Three’s a Team: Increasing Collaboration Among Instructional Assistants, General, and Special Educators Teaching Students with Disabilities

abstract: Children with cognitive disabilities are frequently included in general education classes to access grade level curriculum and socially interact with peers. To assist with the inclusion of students with disabilities, some schools assign instructional assistants to support general education...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Shurman, Jo L. (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38396
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-383962018-06-22T03:07:00Z Three’s a Team: Increasing Collaboration Among Instructional Assistants, General, and Special Educators Teaching Students with Disabilities abstract: Children with cognitive disabilities are frequently included in general education classes to access grade level curriculum and socially interact with peers. To assist with the inclusion of students with disabilities, some schools assign instructional assistants to support general education teachers. However, there is often a lack of planning time or a planning protocol for the general education teachers, special education teachers, and instructional assistant to plan for the inclusion of students with cognitive disabilities. This action research project intended to increase the collaboration among instructional assistants, general education teachers, and special education teachers by developing a Community of Practice among the three groups of professionals. The action included a jointly attended professional development opportunity on strategies to include students with cognitive disabilities in the general education classroom, followed by monthly structured collaboration meetings in which the team jointly planned for the students with disabilities. Effectiveness of the project was judged using survey and interview questions derived from Theory of Planned Behavior and the self-efficacy construct from Social-Cognitive theory. The implementation of a team planning protocol increased the team’s collaboration by positively improving communication and connectivity among the team members. Dissertation/Thesis Shurman, Jo L. (Author) Marley, Scott C. (Advisor) DiGangi, Samuel (Committee member) Sallu, Adama (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Special education eng 162 pages Doctoral Dissertation Leadership and Innovation 2016 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38396 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2016
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Special education
spellingShingle Special education
Three’s a Team: Increasing Collaboration Among Instructional Assistants, General, and Special Educators Teaching Students with Disabilities
description abstract: Children with cognitive disabilities are frequently included in general education classes to access grade level curriculum and socially interact with peers. To assist with the inclusion of students with disabilities, some schools assign instructional assistants to support general education teachers. However, there is often a lack of planning time or a planning protocol for the general education teachers, special education teachers, and instructional assistant to plan for the inclusion of students with cognitive disabilities. This action research project intended to increase the collaboration among instructional assistants, general education teachers, and special education teachers by developing a Community of Practice among the three groups of professionals. The action included a jointly attended professional development opportunity on strategies to include students with cognitive disabilities in the general education classroom, followed by monthly structured collaboration meetings in which the team jointly planned for the students with disabilities. Effectiveness of the project was judged using survey and interview questions derived from Theory of Planned Behavior and the self-efficacy construct from Social-Cognitive theory. The implementation of a team planning protocol increased the team’s collaboration by positively improving communication and connectivity among the team members. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Leadership and Innovation 2016
author2 Shurman, Jo L. (Author)
author_facet Shurman, Jo L. (Author)
title Three’s a Team: Increasing Collaboration Among Instructional Assistants, General, and Special Educators Teaching Students with Disabilities
title_short Three’s a Team: Increasing Collaboration Among Instructional Assistants, General, and Special Educators Teaching Students with Disabilities
title_full Three’s a Team: Increasing Collaboration Among Instructional Assistants, General, and Special Educators Teaching Students with Disabilities
title_fullStr Three’s a Team: Increasing Collaboration Among Instructional Assistants, General, and Special Educators Teaching Students with Disabilities
title_full_unstemmed Three’s a Team: Increasing Collaboration Among Instructional Assistants, General, and Special Educators Teaching Students with Disabilities
title_sort three’s a team: increasing collaboration among instructional assistants, general, and special educators teaching students with disabilities
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38396
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