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Career Development for Exceptional Individuals
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Video-based Simulations: Considerations for Teaching Students with Developmental Disabilities

Cheryl A. Wissick

The University of South Carolina, cwissick{at}sc.edu

J. Emmett Gardner

The University of Oklahoma

John Langone

The University of Georgia

The use of video-based multimedia simulations for teaching functional skills to persons with developmental disabilities remains an unexplored application of technology for this group. This article examines the historical literature in this area, and discusses future considerations, design issues, and implications of using multimedia simulations. Implementation issues are presented, and suggestions regarding design, development, and application of multimedia simulations are offered. Considerations address the importance of appropriate role modeling and the combination of video-based simulation and in vivo training to foster generalization and maintenance in the context of transition to the real world.

Career Development for Exceptional Individuals, Vol. 22, No. 2, 233-249 (1999)
DOI: 10.1177/088572889902200206


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