
Description
With Faking It, Christopher Lee and Rosemary Jackson changed the way we view special learners, offering a moving account of Lee's struggle and ultimate triumph over dyslexia. Now, with What About Me?, Lee combines his special insight with Jackson's expertise as a special education trainer to offer specific help to teachers and parents of other misunderstood learners.
What About Me? is a practical yet personal book on how to help special learners grow into self-sufficient, responsible adults who can recognize their strengths and manage their weaknesses. To that end, Lee and Jackson offer specific guidance on:
- what you can do and where you can go if your student has a learning disability
- what it's like to perceive words and numbers differently
- how to help students with learning disabilities become creative writers
- how to maximize memory skills
- how to encourage kinesthetic and tactile learners to thrive in the classroom
- how to recognize, deal with, and honor personal survival skills
- how to help students develop self-advocacy skills
- how assistive technology can help
- where to find more information on learning disabilities and assistive technology.
Product Details
Publisher | Heinemann Educational Books |
Publish Date | February 01, 2001 |
Pages | 176 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780325003481 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 6.4 X 0.4 inches | 0.6 pounds |
About the Author
In 1992, he published Faking It: A Look into the Mind of a Creative Learner, and in 2001, What About Me? Strategies for Teaching Misunderstood Learners (Portsmouth NH: Heinemann, Boynton and Cook). These books draw on Christopher's developmental experiences and his challenges attending the University of Georgia (UGA) in order to help teachers and parents optimize learning disabled students' performance.
Christopher has published a one of a kind on-line guide, Learning Disabilities and Technology, an Emerging Way to Touch the Future. He has published articles, chapters and several journals, and has been selected to chair many collaborative projects that relate to disability issues.
In 2003, Christopher was highlighted in a Microsoft video and publication, Microsoft Accessible Technology for Everyone (http: //www.microsoft.com/enable/casestudy/videos.aspx). That year he was awarded the W.F. Faulkes Award by The National Rehabilitation Association for his contributions to the increase of knowledge in the fields of rehabilitation.
He graduated from UGA with a major in Speech Communication in June 1990. He served as Director of Georgia's Assistive Technology Project: Tools for Life, a project operated under the aegis of the Department of Labor, Division of Rehabilitation Services/Vocational Rehabilitation.
Christopher is working on national systems change with the Georgia Department of Labor, Department of Education, Department of Technical and Adult Education, Division of Rehabilitation Services and technology assistance projects throughout the country. Christopher has served as Executive Director of the Learning Disabilities Association of Georgia and President to both this organization and the Atlanta chapter of the Learning Disabilities Adults of Georgia.
Currently he serves as Director of the Alternative Media Access Center house at the University of Georgia, Department of Psychology.
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