Western Oregon University

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    4368 research outputs found

    Reforming Juvenile Justice Requires Innovating Equity in Education

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    As many as 85 percent of students in juvenile justice are said to have some type of learning disability (National Council on Disability, 2015). A root cause analysis of indicators across societal systems reveals a pattern or chain of events which lead to this contemptible outcome. A contemptible outcome that represents the detriment of millions of children and families used to feed a cycle that erode the emotional and mental wellbeing not only of individuals, but the societies in which they live; not only erodes emotional and mental wellbeing but stands as a hallmark for the devaluing of human life. A contemptible outcome that must be interrupted. Research and best practices are available to disrupt this alarming statistic and with it reduce the number of students ever becoming systems-involved with juvenile justice. Using a synthesis of research and review of best practices, this article identifies problems, offers insights and strategies for intervention, revealing a solution that could put an end to the school-to-prison pipeline

    Using Multisensory Components to Teach Letter and Sound Knowledge

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    The focus of this study is to investigate if using multisensory components can increase students\u27 letter and sound knowledge. Specifically this study probes how effective these multisensory components may be to students learning who have dyslexia or symptoms of dyslexia. This study also investigates if using these multisensory components increases students\u27 engagement during intervention. To investigate this study I selected three focus students, two who were flagged as having dyslexia and one who had symptoms of dyslexia. These students would receive reading intervention to continue learning their letters and sounds only this time using multisensory components. Students would receive two weeks of intervention learning digraphs and consonant blends and taking progress monitoring assessments to analyze their development. In addition, I would observe students during intervention to collect field notes about their engagement during each lesson. Students would also complete an end of intervention engagement survey to collect their own thoughts about multisensory components and their engagement during intervention. After analyzing the data, it was evident that after two weeks of intervention with the three focus students there was not a clear indication that using multisensory components increased students\u27 letter and sound knowledge. However, there was evidence to provide reason that using the multisensory components helped increase students\u27 engagement during intervention

    Making Self-Care, Well-Being, and Emotional Intelligence a Part of Your Life

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    This action research project investigates how practicing self-care impacts well-being and emotional intelligence for me personally, as a working interpreter, and as a signing instructional assistant. Tools used to collect data were a modified Well-Being Survey (The KIDSCREEN Group, 2004), an Emotional Intelligence Test (Daniel, 2000), and the Junto Emotion Wheel (Chadha, 2022). Data was collected and analyzed for eleven weeks from May to July. This research was conducted to see what kind of impact self-care would have on my well-being and emotional intelligence. The goal was to see how taking care of myself could improve my mood and well-being, prevent burnout from work, and build better relationships with colleagues at work. The results demonstrated that the number of self-care activities I participated in would go down when I was in a good mood and feeling positively about work, and that I used self-care when I was feeling down or stressed. Overall, I found that by the end of the eleven weeks, I had medium to high emotional intelligence scores which indicated that self-care helped me develop in the areas of self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, and relationship management

    A Deaf Interpreter’s Experience with DCS Supervision: A Dialogic Autoethnography

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    In this thesis, I sought to examine myself as a Deaf interpreter in Demand and Control Schema (DC-S) supervision sessions. The methodology was a dialogic analysis based on power/communication dynamics in DC-S supervision as a Deaf interpreter. The platform that I used was the Interpreting Institute for Reflection-in-Action & Supervision (IIRAS) platform online sessions. In the session, the hearing participants were 18 years or older, they either work or have worked as ASL/English interpreters. They attended at least three supervision sessions. The data collected included the researcher\u27s journaling, video recordings, and responses from interviews.questions with participants and supervision leaders. There was evidence of hearing and Deaf individuals communicating comfortably and effectively

    To Your Health: Staying Healthy and Connected During Covid-19

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    Know the Truth: Be Informed (Bus Ad)

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    Home Literacy Environment and Effects of Reading Development in Children

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    Title: Home Literacy Environment and Effects of Reading Development in Childre

    K-2 Phenomena Based Science Education: Providing early elementary professional development and resources to increase science opportunities for primary students

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    K-2 Phenomena Based Science Education: Providing early elementary professional development and resources to increase science opportunities for primary student

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