KEY BENEFIT This streamlined text offers the background information needed to understand the importance of inclusion, followed by specific classroom strategies to take directly into an inclusive classroom.
KEY TOPICS Inclusion: Effective Practices for All Students, 3e embraces a real-world approach to creating an inclusive classroom. Broken into three parts, the text covers the values of inclusion, followed by information on meeting the needs of all students, and ending with a bank of research-based step by step instructional methods to take directly into the classroom.
MARKET: For undergraduates and graduates in an Inclusion or Mainstreaming course.
James McLeskey is professor in the School of Special Education, School Psychology, & Early Childhood Studies at the University of Florida. He completed his doctoral work at Georgia State University. Dr. McLeskey is the author or co-author of
Inclusion: Effective Practices for All Students, 3rd Edition (Pearson, 2018)
; Handbook of Effective Inclusive Schools: Research and Practice (Taylor & Francis/Routledge, 2014)
; Special Education for Today's Teachers An Introduction, 2nd Edition (Pearson, 2011);
Reflections on Inclusion: Classic Articles that Shaped our Thinking (CEC, 2007); and
Inclusive Schools in Action: Making Differences Ordinary (ASCD, 2000). He has worked extensively with local schools as they have developed effective, inclusive schools, and has written numerous articles regarding this work. His recent work focuses on preparing teachers to use effective practices, and the role of the principal in developing and supporting effective inclusive schools.
Michael S. Rosenberg is Dean of the School of Education and Professor of Special Education at the State University of New York (SUNY)-New Paltz. He is also Professor Emeritus at Johns Hopkins University where prior to his 2012 appointment at SUNY, Dr. Rosenberg was a Professor and department chair in the Department of Special Education and Associate Dean for Research in the School of Education. Preceding his 26 years at Johns Hopkins, Dr. Rosenberg was an Assistant Professor for 4 years at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana and, for an all too brief semester, a visiting scholar at Westminster College in Oxford, England. Dr. Rosenberg completed his doctoral work at Penn State University, and was a 2008 Fulbright Fellow at Saint Patrick's College in Dublin, Ireland. An author or co-author of five textbooks and numerous articles and chapters, he remains active in research related to teacher preparation policy and practice, as well as comprehensive and culturally responsive behavior management. A former teacher of secondary students with learning and behavioral disabilities, Dr. Rosenberg is active in a number of professional organizations, was the co-editor of
Teacher Education and Special Education from 2009 -2012, and received the 2007 TED/Merrill Teacher of Excellence Award.
David L. Westling joined the faculty at Western Carolina University as the Adelaide Worth Daniels Distinguished Professor of Special Education in 1997. Before arriving at WCU, Dr. Westling was on the faculty in special education at Florida State University. He received the EdD Degree in Special Education from the University of Florida in 1976 with related areas of study in Applied Behavior Analysis and Educational Research. He is the co-author of Teaching Students with Severe Disabilities, Special Education for Today's Teachers: An Introduction, and Inclusion: Effective Practices for All Teachers and has published more than 50 papers in refereed journals in special education. Dr. Westling is past-president of the Board of Directors for TASH, is co-director of the personnel preparation project in severe disabilities at Western Carolina University, and co-director of the Western Carolina University's University Participant Program. Dr. Westling was a Fulbright Research Scholar in Salzburg, Austria in 1994.