National Dissemination Center for Children with Disabilities

NICHCY Connections...
to What Works: Can We Say?

Table of Contents
  • First Toe in the Water
  • Improving School Systems
  • Preparing & Keeping Good Teachers
  • Helping Young Children
  • Teaching Reading
  • Providing School Services
  • Transitioning to Adulthood
  • Launched September 29, 2004
    Updated December 5, 2007

    Approx. 12 pages when printed

    Authors
    Dr. Barbara Smith
    Research Analyst, NICHCY

    Lisa Küpper
    Director of Publications, NICHCY

    What works? What Works. We hear those words a lot these days, sometimes as a statement, sometimes as a question. Millions of dollars have been expended trying to determine what's effective in...you name it---teaching children, teaching children with disabilities, teaching math and every other subject in school, training teachers, hiring teachers and keeping them, administering sound educational programs, keeping our children from dropping out of school, graduating them with solid skills...and on and on. Educating children is a complex business, and every facet of it contributes to (or can detract from!) the functioning of the whole. So--what have we found out? What can we say after all the research we've conducted, all the journals that tell what's been discovered, all the experience we combine? Do we know what's effective, what works in building educational systems and practices that will serve our children?

    This NICHCY Connections page takes a look at an array of topics in education and the research we have on each. We've focused primarily on published meta-analyses and syntheses that add up the evidence to date on effective practice in each area. A caution is in order, though, before we launch into the list of resources. We are in the process of reviewing these resources for the soundness of their methodological approach to synthesizing the evidence from individual studies. A meta-analysis can be well-done---or not. Or, as with most things, somewhere in between. It's important to recognize that research isn't something you can take off a shelf and apply wholesale to your circumstances. There are many factors to consider before deciding that a specific research approach matches your situation, your students or teachers, your socio-economic setting, your local needs. If you're unsure what we mean, then you may wish to take a look at our Special Education Research: Where to Start? It'll connect you with basic intros to research, perspectives on how to use it locally, things to be cautious about, and places to visit online that offer beginning connections to special education research.

    Why, you might ask, are we telling you about research that may or may not represent the state of the art? Because what's in the list below represents what's available for all of us to pull from as we work to improve our educational systems and children's outcomes. And while we put these resources through an internal system of extensive review and scrutiny, children are in school, growing older, teachers are leaving the profession, educational agencies can't find and keep sufficient related services personnel to address the needs of students, and states struggle with accountability, reform, teacher training, and budgetary limits. The time is now, and what information we do have is what we have to work with.

    As we review these resources, we will add information here to tell you what we find. And we'll be adding to this page, as research penetrates ever more deeply into the educational world and more syntheses and meta-analyses emerge to guide our decision making and practice. So please do check back occasionally to see what's new!

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    First Toe in the Water

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    Improving School Systems
    Are you an administrator, school leader, department chair, superintendent, policy maker---or just a concerned stakeholder? If administrative matters concern you, look here for guidance and published research that may help address issues in your neck of the woods.


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    Preparing & Keeping Good Teachers
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    Teaching Reading
    There's an extraordinary amount of information available on effective practice for teaching reading. If this is a topic of interest to you, we've organized the research and resources into a NICHCY Connections to...Literacy Resources, which will connect you to research-based information on:

    Rather than repeat all that info here, we refer you to this separate A-Z page, at: www.nichcy.org/resources/literacy2.asp

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    Providing School Services arrow pointing up Back to top

    Transitioning to Adulthood
    Research Basics
    It's important to know a bit (well, a lot!) about research, if you're going to read it and apply it to your local circumstances. We've been steadily building a collection of research pages to help our visitors do just that. So to lay the groundwork before plunging into unexpectedly deep water, you might want to start with these basic NICHCY Connections pages:

    This information is copyright free.
    Readers are encouraged to copy and share it, but please credit the National Dissemination Center for Children with Disabilities (NICHCY).
    NICHCY Connections pages are published in response to questions from individuals and organizations that contact us. We encourage you to share your ideas and feedback with us!
    Project Director: Suzanne Ripley
    Editor: Lisa Küpper, Director of Publications, NICHCY
    Authors: Barbara Smith & Lisa Küpper, NICHCY
    Update: Kyrie Dragoo, Research Analyst/Program Officer, NICHCY

    NICHCY thanks our Project Officer, Dr. Judy Shanley, at the Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP), U.S. Department of Education.

    Publication of this Web resource page is made possible through Cooperative Agreement #H326N030003 between the Academy for Educational Development and the Office of Special Education Programs of the U.S. Department of Education. The contents of this document do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Department of Education, nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.


     

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    NICHCY
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    Washington, DC 20013
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