The first Introduction to Special Education text written specifically for BOTH future general and special educators. This groundbreaking text provides balanced coverage of the foundations of exceptionalities that future teachers need to know to understand their students and responsibilities, and the practical information they need to effectively teach all students.
Read this for my Examination of Exceptionalities class and you bet I'm counting it in this year's reading - the darn thing is almost 600 pages long! While there were several helpful suggestions in this book, the majority of what it said can be boiled down to just two things:
1. Differentiate, differentiate, differentiate 2. Collaborate with parents, specialists, etc. as much as possible
The specific information about what assessments might be used to identify various exceptionalities was overwhelming and didn't have much practical application for me personally, which makes me think this might be better as a reference book rather than a textbook to slog through. I learned some things from this, but overall, I am so pleased to have finished.
Starts slowly with a general introduction to teaching collaboration about exceptional students (students with special needs). It is a well-organized required text with summaries, leading and follow up questions, and a systematic chapter structure, making it easy to review and take notes.