23 (7) , 439-445
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002221949002300708
Abstract
The social status of elementary students with learning disabilities (LD) served by the Integrated Classroom Model (ICM) was compared to the social status of elementary students with learning disabilities served in a regular class with resource room support. The ICM serves elementary special education and non-special-education students (1:2) together as one class. The comparison group was composed of students with learning disabilities who received special education services outside of their regular classroom for a portion of their school day. Social status was determined by assessing interpersonal relationships among students, using a peer rating method. The results of analyses of various dimensions suggest that while special education students in both programs have significantly lower social status on average than their non-special-education peers, the children in the ICM have a better opportunity to blend successfully into the classroom than the children who go out to a resource room.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Students' Preferences for Service Delivery: Pull-Out, In-Class, or Integrated ModelsExceptional Children, 1989
- Integrated Classroom versus Resource Model: Academic Viability and EffectivenessExceptional Children, 1988
- SOCIAL SKILLS TRAINING WITH CHILDREN: PROCEED WITH CAUTIONJournal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1982
- Social outcomes of mainstreaming: Sociometric assessment and beyondExceptional Education Quarterly, 1981
- Sociometric Status of Learning Disabled Children in an Integrative ProgramJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1979
- Peer Status and Personality Characteristics of Learning Disabled and Nondisabled StudentsJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1978
- Actual and Perceived Peer Status of Learning-Disabled Students in Mainstream ProgramsThe Journal of Special Education, 1978
- Peer Popularity of Learning Disabled ChildrenJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1976
- Peer Popularity of Learning Disabled ChildrenJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1974
- Expanding the Resource Concept: The Resource SchoolExceptional Children, 1973