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Insight into teacher work of Japanese special education classroom teachers: How they collaborate and how they apply lesson study to special education

Yoriko Kikkawa-2011-01-01-Griffith Research Online (Griffith University, Queensland, Australia)

TL;DRAbstract

Recent international study of teacher work has highlighted its complex nature and its shared ecological demands for classroom instruction. In Japan and Australia, special educators have worked with groups of students including those with autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) and with groups of teachers. It has appeared that, despite considerable ecological similarity in the practices of special educators, different approaches have shaped their work with groups in both countries. The most scientifically proven category of practices for teaching students with ASD has been the skill based practices associated with applied behaviour analysis, which have shaped classroom instruction of Australian special educators. In contrast, an interpersonal category of teacher practice for students with ASD has involved a longer-term naturalistic process of interaction and instruction, harder to quantify and presently classified as having an insufficient evidence base. Japanese teachers' classroom instructio

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Recent international study of teacher work has highlighted its complex nature and its shared ecological demands for classroom instruction. In Japan and Australia, special educators have worked with groups of students including those with autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) and with groups of teachers. It has appeared that, despite considerable ecological similarity in the practices of special educators, different approaches have shaped their work with groups in both countries. The most scientifically proven category of practices for teaching students with ASD has been the skill based practices associated with applied behaviour analysis, which have shaped classroom instruction of Australian special educators. In contrast, an interpersonal category of teacher practice for students with ASD has involved a longer-term naturalistic process of interaction and instruction, harder to quantify and presently classified as having an insufficient evidence base. Japanese teachers' classroom instructio

Keywords

PsychologyInterpersonal communicationNaturalistic observationPedagogyMathematics educationSpecial educationMeaning (existential)Group work

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