Bilingual Special Education Teachers' Shifting Paradigms
- 1 December 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Learning Disabilities
- Vol. 28 (10) , 622-635
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002221949502801004
Abstract
This study examined the nature and process of change among five bilingual special education teachers as they attempted to modify existing instructional practices. Three factors affected the change process: (a) The more special education training in the teachers' background, the stronger their reductionist orientation; (b) change involves shifts in instructional practices and shifts in beliefs, and they do not automatically go hand in hand; and (c) change is most facilitated at the beginning stages of collaboration by including practicing members of the teachers' occupational community as agents of change.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Overrepresentation of Minority Students in Special EducationThe Journal of Special Education, 1994
- Teacher Under Construction: A Collaborative Case Study of Teacher ChangeAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1992
- Creating zones of possibilities: Combining social contexts for instructionPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1990
- Doing More in the Same Amount of Time: Cathy SwiftEducational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1990
- Holistic/constructivist Principles of the Teaching/Learning ProcessJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1988
- The Reductionistic Fallacy in Learning DisabilitiesJournal of Learning Disabilities, 1988
- Change as the Goal of Educational ResearchAnthropology & Education Quarterly, 1987
- Metacognition and Passing: Strategic Interactions in the Lives of Students with Learning DisabilitiesAnthropology & Education Quarterly, 1986
- Staff Development and the Process of Teacher ChangeEducational Researcher, 1986
- “Let'stryto make it a good day”— some not so simple ways∗Discourse Processes, 1980