High Leverage Practices for Intensive Interventions
High Leverage Practices for Intensive Interventions provides special education teachers with descriptions and practical instructions on how to use High Leverage Practices (HLPs) to improve student outcomes. Since many students with disabilities spend their school day in inclusive general education classrooms, these intensive interventions are often delivered in separate or tier 3 settings to meet the students’ individualized needs. Each chapter focuses on a specific High Leverage Practice with explanations of its purpose and essential components, accompanied by examples for use with small groups of students or the individual student. This accessible and comprehensive guide is key for pre-service teachers in special education programs or those who provide intensive interventions with students.
BOOK INFORMATION
Introduction
Section I: Collaboration High Leverage Practices
1. Collaborate with Professionals to increase Student Success
2. Organize and Facilitate Effective Meetings with Professionals and Families
3. Collaborate with Families to Support Student Learning and Secure Needed Services
Section II: Assessment High Leverage Practices
4. Use Multiple Sources of Information to Develop a Comprehensive Understanding of a Student’s Strengths and Needs
5. Interpret and Communicate Assessment information with Stakeholders to Collaboratively Design and Implement Educational Programs
6. Use Student Assessment Data, Analyze Instructional Practices, and Make Necessary Adjustments that Improve Student Outcomes
Section III: Social/Emotional/Behavioral High Leverage Practices
7. Establish a Consistent, Organized, Respectful Learning Environment
8. Provide Positive and Constructive Feedback to Guide Students’ Learning and Behavior
9. Teach Social Behaviors
10. Conduct Functional Behavioral Assessments to Develop Individual Student Behavior Support Plans
Section IV: Instruction High Leverage Practices
11. Identify and Prioritize Long- and Short-term Learning Goals
12. Systematically Design Instruction Toward a Specific Learning Goal
13. Adapt Curriculum Tasks and Materials for Specific Learning Goals
14. Teach Cognitive and Metacognitive Strategies to Support Learning and Independence
15. Provide Scaffolded Supports
16. Use Explicit Instruction
17. Use Flexible Grouping
18. Use Strategies to Promote Active Student Engagement
19. Use Assistive and Instructional Technologies
20. Provide Intensive Instruction
21. Teach Students to Maintain and Generalize New Learning Across Time and Settings
22. Provide Positive and Constructive Feedback to Guide Students’ Learning and Behavior
23. Learning to Use HLPs for Intensive Interventions: Reflections for Teachers, School Leaders, and Teacher Educators
James McLeskey is Professor in the School of Special Education, School Psychology, and Early Childhood Studies at the University of Florida, and project staff member for the CEEDAR Center.
Lawrence Maheady is Professor and Horace Mann Endowed Chair in the Exceptional Education Department at SUNY Buffalo State.
Bonnie Billingsley is Professor of Teaching and Learning at Virginia Tech. She teaches in both the teacher preparation and doctoral programs at Virginia Tech.
Mary T. Brownell is a Distinguished Professor of Special Education at the University of Florida and Director of the Collaboration for Effective Educator Development, Accountability and Reform (CEEDAR) Center.
Timothy J. Lewis is Curators’ Distinguished Professor of Special Education, Director of the University of Missouri Center for School-wide Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS).
Sheila R. Alber- Morgan is Professor of Special Education at The Ohio State University and a Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA- D). Her research focuses on using behavioral interventions to increase academic performance for individuals with disabilities.