Abstract

Learning center models offer students with disabilities learning experiences in general education classrooms, while retaining support and services from special education personnel. The learning center approach examines existing educational perspectives, practices and structures, surrounding access to general education for students with disabilities. This study used a document analysis, a qualitative data method, to examine how two California school districts developed a learning center model to transform special education programming from segregated special education classrooms and practices to placement and access to general education. The findings inform educational programming for students with disabilities in the least restrictive environment, to comply with the American federal mandate. Findings suggest that the deep structure of educational practices complicated the ease of a change in practices for both general and special educators. However, the community approach of the learning center model, where all teachers assume the educational responsibilities for all students, forced these educators to be flexible, reexamine structures and practices, and challenge the ethos of traditional schooling.

Highlights

  • With decades of research demonstrating the benefits of inclusive education (Allen & Slee, 2008; Causton-Theoharis, Theoharis, Cosier, & Orsati, 2011; Cosier & Ashby, 2016; Danforth, 2014; Daniel & King, 1997; Mastropieri et al, 1998; Waldron & McLeskey, 1998), our current educational system continues to foster the practice of segregation based on disability

  • The purpose of this study was to examine how two California school districts moved from self-contained special education programming models to an learning center models (LCMs) approach, resulting in an exponential increase of access to general education for students with disabilities (SWD)

  • Results of this study suggest that the LCM did have an effect on teachers’ pedagogical practices and their perceptions on teaching SWD

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Summary

Introduction

With decades of research demonstrating the benefits of inclusive education (Allen & Slee, 2008; Causton-Theoharis, Theoharis, Cosier, & Orsati, 2011; Cosier & Ashby, 2016; Danforth, 2014; Daniel & King, 1997; Mastropieri et al, 1998; Waldron & McLeskey, 1998), our current educational system continues to foster the practice of segregation based on disability. Educational practices tend to focus on the medical model of disability (Valle & Connor, 2011), which concentrates on the impairment and deficits of an individual in an effort to develop an educational plan that will remediate these deficits or normalize the individual as much as possible. These practices have created further segregation for students with disabilities (SWD), those with significant disabilities, at alarming rates (Cosier, Cardinal, & Gomez, 2018). This study seeks to examine the development of these LCMs which lends to in inclusive education for SWD within the two districts

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