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What are the two types of data required to make judgements about a student?
informal and formal
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What is good about semi structured interviews?
Combine the best features of both structural and unstructured interviews and allow for flexibility and follow-up questions
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What is whole interval recording?
- Behavior is only recorded when it occurs during the entire time interval
- -good for continuous behaviors or behaviors occurring in short duration
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What is frequency or event recording?
Record the number of behaviors that occur during a specific period
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What is duration recording?
the length of time the specific behaviors last
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what is latency recording?
time between onset of stimulus or signal that initiates a specific behavior
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What is time-sampling interval recording?
Select a time period for observation, divide the period into a number of equal intervals, and record whether or not behavior occurs
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What is partial-interval recording?
- behavior is scored if it occurs during any part of the time interval
- -effective when behaviors occur at a relatively low rate or for inconsistent durations
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What is momentary time sampling?
behavior is scored as present or absent only during the moment that a timed interval begins
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What is the first special education law in the united states?
Individuals with Disabilities Educational Improvement Act (IDEA)
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What does the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA)?
Schools must have strict confidential record keeping procedures
to protect confidentiality and allow parents access to educational records
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What does The Rehabilitation Act, Section 504 state?
Section 504 prohibits discrimination against otherwise qualifying individuals on the basis of a handicapping condition in any program receiving federal funding
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What did the Zero Reject Principle do?
Establish Child find
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What does the Brown vs. Board of Ed state?
the educational facilities are not allowed to segregate according to race
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What does the Hobson vs Hansen state?
Schools must provide equal education opportunities despite family's socioeconomic status (SES)
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What does the Diana vs. State Board of Education state?
Assessments must be administered in the native language of the student in order to validate minority testing practices
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What does Larry v. Riles state?
the percentage of minority students placed in special education classrooms could not exceed the percentage in the representative population
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What does Pase vs Hannon state?
endorsed the use of standardized tests as long as the tests are not culturally biased and are used with several other measures
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What does PARCE v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (1972) state?
intellectually disabled children should have access to public education and that due process rights shall be honored and preserved
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What did Marshall vs. Georgia state?
percentage of minorities placed in special education can exceed the percentage in the representative population as long as the appropriate and proper steps for placement were followed
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What did Honig v. Doe state?
Special education students must have a manifestation hearing to review placement if they are suspended for more than 10 days
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What did Oberti vs. Cementon state?
the rights of a special needs student to be included in regular education classes and activities: Least restrictive Environment
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What did Rowley v Hudson Board of Ed (1982) state?
Public schools do not have to provide the best education, but rather an adequate education
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What did Lau v. Nichols state?
schools must provide accommodations for English as a second language students
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What did Tatro v. Irving Independent school district state?
schools must provide medical services that do not require a medical doctor to perform such medical services, even if the child needs full time attention from a nurse
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Who is William Wundt?
Founding father of psychology
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Who is Lightner Witmer?
Father of school psychology
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Who is Arnold Gesell?
First school psychologist and first to develop tests that measured development in children
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What did Arnold Gesell believe?
development in children was a parallel and orderly process
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Who was B.F. Skinner and what did he believe?
- Major contributor to the field of behaviorism
- - believed all behavior was shaped and maintained by consequences that followed behavior
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What did Albert Bandura believe?
cognition helped drive behavior
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Who was Alfred Binet?
one of the first scientists to measure the construct of intelligence and its relation to the normal curve
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What is the parietal lobe responsible for?
helps to assimilate body sensations
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What is the temporal lobe responsible for?
primary processes in auditory information, memory is associated with this lobe
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Hippocampus is responsible for what?
forming memories
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The Broca's area and Wernickes's area are implicated in what type of problems?
language problems and reading difficulties
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What is dopamine?
Neurotransmitter involved in producing positive emotions and mood
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What are endorphins?
natural opiate similar to morphine that are released to moderate pain
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What is serotonin?
- assocaited with relaxation, sleep, and mood
- - imbalance can cause depression
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What is glutamate?
- significant excitatory neurotransmitter that is released by nerve cells in the brain
- responsible for sending signals between neurons
- plays an important role in learning and memory
- one of the most prevalent neurotransmitters in the brain
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What are Piaget's 4 stages of development?
- 1. Sensorimotor
- 2. Preoperational
- 3. Concrete Operational
- 4. Formal Operational
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What is the age range of sensorimotor stage and what does it involve?
0-2 years old
- involves motor actions and senses
- Children come to realize that objects exist separately from them and they can manipulate objects
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What is the age range of preoperational stage and what does it involve?
- 2-7 years
- symbolic functions emerges
- Children develop the ability to make something stand for something else
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What is the age range of concrete operational stage and what does it involve?
- 7-11 years
- Children begin to think about more than just one dimension of a problem or situation
- They gain the understanding of conservation also the ability to think deep and logically
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What is the age range of formal operational?
- 11+ years
- Complex abstract thought emerges and hypothetical and deductive reasoning develops
- Children perform mental operations on ideas or imagined situations
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What are Erik Erikson's stages of development stages?
- 1. Trust vs. Mistrust
- 2. Autonomy vs. shame and doubt
- 3. Initiative vs. Guilt
- 4. Industry vs. Inferiority
- 5. Identity vs. Role Confusion
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What is the age range of the trust vs mistrust stage and what does it involve?
- 0-18 months
- attachment to caregiver at this stage
- child must develop sufficient trust with the caregiver in order to explore the world
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What is the age range of the autonomy vs shame and doubt phase and what does it involve?
- 18 months to 3 years
- children start to develop a sense of confidence in their abilities to explore and do things for themselves
- begin to understand that they control their behaviors
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What is the age range for the initiative vs guilt stage and what does it involve?
- 3-5 years
- children move from simple self-control, as in the previous stage, to taking initiative in play and in various tasks.
- Imaginary play and choosing activities illustrate this stage
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What is the age range for the Industry vs Inferiority stage and what does it involve?
- 6-12 years old
- success or failure in school has lasting effects on self efficacy and sense of adequacy.
- Children learn a sense of industry if they are recognized in various activities
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What is the age range for the Identity vs role confusion stage and what does it involve?
- 13-18 years
- people develop a sense of identity, sense of self, and strong ego during this time
- Peers, role models, and social pressures are factors associated with this stage
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What is Bandura's social learning theory/ social cognitive theory?
- children's ability to learn vicariously
- Children learn by their social interactions
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What are the two points of social learning theory?
- 1. Humans learn not only through reward and punishment conditioning, but also by observing and imitating others "Bobo doll study"
- 2. Children imitate the behaviors of others and select specific behaviors to imitate based on how they processed the information they observed
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What are Kohlberg's three stages of moral development?
- 1. Preconventional
- 2. Conventional
- 3. Postconventional
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What happens in the Precoventional stage?
Behavior is based on the desire to avoid punishment and gain rewards
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What happens in the Conventional stage?
- Behavior is designed to acquire the approval of others to maintain social relations
- Children will conform to what parents say is right or wrong solely based on conforming to the rules
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What happens in the Postconventional stage?
Judgements about right and wrong are logical and behavior is controlled by an internalized ethical code that is relatively independent of the approval or disapproval of others
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