Chapter 1 Evidence-Based Practices in Learning and Behavioral Disabilities: The Search for Effective Instruction
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Published:2013
Bryan G. Cook, Melody Tankersley, Timothy J. Landrum, 2013. "Chapter 1 Evidence-Based Practices in Learning and Behavioral Disabilities: The Search for Effective Instruction", Evidence-Based Practices, Bryan G. Cook, Melody Tankersley, Timothy J. Landrum
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The gap between research and practice in special education places an artificial ceiling on the achievement of students with learning and behavioral disabilities. Evidence-based practices (EBPs) are instructional practices shown by bodies of sound research to be generally effective. They represent a possible means to address the research-to-practice gap by identifying, and subsequently implementing, the most effective instructional practices on the basis of reliable, scientific research. In this chapter, we provide a context for the subsequent chapters in this volume by (a) defining and describing EBPs, (b) recognizing some of important limitations to EBPs, (c) introducing a number of ongoing issues related to EBPs in the field of learning and behavioral disabilities that are addressed by chapter authors in this volume, and (d) briefly considering a few emerging issues related to EBPs that we believe will become increasingly prominent in the near future.
