Nikki L. Murdick
Southern Illinois University Carbondale
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Featured researches published by Nikki L. Murdick.
Remedial and Special Education | 2005
Barbara C. Gartin; Nikki L. Murdick
The Individualized Education Program (IEP) is an essential component in providing a free, appropriate public education (FAPE) to individuals with disabilities. The 2004 amendments of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) have attempted to reduce the paperwork requirements of the IEP, while simultaneously ensuring that the goal of FAPE is met. Furthermore, the legislation attempts to bring the requirements of IDEA and NCLB into better alignment. Legislative changes to the IEP are described, and possible implications are discussed.
Remedial and Special Education | 2001
Barbara C. Gartin; Nikki L. Murdick
The provision of appropriate educational programs for students with disabilities continues to be clarified through amendments to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) of 1990. Required in the latest amendments, in 1997, and the subsequent publication of the regulations in 1999, are a research-based method known as functional assessment of behavior (FAB) and a behavioral change strategy known as positive behavior supports (PBSs). This article provides a legal base for and describes the steps in implementing an FAB; it also provides examples of appropriate PBSs and their use with students with disabilities.
Intervention In School And Clinic | 1996
Nikki L. Murdick; Beverly Petch-Hogan
Discusses alternative intervention strategies for educational problems in the inclusive classroom prior to evaluating a student for special education placement
Teaching Exceptional Children | 2004
Nikki L. Murdick; Barbara C. Gartin; Shaila Rao
inclusion movement and the government’s focus on “leaving no child behind,” educators have begun to identify a group of children who have difficulty learning but do not fit into more commonly understood categories of disability. One little-known category of exceptionality is known as hyperlexia. For teachers it may be a quandary for program development as they confront children who exhibit a group of characteristics that seem to conflict with each other. Thus, the teacher may note “characteristics of precocious reading development and disordered language acquisition, with concomitant social and behavioral deficits” (Kupperman, Bligh, & Barouski, n.d., p. 1). According to Charlotte Miller (1999): Hyperlexic children are intelligent, often highly-gifted individuals. They have an intense curiosity and interest in learning. Older hyperlexic children may often be highly verbal and obviously academically gifted. These gifts at times may be so obvious that little attention is paid to the language difficulties of hyperlexia, or to the very nature of the hyperlexic learning style. Only through an understanding of these language difficulties, and the visual and gestalt processing style of these children, can we help them to maximize their potential.
The Clearing House | 1993
Nikki L. Murdick; Barbara C. Gartin
odays teachers and students are constantly at risk because of the increase in violent crimes within schools. According to the Uniform Crime Report (1981), 18.5 percent of all arrests involving violent crime are committed by individuals who are under the age of eighteen. In fact, it has been estimated that juvenile misconduct of a violent nature leading to adjudication may occur in up to 95 percent of the nations youth under the age of twenty-one (Siegel and Senna 1981). Often these children and youths are labeled unofficially as delinquent, conduct disordered, or antisocial (Rock 1992). Whatever the label, though, various forms of juvenile misconduct, rule breaking, and especially violent behaviors are commonplace in public schools today. Continued occurrences of violent behaviors instill fear in both the teachers and the students who attend the public schools (Boesel 1978). Needless to say, this atmosphere is not conducive to the provision of a safe environment in which to learn. Because of this fear as well as other contributing factors, many students believe that for their protection they must carry some type of weapon to school (Parade Magazine 1992). In this article we will try to alleviate some of these fears by discussing possible causes of violence in the classroom and by outlining steps to prevent or reduce the impact of students who exhibit violent behaviors.
Journal of Disability Policy Studies | 1996
Nikki L. Murdick; Barbara C. Gartin
Neither P.L. 94-142 nor its amendments, the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) of 1990, refers to the terms “inclusion” or “mainstreaming,” addressing only the issue of placement in the “least restrictive environment” (LRE) for students with disabilities. Beginning in 1989, the federal courts began to address the issue of the inclusion of students with disabilities into the regular education classroom as a method for meeting the least restrictive environment mandate of federal legislation. As a result, functional definitions of LRE and its impact on the issue of inclusion have emerged in case law decisions during the decade. These decisions have provided educators and administrators with guidelines concerning appropriate placements, use of records from other school districts for program and placement decisions, and types of required documentation. As litigation concerning inclusion increases, it is imperative that educators be aware of and understand the implications of these legal decisions. We review federal and circuit court cases related to the issue of inclusion and interpret the impact these decisions are having on the special education process as well as the effect this controversy and subsequent legal decisions are having on the educators who are involved.
Education and Training in Developmental Disabilities | 2004
Nikki L. Murdick; Paul Shore; Mary M. Chittooran; Barbara C. Gartin
Archive | 2002
Barbara C. Gartin; Nikki L. Murdick; Marcia Imbeau; Darlene E. Perner
Archive | 2007
Nikki L. Murdick; Barbara C. Gartin; Terry Crabtree
Education and Training in Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities | 2002
Barbara C. Gartin; Nikki L. Murdick; James R. Thompson; Tina Taylor Dyches