In her book, Great Ideas: Using Service-Learning and Differentiated Instruction to Help Your Students Succeed, P. J. Gent describes service-learning as “service-based learning while helping to meet the needs of others, the community or the environment” (p. 2). In this idea-filled book, she provides an overview of the use of service-learning within an inclusive classroom environment. This text is as much about differentiated learning as it is about service-learning, and it provides clear and compelling examples of their integration. The first three chapters provide an introduction to the history of and rationale for service-learning and the implementation of service-learning within an inclusive framework. The remaining seven chapters detail the steps and implementation of service-learning: preparation, investigation, action, reflection, evaluation, celebration, and continuation. Each chapter opens with a vignette placing the use of service-learning within a classroom context. Those vignettes and student profiles were some of the strongest parts of the...
Skip Nav Destination
.
Article navigation
1 October 2012
BOOK REVIEW|
October 01 2012
Great Ideas: Using Service-Learning and Differentiated Instruction to Help Your Students Succeed
Great Ideas: Using Service-Learning and Differentiated Instruction to Help Your Students Succeed
by.
P.J.
Gent
Baltimore, MD:
Paul H. Brookes
, 2009
Christine Ashby
Christine Ashby
Syracuse University
Search for other works by this author on:
Intellect Dev Disabil (2012) 50 (5): 436–437.
Citation
Christine Ashby; Great Ideas: Using Service-Learning and Differentiated Instruction to Help Your Students Succeed. Intellect Dev Disabil 1 October 2012; 50 (5): 436–437. doi: https://doi.org/10.1352/1934-9556-50.5.436
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Client Account
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Could not validate captcha. Please try again.
Sign in via your Institution
Sign in via your InstitutionAAIDD Members
To access the journals, use your member log in credentials on the AAIDD website and return here to gain access. Your member credentials do not work with the login widgets on these pages. Always log in on the AAIDD website.
56
Views
Citing articles via
Through the Looking Glass: A Data Lens on Health of People With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Gloria L. Krahn, Susan M. Havercamp, Alexandra Bonardi
Family Resilience in Families of Children With Autism Spectrum Disorders: Ecological Systems Theory Perspective
Ayelet Gur, Yifat Bar Meir, Maayan Edelstein, Mirit Nagar, Òrly Rokach, Ari Reich, Tali-Noy Hindi
“You Don’t Know What You Don’t Know”: Parent Perspectives on Navigating Disability-Related Information and Resources
Emily R. Lanchak, Erik W. Carter, Elise D. McMillan
Establishing an Advocacy Activities Scale for Parents of Individuals With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Chak Li, Meghan M. Burke, Julie Lounds Taylor, Leann S. DaWalt, Zachary Rossetti
Racial/Ethnicity Disparities in COVID-19 Worry for Caregivers of Adults With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Laiba Asif, Kristen A. Staggers, K. Jordan Kemere, Ambrielle Davis, Ellen Fremion