School reform disorder: Alternative audience responses to nonsense |
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Authors: | James M. Kauffman Ed.D. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Curriculum, Instruction, and Special Education, University of Virginia, USA;(2) Curry School of Education, Ruffner Hall, University of Virginia, 405 Emmet Street, 22903 Charlottesville, VA |
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Abstract: | Neither general education nor special education now offers appropriate and therapeutic treatment to all children and youth with emotional or behavioral disorders. Substantial improvements are needed in both general and special education, but the needed changes may not be those suggested by many proponents of school reform. Some suggested reforms are tenuously connected to reality in ways that suggest comedic intent or thought disorder, yet audiences typically respond as if these suggestions were both serious and rational. The disorder of school reform may be as much a problem of inappropriate audience response as it is a matter of nonsensical suggestions. One possible response to serious but highly questionable suggestions for reform is articulation of postulates on which a comprehensive educational service delivery system might be based. I present eight such postulates and correlates.This article is based on a keynote presentation at the First Annual Conference on Multiple Perspectives on Children and Adolescents with Serious Emotional Disturbance, Virginia Beach, VA, October 8, 1991. Portions of the paper are based on Kauffman and Hallahan (in press). |
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Keywords: | school reform service delivery regular education special education |
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