Abstract
The purpose of the multi-year study discussed in this article was to investigate the impact of preservice educator participation in a community-based service-learning program for children with disabilities. Pre-service educators who were enrolled in either an adapted physical education or introduction to special education course participated in the Children’s Adaptive Physical Education Society!, a skill-development program for 35 children (ages 5-12) with developmental disabilities. Two measures—a modified regular education initiative survey and a reflective blog assignment—were administered to the participants to identify changes in their beliefs and attitudes toward teaching and including children with disabilities in their future classrooms. The results revealed statistically significant gains in their understanding, confidence, willingness, skill set, and educational satisfaction. Responses in the reflective blogs further supported the statistical findings, suggesting that a community-based learning program provides pre-service educators with sufficient experiences to positively and effectively change their beliefs and attitudes toward teaching and including children with disabilities in their future classrooms.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Zagrodnik, J., Williams, N. A., & Leytham, P. A. (2017). Pre-Service Educator Preparation to Teach Children with Disabilities Through Service-Learning. International Journal of Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.37333/001c.29772
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