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         Special Needs Teacher General:     more books (100)
  1. Teaching Students With Emotional Disturbance: A Practical Guide for Every Teacher (A Practical Approach to Special Education for Every Teacher) by Robert Algozzine, James Ysseldyke, 2006-03-24
  2. WholeSHSchool Approaches: Meeting the Special Educational Needs of All Children SH A Guide to Teachers (Education Policy Perspectives : School Organization and I) by Arlene Ramasut, 1989-03-01
  3. To Think Like a Teacher: Cases for Special Education Interns and Novice Teachers by Mark B. Goor, Karen E. Santos, 2001-10-23
  4. Special Kids For Special Treatment: How Special Do You Need To Be To Find Yourself In A Special School? by Helen Phtiaka A, 1997-04-01
  5. Meeting the Needs of the Handicapped: A Resource for Teachers and Librarians
  6. Introducing Special Educational Needs: A Guide for Students by Philip Gardner, 2001-10-26
  7. Helen and Teacher: The Story of Helen Keller and Anne Sullivan Macy (Radcliffe Biography Series) by Joseph P. Lash, 1997-04
  8. Effective Special Education Teacher: A Practical Guide for Success, The by Laurie U. deBettencourt, Lori A. Howard, 2006-09-01
  9. The Special Educational Needs Co-ordinator's Handbook: A Guide for Implementing the Code of Practice by Gregan Davies, 1995-02-09
  10. Inclusive Programming for High School Students with Autism or Aspergers Syndrome: A Guide for Parents and Teachers by Sheila Wagner, 2008-04-01
  11. Special Stories for Disability Awareness: Stories and Activities for Teachers, Parents and Professionals by Mal Leicester, 2007-08-30
  12. Managing the Social and Emotional Needs of the Gifted: A Teacher's Survival Guide by Connie C. Schmitz, 1985-02
  13. What Every Teacher Should Know About Special Learners (Tileston, Donna Walker. What Every Teacher Should Know About--, 8.) by Donna E. Walker Tileston, 2003-10-30
  14. The Classroom Teacher's Inclusion Handbook: Practical Methods for Integrating Students with Special Needs by Jerome C. Yanoff, 2006-09-28

101. LAB At Brown Teaching Diverse Learners Bilingual/Special
TDL Logo, Teaching Diverse Learners. Go to TDL Home Page English language learners with special education needs Contexts and possibilities.
http://www.alliance.brown.edu/tdl/tl-strategies/se-principles.shtml

102. NUT On The Web
NUT Survey of special Educational needs Coordinators and the Revised Code of Practice Messages of support from world teachers organisations
http://www.teachers.org.uk/story.php?id=3035

103. Past Issues - March/April 1999
Richards, the special educator, also raves about coteaching and being able to Practitioners and researchers alike argue that co-teaching need not be an
http://www.edletter.org/past/issues/1999-ma/coteaching.shtml
March/April 1999 Co-Teaching: Are Two Heads Better Than One in an Inclusion Classroom?
By Millicent Lawton When Ronni Swan's principal at Starms Discovery Learning Center in Milwaukee asked her to co-teach this school year with a special educator, Swan balked. A general education teacher, Swan had already had a bad experience trying to co-teach, and the memory made her leery. But the push on co-teaching was part of the multiage elementary school's mission to weave disabled students into all regular classes. So, Swan agreed reluctantly-and then worried. As it happens, her pairing with teacher Paige Richards has worked so well it's made her a believer in co-teaching. "I would never go back to just teaching regular ed [by myself]," Swan says firmly. "It's no fun. It's lonely." Swan also believes the students benefit academically from having two teachers present, each with different strengths. Swan's strong suit is language arts, while Richards' is science. Richards, the special educator, also raves about co-teaching and being able to mix special ed and regular ed children together. "I feel like the benefits of inclusion far outweigh anything in a self-contained [special education] classroom," she says. She cites in particular the progress of one 10-year-old mentally retarded boy she has taught for three years in an inclusion class at the school. When he started in the multiage class, the boy had poor social skills and couldn't stay on task. Now the boy can "tell you what he did over the weekend. He can tell you two or three things in a row, on a topic, and then switch to something else. That's a goal we had for his IEP (Individualized Education Plan)."

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