Making Adaptations for Mainstreamed Students
- 1 July 1991
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Remedial and Special Education
- Vol. 12 (4) , 18-27
- https://doi.org/10.1177/074193259101200404
Abstract
This study sought to determine teachers' perceptions of the desirability and feasibility of adaptations for mainstreamed students in their general education classes. Of particular interest was how teachers of different grade levels would respond to adaptations. Elementary (n = 25), middle school (n = 23), and high school (n = 45) teachers rated both the desirability and feasibility of 30 items on the Adaptation Evaluation Instrument (AEI) on a Likert-type scale. The 30 items represented adaptations derived from two sources, (1) a review of literature and (2) transcripts from a series of focused group interviews. Results indicated statistically significant differences between the mean desirability and feasibility ratings of each inventory item, with all adaptations perceived as more desirable than feasible. Surprisingly few differences between grade groupings surfaced. Findings are discussed in light of teacher preferences for various adaptations.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Instructional Arrangements: Perceptions from General EducationTEACHING Exceptional Children, 1990
- Contextually Based School Consultation: Influential VariablesExceptional Children, 1990
- Consultation-Based Programming: Instituting the Collaborative Ethic in SchoolsExceptional Children, 1990
- A Rationale and Guidelines for Establishing Special Education Consultation ProgramsRemedial and Special Education, 1988
- The Regular Education Initiative: Patent Medicine for Behavioral DisordersExceptional Children, 1988
- Beyond Special Education: Toward a Quality System for All StudentsHarvard Educational Review, 1987
- Why Children Fail to Learn and What to Do about itExceptional Children, 1986
- Assessment for Instructional PlanningExceptional Children, 1986
- Learning Strategies: An Instructional Alternative for Low-Achieving AdolescentsExceptional Children, 1986
- Special Education and Regular Education: A Merger Made in Heaven?Exceptional Children, 1985