학술논문

Ecobehavioral Analysis of the Experiences of Students With Complex Support Needs in Different Classroom Types.
Document Type
Article
Source
Research & Practice for Persons with Severe Disabilities. Dec2022, Vol. 47 Issue 4, p209-228. 20p.
Subject
*SCHOOL environment
*EDUCATION
*TEACHING methods
*SOCIAL support
*DISTRACTION
*COLLEGE teacher attitudes
*ECOLOGY
*PEER relations
*STUDENTS with disabilities
*INTERNSHIP programs
*PSYCHOSOCIAL factors
*STUDENT attitudes
*EDUCATIONAL outcomes
Language
ISSN
1540-7969
Abstract
Students with complex support needs frequently experience restrictive educational placements such as self-contained and separate school classrooms. Given the need to support students with complex support needs to experience positive outcomes and make progress in the general education curriculum, there is a need to investigate the characteristics of the classroom contexts in which they are learning. The purpose of this study was to use ecobehavioral assessment observation methods to investigate how student behaviors, educator behaviors, and classroom ecology vary across general education, resource, self-contained, and separate school classrooms. We observed 116 students with complex support needs across the United States, and results indicated that contextual features of resource, self-contained, and separate school classrooms do not offer superior levels of instruction or supports for students with complex support needs as compared with general education classrooms. We were more likely to observe no one interacting with the focus student, no instruction, and the presence of distractions in self-contained and separate school classrooms compared with general education classrooms. Implications for policy, research, and practice are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]