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Instructor’s Manual and Test Bank
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For
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Characteristics of Emotional and
Behavioral Disorders of Children and
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Youth
Eleventh Edition
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by
James M. Kauffman, University of Virginia
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And
Timothy J. Landrum, University of Louisville
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Prepared by
Chris A. Sweigart, Ph.D., University of Louisville
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Boston Columbus Indianapolis New York San Francisco Hoboken
Amsterdam Cape Town Dubai London Madrid Milan Munich Paris Montreal Toronto
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Delhi Mexico City Sao Paolo Sydney Hong Kong Seoul Singapore Taipei Tokyo
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, Table of Contents
Preface iv
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PART 1 – Points of Departure
Chapter 1 – Beginning Point: Basic Assumptions 1
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Chapter 2 – What We’re About: The Problem and Its Size 8
Chapter 3 – Where We Started and Where We’re Going: Past, Present, Future 16
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PART 2 – Possible Causes
Chapter 4 – Biology 24
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Chapter 5 – Culture 30
Chapter 6 – Family 36
Chapter 7 – School 44
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PART 3 – Types of Disordered Behaviors
Chapter 8 – Attention and Activity Disorders 51
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Chapter 9 – Conduct Disorder 58
Chapter 10 – Anxiety and Related Disorders 67
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Chapter 11 – Depression and Suicidal Behavior 76
Chapter 12 – Disorders of Thinking, Communicating, and Stereotypical Behavior 83
Chapter 13 – Special Problems of Adolescents
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88
PART 4 – Assessment
Chapter 14 – Measurement Issues, Screening, and Identification 95
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Chapter 15 – Assessment for Instruction 104
Answer Key: True/False and Multiple Choice Questions 111
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, Chapter 1
BEGINNING POINT: BASIC ASSUMPTIONS
Various Ways of Thinking About the Problem and Our Ideas About Good Teaching
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OUTLINE
Learning Outcomes
Thinking About the Problem
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Brief Descriptions of Four Conceptual Models
Biological Model
Psychoeducational Model
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Ecological Model
Behavioral Model
Choosing Models
An Integrated, Social-Cognitive Model
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Good Teaching
Expectations
Causes of Behavior
Definition, Measurement, and Assessment of Behavior
Work, Play, Love, and Fun
Direct, Honest Communication
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Self-Control
Cultural Differences
Instruction: The Business of Special Education
Thoughts about Actual People
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Interrelationships among Causes, Types of Behavior, Assessment, and Intervention
Summary
End-of-Chapter Quiz (eText)
Cases for Discussion
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LEARNING OUTCOMES
1.1 Explain how thinking about behavior problems is linked to intervention strategies.
1.2 Briefly describe the most obvious strengths and weaknesses of four conceptual models:
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biological, psychoeducational, behavioral, and ecological.
1.3 Describe how you would choose a conceptual model.
1.4 Describe the major features of an integrated, social-cognitive model.
1.5 Understand the role of an effective teacher of students with EBD with regard to each of these:
expectations; causes of behavior; definition, measurement, and assessment; work, play, love, and
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fun; direct, honest communication; self-control; cultural differences; instruction; and thoughts
about actual people.
1.6 Explain how causal factors, types of behavior, assessment, and intervention are interrelated in
discussions of EBD.
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TERMINOLOGY
Behavioral model
Biological model
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Conceptual model
Eco-behavioral analysis
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1
Copyright © 2018 Pearson Education Inc. All Rights Reserved.
, Ecological model
Medical model
Personal agency
Psychoeducational model
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Social-cognitive model
Social-cognitive theory
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Copyright © 2018 Pearson Education Inc. All Rights Reserved.