Deborah Coughlin has never been trained in special education: she is a classroom teacher retracing the processes and questions that guided her efforts to advocate and accommodate the special-needs students in her classroom. Her inquiries educated her with regard to the laws, procedures, and politics involved in working with these students. Her inquiries also helped her come to her own understandings and make her own adjustments when accommodating varying needs in the classroom. Coughlin shares the knowledge she gained in this book, explaining: the rationale behind the federal laws, codes, mainstreaming, and more how federal laws pertain to students what your legal responsibilities are as a teacher how you can use this information in the classroom how you can apply this information to curriculum and theories of teaching and learning how you can assess and evaluate students--and their work samples how you can create goals and curriculum based upon demonstrated need and assessments how you can develop a curricular program based upon sound literacy practices that accommodates all needs and children how you can create a schoolwide literacy program. The bottom line is that you can follow the law, accommodate all needs, and be an advocate for your students--without having to resort to poor teaching. The Mainstreaming Handbook shows you how.