a disability with significant difficulty in social relationships, communication, managing stress and finding a wide range of interests.
What is Autism Spectrum Disorder
100
an essential factor in determining and using sources to decide which information we can rely on.
What is objectivity
100
This type of study is when a group of students work collectively together to investigate and attempt o find possible answers.
What is inquiry cooperative learning
100
These types of disabilities include speech and language impairments, emotional disturbance, learning impairments, and mild intellectual difficulties.
What is High Incidence Disabilities
100
This man challenged the way educators defined intelligences and offered multiple new ways to look at smartness.
Who is Howard Gardner
200
This category of disability includes autism, multiple disabilities, sensory impairments and physical, medical and health disabilities.
What is Low-Incidence Disabilities
200
The focus of this idea is to raise questions and interpret information to make judgements and find validity in information.
What is critical thinking skills
200
1. Define the problem
2. speculate possible answers
3. gather information
4. analyze the information and test hypothesis
5. reach the conclusion
What is the six steps of inquiry in all classrooms
200
This type of training teaches students to redirect their actions by talking to themselves resulting in appropriate behavior.
What is self control training
200
This is the idea that presumes that ALL students can learn and learn effectively in a classroom rather than assuming they are incapable.
What is "the least dangerous assumption"
300
This type of disability includes difficulty with learning, social and emotional skills, and who use adaptive equipment to help them learn.
What is sensory impairments
300
These are two aspects that are most important when students are choosing which sources they use for critical research. They keep the text relevant and accurate.
What are "technical correctness" and "currency"
300
The idea of using real hands-on models in the classroom and allowing students to explore "artifacts"
What is "Realia"
300
These types of students have trouble with processing, organizing, and applying academic information.
What are learning disabilities
300
Change this to person first language: Jeff is retarded.
What is "Jeff has a cognitive disability"
400
A device that electronically transmits sound to the brain enabling students to perceive sound.
What is a cochlear implant
400
1. classify information
2. interpret information
3. analyze information
3. summarize
4. synthesize
5. evaluate
What are Beyer's six categories of critical thinking
400
This person created the six fundamental dimensions for inquiry in each classroom.
Who is Fred Newmann
400
This type of problem is mostly observed when students read orally, mispronounce words, substitute one word for another, and omit words.
What are accuracy problems
400
If your IQ is below this number on the bell curve you are automatically issued the label of "mental retardation."
What is a 70 IQ
500
This inherited disorder includes the following symptoms:fatigue, severe chest pain, swollen hands or feet, and often experience cognitive impairment.
What is sickle-cell disease
500
This person defines critical thinkings as, "demand analysis, interpretation of, or manipulation of information." He also developed _______ categories of critical thinking.
Who is Newmann and his six categories of critical thinking
500
1. teacher starts with a puzzling question
2. students ask yes/no questions for data
3. students ask yes/no questions for hypothesis
4. students make explanations and discuss with others
5. Students look back and analyze inquiry process.
What is Suchman's Inquiry Model
500
This type of training takes children through tasks involving spacial orientation, eye movements, and balance with the goal of improving their reading skills.
What is vestibular training
500
This is the intelligence which focuses on your inner state of being, being reflective and aware.