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Home/ TEMS520/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Scott Ceglarek

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Scott Ceglarek

Scott Ceglarek

How to Create Behavorial Intervention Plans - 0 views

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    With classrooms becoming more and more mainstreamed I thought that this article/website would help general education teacher understand how to create a Behavior Intervention Plan. This text focuses more on kids with autism which I found to be important because of the increased awareness of students with this disability. Student with autism can be a challenge for any teacher to teach. The skills that they usually can be taught are social, daily living, and task skills. One way to help in assisting teachers and the students in doing this is creating behavior intervention plans. With autistic students we need to use special strategies to teach them these skills and the behavior intervention plans provide that strategy. There are several steps that go into the behavior intervention plans that ensure that the students get the most out of the plan. First the teacher will need to record the student's behavior. The behaviors the teacher is looking for are problem behaviors like biting and throwing objects and skill behaviors like language or social skills. Also the teacher will need to record the frequency, duration, and time of these behaviors. Next would be an ABC analysis of the student. The A part means antecedent, what happened before the behavior. The B part would require an analysis of the behavior itself. The C part would be the consequence of the behaviors or what happened after. Following this be choosing a target for the student or goal such as choosing 1-2 skill behaviors and 1 problem behavior to work on. The last few steps include choosing a Right Intervention Strategy for the student with autism. This could include choosing reinforcement such as sensory time, making a structured schedule, and consistent intervention to any issues. In the end you should always continue to analyze the behavior intervention plan.
Scott Ceglarek

Education World: Tools for Teaching - 0 views

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    This article that I found I thought was very useful with new teachers developing classroom rules and procedures. Without the proper classroom routines and procedures in place a teachers classroom can be much different than they would want it to be. Noise levels, classroom wandering, and time being wasted can all occur. These things can be fixed but not by just announcing that no talking, staying in your seat, and staying on task are to be expected. These must be taught. The use of visual cues such as stop and start hand gestures as well as a gesture to say stop and start over if the procedure was not done correctly. By practicing the routine to mastery, students become aware that you are trying convey that this practice is important to their behavior. Establishing high standards is easier than having low standards. To show this, one must realize that reinforcement for bad behavior must come from the peer group. Research has reportedly shown that effective teachers show that they use the first few weeks of school teaching classroom rules. This is being proactive in your classroom.
Scott Ceglarek

Peer Relationships | Education.com - 0 views

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    This article is about teachers developing positive peer relationships in the classroom. Peer relationships and the experiences associated with them are an important aspect of the development of a children and adolescents. These experiences happen on different levels that include general interactions with peers, friendships, and in groups. With friendship it can serve the function of providing self worth, affection, building of relationships. Having supports help with personal problems, parents, being active. Peer groups are intimate groups of peers who interact regularly. Many peers groups according to research have shown to have similar GPA's, college aspirations, time spent on homework, and general engagement in school. Sociometric status is unique because it concerns overall peer acceptance. So if a child or adolescent is popular, average, neglected, rejected, and controversial has a major effect on one's peer relationships. All of these levels one's peer relationships such as the ways they develop, the experiences that come from them, and the types of pressures associated with them.
Scott Ceglarek

Attachment in the Classroom - 0 views

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    This article is about teacher-student relationships. The student-teacher relationship is one of the most important factors of teaching that can be neglected. The article found that enhancing teacher-student relationships is necessary to raising student achievement because that achievement is linked to adolescent's need of having secure attachments. This is like students attachments to parents, but only with teachers. Thus research has shown that students with secure attachments do better in school. It also offers some ways in which teachers can improve teacher-student relations. Some of these methods include having an increased sensitivity and have positive interactions with students, to be well-prepared for class and hold high expectations for students, be responsive to students and provide choices whenever possible, and help students be kind, helpful and accepting of one another. By understanding the roles in which teachers have in their relationships with students will help educators become more effective.
Scott Ceglarek

Identifying Our Basic Psychological Needs - 0 views

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    This website text is about teachers learning to motivating students during this new era of standards. Student's psychological needs are some of the most important aspects of education. We want to understand why some students come to school prepared to learn while others are not. Why are our dropout rates at the rate they are? With standards on the rise and all of the other factors associated with a student's education coming into play we can be leaving our students at a great risk. Knowing what their needs are can help ease this risk. With this knowing how to motivate students, their need for competence, need for belonging, need for feelings of usefulness, satisfying the need to build optimism, and need for feeling potency can help not only students but schools overall. They are all part of the CBUPO Theory. This is not easy to achieve but it is possible.
Scott Ceglarek

Book Review: It's So Much Work to Be Your Friend: Helping the Child with Learning Disab... - 7 views

TEMS520 special education strategies elementary secondary bookreview
started by Scott Ceglarek on 13 Feb 12 no follow-up yet
  • Scott Ceglarek
     
    The book I choose for the book review is "It's So Much Work to Be Your Friend: Helping the Child with Learning Disabilities Find Social Success" by Richard Lavoie. I choose this book because it was a text that I had read during my first special education class I took at Saginaw Valley State University. It about better understanding the daily struggles associated with children with learning learning disabilities, which is something that I feel all people, not just teachers will benefit from.
    This book is arranged into chapters. Each chapter covers a new topic related to children with learning disabilities ranging from Attention Deficit Disorder, visual-spatial issues, social disorders, to nonverbal communication disorders. Richard Lavoie highlights the impact of this problem in children, the developmental aspect of the problem, the history, and any possible solutions and responses that could help teachers, parents and anyone that assist students. He wants the readers no matter who they are - parents, teachers, friends, or anyone in fact - to learn provided practical, expert advice on helping learning disabled children achieve social success.
    I would recommend this book to all teachers because as the education field is ever changing, more and more teachers are exposed to students with learning disabilities. Having a better understanding of those disabilities will only benefit a teacher in their career. Having this book in one's professional collection will provide you with a simple, easy to understand resource on the subject matter. Currently, since I am not teaching on a regular bias, I do not reference this book often. However, I do plan on referencing it when I enter the classroom as a special education teacher or a general education teacher.

    http://www.amazon.com/Its-Much-Work-Your-Friend/dp/B000WMOFA2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1329098744&sr=8-1
Scott Ceglarek

Journal #1:Teaching Reading In The Social Studies - 1 views

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    Ediger, M. (2000). Teaching Reading In The Social Studies [Abstract]. College Student Journal. Retrieved January 29, 2012, from http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCR/is_1_34/ai_62839401/?tag=content;col1 For my first journal article I choose an article that covers teaching in reading in social studies. The article discusses how teachers should use methods of guiding students to comprehension and understanding of ideas in print. Students need word recognition skills which can lead to meaningful learning. This is crucial for students to develop necessary skills to achieve a higher understanding in this subject area. To do this teaching reading across the subject will benefit as students learn the important facts, concepts, and ideas the curriculum. As a social studies teacher, you need to be active in students reading by helping with comprehension which can lead to a better understanding of the material. The article offers several methods on how to do this. These include adding new words found in readings as vocabulary, reading orally in small groups, using a student aid to read orally, using tape recordings of the section, individual readings, and using journals during readings. Overall I thought this article was great because while it provided you many ideas and practices that you could actually use in your classroom. In the end, having actual methods to use first hand will benefit us as teachers the most. It will just be up to use to master using them in the classroom.
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