An Exploratory Study of Self-Directed Science Concept Learning by Students With Moderate Intellectual Disabilities

被引:22
|
作者
Jimenez, Bree A. [1 ]
Browder, Diane M.
Courtade, Ginevra R. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ N Carolina, Dept Special Educ & Child Dev, Charlotte, NC 28223 USA
[2] Univ Louisville, Louisville, KY 40292 USA
关键词
severe intellectual disability; inquiry science; general curriculum access; HIGH-SCHOOL-STUDENTS; MENTAL-RETARDATION; SIGHT WORDS; SKILLS; MODEL;
D O I
10.2511/rpsd.34.2.33
中图分类号
G76 [特殊教育];
学科分类号
040109 ;
摘要
This investigation focused on the effects of a treatment package including multiple exemplar training, time delay, and a self-directed learning prompt (KWHL, chart) on students ability to complete an inquiry lesson independently and generalize to untrained materials Three middle school students with moderate intellectual disabilities learned to self-direct themselves through a 15-step task analysis to complete inquiry lessons in chemistry and physical science. All three students achieved mastery across materials, science concepts, and instructional settings, but unanticipated generalization weakened the demonstration of experimental control. The results provide a potential method for students with moderate intellectual disabilities to learn science concepts.
引用
收藏
页码:33 / 46
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Using Self-Directed Video Prompting to Teach Students with Intellectual Disabilities
    Cannella-Malone H.I.
    Brooks D.G.
    Tullis C.A.
    Journal of Behavioral Education, 2013, 22 (3) : 169 - 189
  • [2] The Effects of Self-Directed Video Prompting With Two Students With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
    Daniel Payne
    Helen I. Cannella-Malone
    Christopher A. Tullis
    Linsey M. Sabielny
    Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities, 2012, 24 : 617 - 634
  • [3] The Effects of Self-Directed Video Prompting With Two Students With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
    Payne, Daniel
    Cannella-Malone, Helen I.
    Tullis, Christopher A.
    Sabielny, Linsey M.
    JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL AND PHYSICAL DISABILITIES, 2012, 24 (06) : 617 - 634
  • [4] Self-directed learning of child-care skills by parents with intellectual disabilities
    Feldman, MA
    INFANTS AND YOUNG CHILDREN, 2004, 17 (01) : 17 - 31
  • [5] Development of Self-directed Learning Concept
    Strods, Gunars
    SOCIETY, INTEGRATION, EDUCATION, VOL I, 2011, : 288 - 298
  • [6] Comparing self-directed video prompting to least-to-most prompting in post-secondary students with moderate intellectual disabilities
    Cannella-Malone, Helen I.
    Chan, Jeffrey M.
    Jimenez, Eliseo D.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES, 2017, 63 (04) : 211 - 220
  • [7] Using weblogs to promote self-directed learning in elementary students' independent science study
    Lan, Yu-Ju
    Sung, Yao-Ting
    Chang, Kuo-En
    8TH IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCED LEARNING TECHNOLOGIES, PROCEEDINGS, 2008, : 1085 - 1086
  • [8] SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING FOR MILITARY STUDENTS
    Eftimescu, Gabriela
    Lungu, Delia
    15TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE THE KNOWLEDGE-BASED ORGANIZATION: BEHAVIORAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCES, CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS 4, 2009, 4 : 294 - 298
  • [9] READY OR NOT: STUDENTS WITH SELF-DIRECTED LEARNING?
    Osman, M. H.
    JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2015, 10 : 84 - 90
  • [10] Computer science and engineering students' self-directed learning strategies and satisfaction with online learning
    Zhu, Meina
    Berri, Sarah
    Huang, Yaoxian
    Masoud, Sara
    COMPUTERS AND EDUCATION OPEN, 2024, 6