Literaturnachweis - Detailanzeige
Autor/inn/en | Brolin, Donn E.; und weitere |
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Institution | Missouri Univ., Columbia. Dept. of Counseling and Personnel Services. |
Titel | PRICE Needs Assessment Study. Project PRICE Working Paper No. 7. |
Quelle | (1976), (93 Seiten)
PDF als Volltext |
Dokumenttyp | gedruckt; online; Monographie |
Schlagwörter | Career Education; Daily Living Skills; Elementary Secondary Education; Exceptional Child Research; Inservice Teacher Education; Interpersonal Competence; Mental Retardation; Mild Mental Retardation; Needs Assessment; Personnel Needs; Prevocational Education; Professional Personnel; Questionnaires; Social Development; Staff Utilization; Surveys; Teacher Attitudes; Teacher Role Arbeitslehre; Alltagsfertigkeit; Lehrerfortbildung; Interpersonale Kompetenz; Geistige Behinderung; Bedarfsermittlung; Personnel requirement; Personalbedarf; Enterprise education; Vorberufliche Bildung; Personalbestand; Fragebogen; Soziale Entwicklung; Deployment of labor; Deployment of labour; Personaleinsatz; Survey; Umfrage; Befragung; Lehrerverhalten; Lehrerrolle |
Abstract | A needs assessment study involving 264 school personnel from six Midwestern public school systems (grades 7-12) was undertaken by Project PRICE (Programming Retarded in Career Education) to determine (1) what types of school personnel feel they can work with educable retarded students, (2) what competencies they feel they can help the students acquire, and (3) the inservice training needs and other assistance of such school personnel. Respondents were given two field questionnaires to evaluate the PRICE career education competencies listed, to identify other major competencies important for retarded students to acquire, and to determine which personnel were felt to be most appropriate to teach each of the competency categories. Results led to conclusions such as the following: that career education of retarded students should involve a wide variety of school discipline (all categories of counselors/teachers indicated that their discipline was appropriate for teaching at least some of the 24 competencies), and that occupational guidance and preparation appears to be the most deficient curriculum area. (Appended material includes the questionnaire forms and the study results in tabular form.) (IM) |
Erfasst von | ERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC |