Close to the Classroom is Close to the Bone: Coaching as a Means to Translate Research into Classroom Practice
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Exceptional Children
- Vol. 62 (1) , 52-66
- https://doi.org/10.1177/001440299506200105
Abstract
This study explored the use of coaching as a way to bring research-based teaching practices into general education classrooms to improve the quality of reading instruction provided to students with learning disabilities. Project staff trained and mentored district special educators on the process of coaching. Qualitative research methodology was used to analyze the process of expert consultation and to better understand the process of change. Key issues that emerged included differences in the ways that special and general educators conceptualize teaching, the differing concerns and priorities between special and general educators, and the anxieties inherent in an observation and feedback process.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Limitations of a Feel-Good Approach to ConsultationJournal of Educational and Psychological Consultation, 1992
- Apprenticeship and Intensive Training of Consulting Teachers: A Naturalistic StudyExceptional Children, 1990
- Reflections and Deflections of Policy: The Case of Carol TurnerEducational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1990
- Story Grammar: An Approach for Promoting At-Risk Secondary Students' Comprehension of LiteratureThe Elementary School Journal, 1990
- Rethinking the Regular Education InitiativeRemedial and Special Education, 1990
- A Curriculum for an Initial-Year-of-Teaching ProgramThe Elementary School Journal, 1989
- Story-Mapping Training as a Means of Improving Reading ComprehensionLearning Disability Quarterly, 1987
- Staff Development and the Process of Teacher ChangeEducational Researcher, 1986
- A Multifaceted Study of Change in Seven Inner-City SchoolsThe Elementary School Journal, 1986
- Vocabulary Development: All Contexts Are Not Created EqualThe Elementary School Journal, 1983