Welcome to Education Career Guide
Chronicle Of Higher Education Career Article
![]()
This is a selection made from among articles on Chronicle Of Higher Education Career. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.
What Constitutes a Special Education Career?
from:What most people don’t realize is that every profession is a “special education career” because all vocations require some type of distinctive training. However, for the sake of this article we’re going to discuss the elements of a Special Education Career that revolve around people with handicaps or disabilities.
There are numerous occupation choices for people who want to work with the handicapped. Teachers, therapists, and counselors are just a few examples and nearly every university in the world offer courses needed to work within the components necessary for this career.
A person who decides to work with the handicapped should not only obtain exclusive training, they should possess qualities in abundance that others may have but not necessarily express. Because you are working with people who don’t hear, think or reason the same way that most do, those in a special education career cannot afford to be impatient or mean spirited. Therefore, an unlimited supply of patience and compassion are absolute musts for people who choose to work in a special education career.
It takes a unique individual to be teacher of mentally or physically handicapped children and/or adults. At the same time, a counselor or therapist who works with the handicapped should be able to understand not only the physical but mental limitations of the people they come in contact with and particularly those with whom they are dealing with on a daily basis.
Other examples of a special education career are types of physical and mental therapy where horses, dogs, art, and music are applied. These are types of therapy that appeal to the senses and childlike hearts of the students.
Another instance of a special education career is someone who provides ears for the deaf. In nearly every profession and training facility around the world there are people who choose to interpret what is being said to people who can’t hear. These individuals are fluent in sign language and have the skills necessary to ensure that their pupils are hearing and understanding what they need to learn. This form of communication is a beautiful thing to watch.
Sign language isn’t the only form of communication where interpreters are necessary in the world today. People who are fluent in foreign languages can work in jobs as varied and influential as national security and government liaisons. Someone who doesn’t aspire to such lofty positions can be employed as translators for the arts by translating books, movies and songs.
So whether you choose a special education career working with children or adults, the disabled or just those linguistically impaired, these vocations are rewarding to everyone involved.
Chronicle Of Higher Education Career News
The Cost of the Path Not Taken - Victoria Advocate
The Cost of the Path Not Taken Victoria Advocate, TX - A Chronicle of Higher Education report released last month indicates admissions directors are finding that because of the today's financial conditions, ... |
French University Presidents Ask Sarkozy to Resolve Tension on ... - AACRAO Transcript
French University Presidents Ask Sarkozy to Resolve Tension on ... AACRAO Transcript, DC - First, they assert that the job cuts in higher education and research are "totally in contradiction" with the betterment of French higher education. ... |
He Said, She Said - American Spectator
He Said, She Said American Spectator - Miriam A. Kazanjian, of the Coalition for International Education, told the Chronicle of Higher Education, "I don't know anyone who is against diverse ... |
Unprecedented Raise - The Post Online
![]() The Post Online | Unprecedented Raise The Post Online, OH - According to The Chronicle of Higher Education, in the past four years, the median base salary for public-university presidents rose by 13 percent to ... |
Why you shouldn't work up until your due date - San Francisco Chronicle
![]() San Francisco Chronicle | Why you shouldn't work up until your due date San Francisco Chronicle, USA - And along with her low-wage work go other factors, like lack of education, worse nutrition, inferior healthcare, etc. which could account for the higher ... |









