A practical, applied approach to assessing learners with special needs from early childhood through transition
Assessing Learners with Special Needs: An Applied Approach, 8/e provides readers with a practical, step-by-step approach to learning about the complex procedures of the assessment process. This new edition provides a new presentation format and a new format for assessing student mastery of material through interactive learning activities. The Enhanced Pearson eText features embedded video, assessments, and exercises.
Assessing Learners with Special Needs: An Applied Approach was a textbook that I had to purchase and read for my graduate level course on assessing students with special needs. Did it have new and relevant information on diagnosing and assessing students with disabilities? Yes. Did it summarize, critique, and apply several diagnostic tests to different disabilities? Yes. Did it explain how to implement and asses these diagnostic tests? Yes. Is it dry and hard to get through? Yes. Overtone has a difficult task: take dry material and make it interesting. It's essential knowledge, but you'll need to take this one in small doses.
Read as part of curriculum for Instructional Design course. This book gave me a whole new appreciation for the amount of work Special Education teachers are required to do in order to do their jobs. Will be saving this book when I begin my journey in the classroom.
Not a particularly interesting or enlightening book. I really only have one question, and that is why does practically every chapter have to give us the history of IDEA as it relates to a particular topic. It is as though the author needs to fill a certain number of pages. If you really need to give the history, do it once early on and just get to each topic.
I initially rented this book but am buying it as a comprehensive assessments reference. The writing is very dense but smart. I especially appreciate its detailed explanations of the statistical methology behind the determination of national norms and special ed eligibility which I will use when informing highly educated and skeptical parents about assessment results data. If parents don't trust the data, you can show them the math and break it down for them in a way that demonstrates why the results are reliable and valid.
Some overview on th ethics and procedures of conducting assessments on students for special education eligibility. The most useful part of this book for me was the list and description of different types of normed assessments, to know what is available, and what tool I would need for any occasion.
This is a comprehensive book that deals with assessments of students in special education. I found it very helpful and full of good information for those of us who are special educators.