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Sheldon Braaten
Sheldon
Braaten has worked with children and youth with serious emotional and
behavioral disorders for over 25 years. He began his career as a therapist
at a mental health center, and then served as a special education teacher
followed by 18 years as the administrator of a special school for
adolescents. He served as the Meeks Distinguished Professor of Special
Education at Ball State University, Muncie, IN (1997 to 2006) and continues
as an adjunct professor at BSU and also at St. Cloud State University, St.
Cloud, MN. Dr. Braaten has taught for the University of Minnesota, Portland
State University, Portland, OR; Hamline University, St. Paul, MN; California
State University, San Bernardino, CA; Lenoir-Rhyne College, Hickory, NC; and
as national faculty for the doctoral program in special education at Utah
State University, Logan, UT.
He is the
cofounder of the Minnesota Council for Children with Behavioral Disorders (MNCCBD),
serving in many roles including president and is a past president and
governor of the International Council for Children with Behavioral
Disorders.
Dr. Braaten is
the author of numerous publications involving program design and
development, assessment, intervention planning, policy development and
educational reform issues. He served as Executive Editor of Preventing
School Failure for 12 years and serves as a consulting editor for
other journals. He served as a consultant to many school districts in the
U.S. and has made has made hundreds of presentations at state, national and
international conferences and numerous presentations for school districts,
organizations and other groups.
As founder and
Executive Director of the Behavioral Institute for Children and Adolescents,
he initiated the International Child and Adolescent conference in 1982,
which continues as a biennial event. Dr. Braaten coordinated the development
of transdisciplinary training models for Indiana and Minnesota which
continue to provide a foundation for training of teachers and school teams.
The Institute sponsors the annual Indiana Conference on services for
students with EBD and offers training to service providers of children and
youth throughout the US, including courses for credit. His current research
and training interests include skill-based assessment and curriculum-based
interventions. He also pursues interests in public policies related to
practices in education, mental health and juvenile justice and their
implications for improving outcomes for all at risk students who are
struggling at home, in schools and the community. |
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