Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-nr4z6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-15T18:30:09.124Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Knowledge and skills for special educators in the 1990s: Perceptions from the field

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2016

Peter Westwood*
Affiliation:
The Flinders University of South Australia
Carolyn Palmer
Affiliation:
The Flinders University of South Australia
*
Peter Westwood is Senior Lecturer and Carolyn Palmer is Lecturer in Special Education at Flinders University of South Australia. The address for correspondence is GPO Box 2100, Adelaide 5001, Australia.

Abstract

Since the early 1970s special education courses at graduate and post-graduate levels have become standard offerings at many Australian universities. As these courses continue to be the main avenue of professional development for special educators in this country, it is pertinent to wonder how often the objectives and content of the courses are examined and revised to ensure contemporary relevance. It must be recognized that the field of special education appears to be in what Tomlinson (1982, p.24) has described as a ‘permanently dynamic state’, with frequent changes in policy, service delivery, roles and responsibilities. The roles and responsibilities of special educators have certainly changed significantly during the past decade (Watts, 1990; Dyson, 1991), and the earlier studies of essential competencies required by special education teachers (e.g. Whitmore,1982; Scott, 1983; Davis, 1983) may not provide reliable data on which to design current courses. There has been renewed interest overseas in the issue of what constitutes essential knowledge and skills for teachers working in special education (Best, 1988; Ramsey & Algozzine, 1991; Ramsey, Algozzine & Smith, 1990; Glomb & Morgan, 1991; Folio, 1990; Cannon, Idol & West, 1992; Reynolds, Wang & Walberg, 1992; Swan & Sirvis, 1992), and it is worth analysing some of this material to determine its relevance for the Australian context. The information could well prove useful as a basis for evaluating special education courses here.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Australian Association of Special Education 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Advisory Council for Special Educational Needs (1990). The Way Ahead: Meeting a wider range of educational needs in regular schools. Implications for preservice teacher education. Spring Hill: Guidance & Counselling Services.Google Scholar
Australian Association of Special Education (1988). Teacher Training: A paper outlining issues and recommendations. Strathfield: NSW Chapter of AASE.Google Scholar
Australian Association of Special Education (1991). Essential skills and competencies to be mastered by graduates from all preservice teacher training courses. Woolloongabba: AASE.Google Scholar
Best, A.B. (1988). Teachers of the visually handicapped: What skills do they need? Journal of Blind Welfare, 72, 15.Google Scholar
Blackbourn, J.M. & Baum, D. (1986). An examination of critical teaching skills present and absent in first-year special education teachers. Paper presented at Mid South Education Research Association Conference, Memphis. (ERIC Document ED 293260).Google Scholar
Butt, N. (1990). A role for special education needs coordinators in the 1990s. Support For Learning, 6, 914.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cannon, G.S., Idol, L. & West, J.F. (1992). Educating students with mild handicaps in general classrooms: Essential teaching practices for general and special educators. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 25, 300317.Google Scholar
Davis, W.E. (1983). Comptencies and skills required to be an effective resource teacher. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 16, 596598.Google Scholar
Dyson, A. (1990). Effective learning consultancy: a future role for special needs coordinators. Support for Learning, 5, 116123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dyson, A. (1991). Rethinking roles, rethinking concepts: Special needs teachers in main stream schools. Support for Learning 6, 5160.Google Scholar
Folio, M.R. (1990). Evaluating preparation programs for special education teachers. In Berney, M.R. & Ayers, J.B. (eds) Evaluating preparation programs for school leaders and teachers in speciality areas. Boston: Kluwer Academic.Google Scholar
Glomb, N.K. & Morgan, D.P. (1991). Resource room teachers’ use of strategies that promote the success of handicapped students in regular classrooms. Journal of Special Education, 25, 221–235.Google Scholar
Nowacek, E.J. McKinney, J.D. & Hallaban, D.P. (1990). Instructional behaviours of more and less effective beginning regular and special educators. Exceptional Children, 57, 140149.Google Scholar
Ramsey, R.S. & Algozzine, B. (1991). Teacher competency testing: What are special education teachers expected to know? Exceptional Children, 57, 339–350.Google Scholar
Ramsey, R.S., Algozzine, B. & Smith, M. (1990). Teacher competency testing: What teachers of students with learning disabilities need to know. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 23, 574578.Google Scholar
Reynolds, M.C., Wang, M.C. & Walberg, H.J. (1992). The knowledge bases for special and general education. Remedial & Special Education, 13, 610, 33.Google Scholar
Scott, P.L. (1983). Have competencies needed by teachers of the hearing impaired changed in twenty-five years? Exceptional Children, 50, 48–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swan, W.W. & Sirvis, B. (1992). The CEC Common core of knowledge and skills essential for all beginning special education teachers. Teaching Exceptional Children, 25, (1) 1620.Google Scholar
Tomlinson, S. (1982). A sociology of special education. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Watts, P. (1990). Changing times: Changing services. Support for Learning, 5, 6–12.Google Scholar
Whitmore, J.R. (1982). The preparation of education professionals for educating exceptional children. Washington DC: American Association of Colleges of Teacher Education. (ERIC Document ED 223 555).Google Scholar