A Call to Action: Identification and Intervention for Twice and Thrice Exceptional Students
By (Author) Blanche E. Sosland
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
15th March 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Educational psychology
Teaching of gifted or talented students
371.9
Hardback
134
Width 149mm, Height 215mm, Spine 17mm
349g
Although twice exceptional students are gradually receiving more recognition and intervention, they are still a grossly underserved segment of the school population. A Call to Action: Identification and Intervention for Twice and Thrice Exceptional Students begins with basic information about twice exceptional studentsstudents who are both gifted/talented and who also have learning disabilitiesand provides strategies for how educators can identify these students. It is imperative that classroom teachers provide intervention to address both exceptionalities since these students often score at grade level on standardized tests, the giftedness score lowered by the learning disability raised by the giftedness, resulting in neither exceptionality being addressed because they do not qualify for either of the special services.
This book discusses the Informal Reading Inventory, how it should be administered, and how the information provided by this instrument can enable the classroom teacher to meet the special needs of these students. It also presents Stopwatch Spelling, a program that with a fast-paced, confidence-building approach, helps many students overcome a frustrating impediment to becoming proficient readers and spellers. A Call to Action draws upon classroom and clinical experiences, field work, and interviews with twice exceptional students of all ages, parents, and community partners.
Blanche E. Sosland has done it again! A Call to Action: Identification and Intervention for Twice and Thrice Exceptional Students is an important book because twice exceptional students are a grossly underserved student population and because far too few professionals and parents know how to identify them. This book combines strategies for identifying students gifted in one areaand below grade level in anotherwith practical interventions. It will be useful to those preparing to become teachers and their professors, those who have taught for several years, and parents of twice and thrice exceptional students. As with her recent book on bullying, it is very readable, combines theory and practice, and has numerous real-life examples from her teachingboth from her students and her colleagues. -- Donald J. Breckon, former president emeritus, Park University, Parkville, Missouri
Blanche E. Sosland has written a powerful, thoughtful booka call to action that offers a pathway forward to identify and intervene on behalf of twice and thrice exceptional students. She writes with grace and style, compassion and generosity. This is an urgent book. Read it now. -- Nancy Sommers, lecturer, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Dr. Blanche E. Sosland addresses one of the most important issues in educationmeeting students where they are. To do this, you have to truly see each student. Dr. Sosland offers tools for assessing, or seeing, all aspects of a student. She also invites teachers to become champions for their students strengths by nurturing their growth and development. -- Nomi Isak, writer, writing coach, and book editor
A Call to Action: Identification and Intervention for Twice and Thrice Exceptional Students is a much-needed resource for teachers and school administrators who want to fully support all of their students to succeed and thriveacademically, socially and emotionally. -- Jane Clementi, co-founder and CEO, Tyler Clementi Foundation
Although the majority of Dr. Blanche E. Soslands teaching career was at the college and university level, she has also taught in classrooms ranging from early childhood to Head Start to middle school. Her areas of expertise include diagnosis and remediation of reading problems in the classroom and twice exceptional children: gifted/talented and learning disabled.