ABSTRACT

Redesigning Special Education Teacher Preparation describes both challenges and possible solutions to redesigning and restructuring high-incidence teacher preparation programs so graduates will meet the Highly Qualified Teacher requirements and be prepared to teach students with high-incidence disabilities. This powerful new text discusses many possible reforms, including field-based teacher preparation, a focus on evidence-based core practices and teacher moves, collaboration with K–12 school-based partners as teacher educators, interdisciplinary collaboration across university faculty, and a grounding in current expectations for high-stakes accountability and program evaluation.

chapter

Introduction

The Challenges of High-Incidence Teacher Education and the Ways 325T Grantees Have Addressed Them

part I|40 pages

High-Incidence Teacher Education Program Redesign and Restructuring

chapter 1|14 pages

The IRIS center

A Federal Investment to Support and Improve Personnel Development

part II|38 pages

Building the Capacity of School Partners

part III|17 pages

Collaborating with General Education Colleagues

chapter 5|15 pages

Collaboration in teacher training

Hurdles Crossed and Lessons Learned

part IV|37 pages

Creating a Culture of Continuous Improvement

chapter 7|16 pages

Merging disparate paradigms

How Do Evidence-Based Practices Fit with What We Know about How Students Learn Best?

part V|35 pages

Program Evaluation in an Era of High-Stakes Accountability

chapter 8|17 pages

Beyond knowing

Scaffolding Field Experiences to Enhance Candidates' Shift to Independent Identification, Application, and Evaluation of EBPs

chapter 9|16 pages

Special education teacher candidate evaluation

Creating a Pre-service to Master Teacher Observation System

part VI|42 pages

Creating Sustainable Innovation

chapter 10|21 pages

Strengthening university/school district partnerships

Getting Everyone on the Same Page

chapter |8 pages

Conclusion

What Is the Future of High-Incidence Teacher Preparation, and How Can Effective Components of 325T Projects Be Applied to Teacher Education Models?