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Mary Ann Pessa

Aaron Likens: Blog Life on the Other Side of the Wall (Autism Awareness) - 1 views

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    Aaron Likens is a Community Education Specialist for Touch Point Autism Services and also the author of Finding Kansas: Decoding the Enigma of Asperger's Syndrome. He has a passion for creating awareness.
Renessa Ciampa Brewer

Muir, H. (2008). Science rules OK: Running societies the rational way. - 2 views

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    The author presents examples of policies that are "bright ideas that have backfired in the real world." Specifically, examples such as random drug testing in prisons, giving juvenile delinquents tours of prisons to scare them straight, and randomised controlled medical treatment trials. She points out that what many of these policy makers are lacking is research on evidence of effectiveness, and that policy makers and researchers need to be in dialogue with each other. "Stubborn ideology," as she calls it, is costing us money.
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    Jenal Austin December 2010 "Science Rules OK: Running Societies the Rational Way" This article discusses the importance of basing public policy on evidence found through appropriately- conducted research studies rather than on assumptions or "feel good" ideology. Unfortunately, due to the fact that politicians want to come across as confident and decisive, they often prefer a simple evaluation of policies that research may have found to be unbeneficial for society. "Rigorous evaluations are seen as threatening rather than supportive of better policy" and many people view the task as "laborious, slow, and expensive." Social policies are also often seen as harmless when, in fact, there has been evidence showing that poorly researched policies have increased drug use in prisons as well as the number of teens involved in car accidents. Large randomized trails are necessary to evaluate whether or not a program might work on the national scale. It is also important that researchers and policy makers communicate with one another and that governments utilize proven facts rather than clinging to idealistic visions.
Julie Johnstone

Making Connections: volunteering and virtual volunteering - 2 views

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    While this article is a bit dated, the concept of virtual volunteering intrigued me. I am interested in exploring this notion a bit more to determine if some of the same benefits can be achieved. It is a nice link between my work in this class and what I focused on in the 692 course.
Ann Leary

Conflict Resolution Skills for Keeping Relationships Healthy - 2 views

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    This is another great article that simplifies conflict resolution skills to keep relationships healthy. Communication and creating healthy relationships is important is both personal and professional lives. I hope you enjoy this article.
Mary Ann Pessa

Case Study Michael at the Lovaas Institute - 1 views

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    Presented as a case study of the importance of Individualized Intervention for children with the diagnosis of Pervasive Developmental Disorder and achieving success. Additional support structure recognized as individually needed for Michael, he received focused instruction in the reading and writing program training nonverbal children to communicate via written word cards and later through typing on a keyboard or writing on paper.
carl ericson

computer science teacher installs ongoing action research course design - 0 views

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    This is the journal/report of a computer science teacher at a private school who redesigned his classes, moving away from a grades- and information-based model toward an adaptive learning, self-motivating, community-of-scholars, discovery approach. He designed it as an ongoing action-research project for his graduate degree. The narrative is easy to follow and good things happen.
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