ADHD How Has Inclusion And Mainstreaming Worked In Vocational Schools Term Paper

PAGES
6
WORDS
2082
Cite

(Lemaire, Mallik & Stoll, 2002, p.39) in vocational training, under the shop/shop models people with disabilities, including those with ADHD are given a bridge opportunity to transition into a workplace setting through the guidance of a program that mimics work and has many of the same expectations, but that does not place them at risk fro the common occurrence of repeated failures, resulting in a resume that marks them as unreliable to future employers. They are offered the opportunity to learn a real world skill, of their interest while being supported through personal growth that will allow them to function appropriately in a work setting. Success with future employers is the key to transitioning any student from school to work, and post-secondary academic instruction does not always successfully do so. A class size of sometimes hundreds of students in a lecture hall does not offer the instructor any real time to address special needs and though students with disabilities such as ADHD who have transitioned through vocational education may have success in this setting in the future the idea of offering such students a transitional position in a shop/shop environment seems one that should answer for many future successes in the workplace. Giving students the opportunity to evaluate opportunities through such an environment can be essential to future success because it can potentially give them a sense of accomplishment and specialized care and attention that build confidence for future endeavors, be they academic or work related. The kinds of issues associated with instructor training in a shop/shop environment, should be minimal, as student load is often lesser in such an environment and most instructors demonstrate through experience the ability to deal with individual issues through smaller class size and demonstrative goals for students, that they are clearly...

...

Additionally, like the workplace, only more so, the instructor is aware, through experience, that individuals learn different things at different times and do not always expect everyone to work on the same timeline for goal success. Additional training about the particulars of ADHD should be done so instructors are aware of the individual needs of the student with such a disorder and can more easily apply such knowledge in the shop/shop environment.

Sources Used in Documents:

References

Halpern, a.S., Yovanoff, P., Doren, B., & Benz, M.R. (1995). Predicting Participation in Postsecondary Education for School Leavers with Disabilities. Exceptional Children, 62(2), 151.

Lemaire, G.S., Mallik, K., & Stoll, B.G. (2002). Expanding Horizons: A Model Academic and Vocational Training Program for Out-of-School Youth with Disabilities. The Journal of Rehabilitation, 68(2), 39.

Neven, R.S., Godber, T., & Anderson, V. (2002). Rethinking Adhd: Integrated Approaches to Helping Children at Home and at School. Crows Nest, N.S.W.: Allen & Unwin.

Proctor, T.J., & Baker, B.R. (1995). Inclusion: One Way a Professional Development School Can Make a Difference. Childhood Education, 71(4), 224.


Cite this Document:

"ADHD How Has Inclusion And Mainstreaming Worked In Vocational Schools" (2007, March 17) Retrieved April 25, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/adhd-how-has-inclusion-mainstreaming-worked-39278

"ADHD How Has Inclusion And Mainstreaming Worked In Vocational Schools" 17 March 2007. Web.25 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/adhd-how-has-inclusion-mainstreaming-worked-39278>

"ADHD How Has Inclusion And Mainstreaming Worked In Vocational Schools", 17 March 2007, Accessed.25 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/adhd-how-has-inclusion-mainstreaming-worked-39278

Related Documents

The shift toward standardized testing has failed to result in a meaningful reduction of high school dropout rates, and students with disabilities continue to be marginalized by the culture of testing in public education (Dynarski et al., 2008). With that said, the needs of students with specific educational challenges are diverse and complex, and the solutions to their needs are not revealed in the results of standardized testing (Crawford &

Adolescent Substance Use Screening Instruments: 10-Year Critical Review of the Research Literature Over ten million teenagers in the United States admit in a national survey that they drink alcohol, although it is illegal under the age of 21 in all states. In some studies, nearly one-quarter of school-age children both smoked cigarettes and drank alcohol. Over four thousand adolescents every day try marijuana for the first time. The dangers of use,

Pedagogic Model for Teaching of Technology to Special Education Students Almost thirty years ago, the American federal government passed an act mandating the availability of a free and appropriate public education for all handicapped children. In 1990, this act was updated and reformed as the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, which itself was reformed in 1997. At each step, the goal was to make education more equitable and more accessible to

(1999) which are: 1) Those with serious mental illnesses such as schizophrenia, bi-polar disorder with major depression and who use alcohol and drugs to self-mediate to cope with the symptoms; and 2) Those with borderline personality and anti-social personality disorders including anxiety disorder that is complicated by use of alcohol and illicit drugs. (Mather et al. 1999) Presenting further difficulty is the establishment of problems with alcohol and illicit drug use