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ISBN# 1-59385-303-3
Handbook of Learning Disabilities

Publication Date: 2006
Edited by H. Lee Swanson,
Karen R. Harris,
Steve Graham
 

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Paperback, 587pp

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About the Author

H. Lee Swanson, PhD, is Distinguished Professor and holds an endowed chair at the University of California, Riverside. He did his doctoral studies at the University of New Mexico and his postdoctoral work at University of California, Los Angeles. Dr. Swanson was recently awarded a large U.S. Department of Education grant, which provides support for a longitudinal study of working memory in children with and without math disabilities. He served as Editor of Learning Disability Quarterly for 10 years, and has also published over 200 articles, 13 books, and 30 chapters.

Karen R. Harris, EdD, is Currey Ingram Professor of Special Education and Literacy at Vanderbilt University. She has taught kindergarten and fourth-grade students, as well as elementary and secondary students with ADHD, learning disabilities, and behavioral/emotional difficulties. Dr. Harris's research focuses on theoretical and intervention issues in the development of academic and self-regulation strategies among students with ADHD, learning disabilities, and other challenges. Author of over 100 scholarly publications, she is Editor of the Journal of Educational Psychology. She is past president of the Division for Research of the Council for Exceptional Children.

Steve Graham, EdD, is Currey Ingram Professor of Special Education and Literacy at Vanderbilt University. Previously, he was Professor of Special Education at the University of Maryland, College Park. He received his doctoral degree from the University of Kansas. Following the completion of his doctorate, he was a member of the special education faculties at Auburn University and Purdue University. Dr. Graham's research has focused primarily on identifying the factors that contribute to the development of writing difficulties; the development and validation of effective procedures for teaching planning, revising, and the mechanics of writing to struggling writers; and the use of technology to enhance writing performance and development. One outcome of this focus has been the development of an instructional approach in writing, known as Self-Regulated Strategy Development (SRSD), which provides a powerful way to assist students in the development of higher-level cognitive processes involved in written language, the capability to monitor and manage their own writing, and positive attitudes about writing and themselves as writers. Dr. Graham is the author of more than 150 scholarly publications and coauthor of several books.

Summary

This comprehensive handbook reviews the major theoretical, methodological, and instructional advances that have occurred in the field of learning disabilities over the last 20 years. With contributions from leading researchers, the volume synthesizes a vast body of knowledge on the nature of learning disabilities, their relationship to basic psychological and brain processes, and how students with these difficulties can best be identified and treated. Findings are reviewed on ways to support student performance in specific skill areas--including language arts, math, science, and social studies--as well as general principles of effective instruction that cut across academic domains. Authoritative and up to date, the book also examines the concepts and methods that guide learning disability research and identifies promising directions for future investigation.

Reviews

A Choice Outstanding Academic Title

"...this is an invaluable book summarizing many key research programs related to LD."
-Contemporary Psychology (Barbara Riddick in Volume 49, Number 6, 2004)

"...an excellent reference for researchers or practitioners interested in a sophisticated introduction to learning disabilities....Most of the authors in the text rely on the positivistic research tradition and employ methods such as meta-analysis to summarize and draw conclusions from large bodies of research. These reviews highlight the movement of the field toward methodological rigor. The inclusion of qualitative research in several chapters builds a richness of perspectives. Swanson, Harris, and Graham accomplish an impressive feat with their handbook. They compile chapters by the most preeminent scholars in the field to create a text that is both comprehensive and accessible."
-Education Libraries (Sara Goldberg-Hamblin in Volume 27, Number 1, Summer 2004)

"A valuable resource for professionals....The critical analysis of the research, the synthesis of what is known, and the evaluation of what we still need to know make this a publication that will influence learning disability research, policy, and practice for years to come."
-Dave L. Edyburn, PhD, Department of Exceptional Education, School of Education, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

"There are several handbook-type volumes on learning disabilities on the market, but none matches this volume for comprehensiveness....The volume's coverage of instructional issues makes it an incredibly useful text for practitioner-oriented courses. At the same time, sections on foundations, causes, and methodology make this 'must' reading for researchers as well. Swanson et al. have done a great service to the field."
-Keith E. Stanovich, PhD, Department of Human Development and Applied Psychology, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto, Canada

