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Article Excerpt "I love to make them laugh because I can see that they are not only enjoying the lessons but also taking a role in them." (Christina Webb, winner of the 2005 Rodel Teacher Initiative, as cited in Young, 2004)
Over the past 20 years, teachers have been under continuous pressure to increase students' academic achievement gains. The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB), the latest effort in the 20+-year-old school reform movement, is a federal mandate that demands in part that school districts implement science-based instructional strategies to ensure that children meet the standards set forth in content curricula. Science-based interventions in the social domain are notably absent.
This omission is unfortunate. Children's social status significantly impacts their participation in the reciprocal teaching-learning process. Many horror stories have detailed the adverse outcomes of ignoring the school's social milieu, from the tragedy at Columbine High School to the many students with learning disabilities who spend their school years depressed and lonely (cf., Margalit & Al-Yagon, 1994). Although schools define their mission and are evaluated based on students' academic achievement, the reality is that the mental and social health of classrooms impacts everyone's learning.
This should not be the case, for multiple reasons. First, a comprehensive systematic body of research, established under the auspices of the Chicago Institute for Children with Learning Disabilities and replicated numerous times, demonstrated that children with learning disabilities are at high risk for experiencing social problems. This research established the need for educators to factor social relationships into curriculum and instruction design. Second, an impressive body of science also has accumulated, demonstrating that effective social interventions combine teaching adaptive social behaviors with effective teaching strategies. This combination produces greater learning gains than effective teaching strategies alone (cf., Borkowski, 1992; Schunk, 1984). First grade-teacher Christina Webb integrated several...
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