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22.45 Check for updates O 61% Editorial Effective Strategies for Students with Emotional and Behavioral Disorders H HAMMILL INSTITUTE ON DISABILITIES Beyond Behavior 2021. Vol. 30(1) 3 Hammill Institute on Disabilities 2021 Artide reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals.permissions DOI: 10.1177/10742956211004242 journals.sagepub.com/home/bbx SSAGE Students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD) experience a combination of academic and social-emotional- behavioral deficits in comparison to their peers. This is why focusing on comprehensive support programs for students with EBD is a logical approach for school-based profession- als who work with this population. This first issue of Beyond Behavior's 30th volume encompasses six articles that pro- vide exceptional guidance for practitioners on a variety of topics that can have a positive impact on both their profes- sional actions and outcomes for students with EBD. Effective management of paraeducators is the focus of the first article, authored by Sarah Douglas and Denise Uitto. Described within is a collaborative four-stage model to ensure paraeducators are trained on the necessary knowl- edge and skills required to support students with challeng- ing behaviors and support specially designed programming. The model clarifies paraeducator responsibilities and defines training needs, creates training plans that align with adult learning principles, implements training using coach- ing with performance feedback, and documents paraeduca- tor performance. Intensification of special education programming efforts is central to the issue's second and third articles. Skip Kumm and Daniel Maggin provide an overview of goal- setting interventions that can be tailored to a myriad of dif- ferent student behavioral profiles and functions. The authors describe a goal-setting implementation process as well an intensification process when outcomes fail to meet expecta- tions. Their intensification process focuses on addressing treatment dosage, alignment, and comprehensiveness. The third article by Kary Zarate and Daniel Maggin shows how video modeling (VM) can be used as a powerful tool to sup- port skill acquisition and generalization for students with and without EBD. The authors offer an overview of VM's positive evidence base, reasons why VM is effective, and step-by-step guidance for VM implementation and intensi- fication that meets the needs of students with challenging behavior. The fourth article by Sanikan Wattanawongwan, S. D. Smith, and Kimberly Vannest focuses on guidance regard- ing how to improve social and emotional learning outcomes using cooperative group activities. Their implementation framework highlights the five instructional steps of plan- ning, introducing, monitoring, assessing, and processing. The authors also address skills generalization. In the fifth article, Ashli Tyre and Laura Feuerborn give professionals a host of suggestions for addressing staff per- ceptions that can interfere with successful implementation of positive behavioral interventions and supports (PBIS) frameworks. The authors coin problematic personnel per- ceptions as "misses." Their article identifies 10 common misses and then offers research- and/or practice-based sug- gestions to promote staff engagement, professional devel- opment, and support for implementation. The final article details the Council for Children with Behavioral Disorders' (CCRD) position statement on the use of physical restraint procedures in schools. In the posi- tion paper, Lee Kern, Sarup Mathur, and Reece Peterson outline the ethical and safety concems regarding the use of physical restraints with students and make recommenda- tions for best practice. The latter include (1) conducting a comprehensive screening to identify all students with edu- cational and/or mental health needs, (2) completing appro- priate assessments (e.g., FBA) for those suspected of having intensive needs, (3) implementing a continuum of research- or evidence-based interventions directed at identified needs, (4) intervening in such a way as to preserve personal dig- nity, and (5) ensuring parents and caregivers are partners and informed of school, district, and state policies pertain- ing to the use of restraint. Paul Mooney Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USA Joseph B. Ryan Clemson University, Clemson, SC, USA = ||| U

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Conditional Sentence @ZCALLMEHAN -fect De fini tion Con ditio nal sentence is a sentence Which States a result 0f a Condition. Con ditional Sent ence con sts of if clause and main da se . Type 2 Type 2 is used to express dreames, un real. Situations, thing s that are unlikely to kappen or a Condition that is Currently being imagined 13 example: I will Join the party, if my mom allows me to go Formula : Subject t past modal tVI+ Complement + if + Subject +VZ t Complement main Clause example : 4 I would go to the mall if she gave me the money W I would pass the ekam if I Studied hard if clau se Nowever, if clawse can also be at the beginning of the sentence. In the case, a Comma. ave Vse Type 3 TYpe3 is used to expre ss the past and the im possible htuations that Can no longer be chan ge. In other words, an ima ginary or Unreal or impofble Condition in the past that did not kappen. example: If my mom allows me to go, 1 will jonr the party ed If clau se Main clau se Type O Type o is used to ex press Some thing that is always true / fact/ general truth/habits. Formula: Subjelt + past modul t have t V3 + Complement t if t Subject + had + v3+ Complement For mul a: Subject + V1 t Complement t ift Subject + V1 + Complement examele: Would have gone to the mall if she had me the money 4I would have passed the exam if I had Studied had and given example: If it rains, the ground gets wet oIf you boil water, it eva porates Pend it Additional formulas If clause + Jugges tion = lf+ S+U1+ Should /ough to/ Type 1 Type 1 is used to express a posibility in the future. (it is nor certain that it will happen, but it is possible). had better + Vi + Complement 1f clause + remin der = IftS+ V1 + Have to/ has to /must t V1 Formula: Subject + mo dal +V1+ Comple ment + ift Subject + Vi+ Complement If + general truth : If + S+V1 + StV1 present/ V1 future Ift Stv1 + Complement + S + V1 future Ift dre am exam ple: 4 I will go to the mall if she gives me the mo hey to I will pass the exam If studies hard

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