"More than a typical handbook, this volume is a virtual self-contained reference library for even the most erudite researcher or practitioner interested in learning differences and difficulties....A masterpiece."
-Edward J. Kame'enui, PhD, Institute for the Development of Educational Achievement, College of Education, University of Oregon

"The chapters in this volume offer an authoritative summary and analysis of core issues related to theory and practice in the LD field. The book should be required reading for all advanced students in the field. It is an indispensable graduate text and resource for scholars."
-C. Addison Stone, PhD, School of Education, University of Michigan

Contents

  1. Foundations and Current Perspectives
    1. Overview of Foundations, Causes, Instruction, and Methodology in the Field of Learning Disabilities, Swanson, Harris, and Graham
    2. A Brief History of the Field of Learning Disabilities, Hallahan and Mock
    3. Classification and Definition of Learning Disabilities: An Integrative Perspective, Fletcher, Morris, and Lyon
    4. Learning Disabilities and the Law, Herr and Bateman
    5. Learning Disability as a Discipline, Kavale and Forness
    6. English-Language Learners with Learning Disabilities, Gersten and Baker
    7. Searching for the Most Effective Service Delivery Model for Students with Learning Disabilities, Zigmond
  2. Causes and Behavioral Manifestations
    1. Attention: Relationships between Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Learning Disabilities, Cutting and Denckla
    2. RAN's Contribution to Understanding Reading Disabilities, Bowers and Ishaik
    3. Basic Cognitive Processes and Reading Disabilities, Siegel
    4. Memory Difficulties in Children and Adults with Learning Disabilities, Swanson and Sáez
    5. Learning Disabilities in Arithmetic: Problem-Solving Differences and Cognitive Deficits, Geary
    6. Language Processes: Keys to Reading Disability, Mann
    7. Self-Concept and Students with Learning Disabilities, Elbaum and Vaughn
    8. Neurological Correlates of Reading Disabilities, Miller, Sanchez, and Hynd
    9. Genetic Influences on Reading and Writing Disabilities, Thomson and Raskind
  3. Effective Instruction
    1. Effective Remediation of Word Identification and Decoding Difficulties in School-Age Children with Reading Disabilities, Lovett, Barron, and Benson
    2. Teaching Text Structure to Improve Reading Comprehension, Williams
    3. Enhancing the Mathematical Problem Solving of Students with Mathematics Disabilities, L. S. Fuchs and D. Fuchs
    4. Students with Learning Disabilities and the Process of Writing: A Meta-Analysis of SRSD Studies, Graham and Harris
    5. Preventing Written Expression Disabilities through Early and Continuing Assessment and Intervention for Handwriting and/or Spelling Problems: Research into Practice, Berninger and Amtmann
    6. Science and Social Studies, Scruggs and Mastropieri
  4. Formation of Instructional Models
    1. Cognitive Strategies Instruction Research in Learning Disabilities, Wong, Harris, Graham, and Butler
    2. Direct Instruction, Adams and Carnine
    3. Cooperative Learning for Students with Learning Disabilities: Evidence from Experiments, Observations, and Interviews, Jenkins and O'Connor
    4. Identifying Children at Risk for Reading Failure: Curriculum-Based Measurement and the Dual-Discrepancy Approach, D. Fuchs, L. S. Fuchs, McMaster, and Al Otaiba
    5. The Sociocultural Model in Special Education Interventions: Apprenticing Students in Higher-Order Thinking, Englert and Mariage
  5. Methodology
    1. Exploratory and Confirmatory Methods in Learning Disabilities Research, Abbott, Amtmann, and Munson
    2. Designs for Applied Educational Research, Schumaker and Deshler
    3. The Methods of Cluster Analysis and the Study of Learning Disabilities, Speece
    4. Neurobiological Indices of Dyslexia, S. E. Shaywitz and B. A. Shaywitz
    5. What Have We Learned about Learning Disabilities from Qualitative Research?: A Review of Studies, MacArthur