Skip to main content
School-Age Children With Special Needs:  What Do They Do When School Is Out?

School-Age Children With Special Needs: What Do They Do When School Is Out?

This book resulted from a national search for models of before- and after-school child care that served children and youth with disabilities. After an opening section which summarizes the results of a national parent survey, there are separate chapters that profile home-based (family child care) models, public school-operated models, models operated in partnership between schools and other organizations, and community-based models. Appendices include parent and provider surveys resource listings, and a quality checklist. At the time the book was published, the author was a research associate at the Wellesley College Center for Research on Women and editor of a nationally circulated newsletter on policy and practice in school age child care. The study was the first of its kind and the book remains the only one published on this subject.

Find This Book

Other books by this author

Making a Place for Kids With Disabilities
Discipline in School Age Care:  Control the Climate Not the Children

Other books on this topic

Meet Me in the Middle: Becoming an Accomplished Middle-Level Teacher
Why Jane and John Couldn't Read — and How They Learned
The Complete Learning Disabilities Handbook

Complete Learning Disabilities Handbook

Joan M. Harwell, Rebecca Williams Jackson
Published:
2008
Individualized Supports for Students with Problem Behaviors
Faking It: A Look Into the Mind of a Creative Learner
Hanging by a Twig: Understanding and Counseling Adults With Learning Disabilities and ADD
Audience:
Policymakers, Teachers
Back to Top