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Deaf Education in America Voices of Children from Inclusion Settings Janet Cerney Dickinson
Deaf Education in America: Voices of Children from Inclusion Settings provides a detailed examination of the complex issues surrounding the integration of deaf students into the general classroom. Author Janet Cerney Dickinson begins her comprehensive work by stressing to parents, educators, and policymakers the importance of learning the circumstances in which mainstreaming and inclusion can be successful for deaf students. This process requires stakeholders to identify and evaluate the perceived benefits and risks before making placement and implementation decisions. The influences of the quality of communication and the relationships built by and with the students are of paramount importance in leading to success. In conjunction with these principles, this thorough study examines the theory and history behind inclusion, such as the effects of the No Child Left Behind education act. Dickinson incorporates this knowledge with interviews of the deaf students themselves as well as with their interpreters and teachers. To ensure complete candidness, the students were surveyed in their homes, and the interpreters and educators were questioned separately. Through these exchanges, Dickinson could determine what worked well for the deaf students, what barriers interfered with their access to communication, and what support structures were needed to eliminate those barriers. As a result, Deaf Education in America offers concrete information on steps that can be taken to ensure success in an inclusion setting, results that reverberate through the voices of the deaf students. Janet Cerney Dickinson is superintendent of the New York School for the Deaf. Print Edition: ISBN 978-1-56368-362-6, 6 x 9 casebound, 232 pages, tables, interviews, references, index $49.95s E-Book: ISBN 978-1-56368-401-2 $49.95 To order by mail, print our Order Form or call:TEL 1-800-621-2736; (773) 568-1550 8 am - 5 pm CST |