Exceptional Children
Gifted and Talented | Special Needs Teaching Methods | Specific Learning Difficulties
This peer-reviewed journal addresses the education and related development of individuals with disabilities and/or who are considered gifted and talented across the lifespan. EC emphasizes empirical scholarship including mixed methods, qualitative, and quantitative research, and systematic research reviews, while also welcoming data-based, theoretical, or conceptual essays and position papers, and commentaries engaging debates and other developments within the field. EC is published quarterly.
Submit your manuscript today at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ecx.
Exceptional Children, an official journal of The Council for Exceptional Children, publishes original scholarship that focuses on the education and related development across the lifespan of individuals with disabilities or who are considered gifted and talented. This includes mixed methods, qualitative, and quantitative research; systematic research reviews; data-based, theoretical, or conceptual essays and position papers; and commentaries engaging debates and other developments within the field. Our editorial vision for EC is to ensure equitable educational access, participation, and outcomes for individuals with disabilities by expanding stakeholders’ capacities to provide robust, effective opportunities to learn for all students.
| Katheleen King Thorius | Arizona State University, USA |
| Endia J. Lindo | Texas Christian University, USA |
| Patricia Martínez-Álvarez | Teachers College, Columbia University, USA |
| Amanda Sullivan | University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA |
| Alexandra Aylward | University of Nevada, Reno, USA |
| Rebecca A. Cruz | Johns Hopkins University, USA |
| Taucia González | University of Arizona, USA |
| David Hernández-Saca | University of Northern Iowa, USA |
| Erica McCray | University of Florida, USA |
| Cristina Santamaría Graff | Indiana University School of Education-IUPUI |
| Seena Skelton | University of Kansas, USA |
| Audrey Sorrells | Texas Christian University, USA |
| Tran Templeton | Teachers College Columbia University, USA |
| Jennifer J. Lesh | Lynn University, USA |
| Al Rickard | Publications Manager |
| Chad Rummel | Executive Director |
| Amy Accardo | Rowan University, USA |
| Terese Aceves | Loyola Marymount University, USA |
| Stephanie Al Otaiba | Southern Methodist University, USA |
| Charlotte Y. Alverson | University of Oregon, USA |
| Alfredo Artiles | Stanford University, USA |
| Kevin Ayres | University of Georgia, USA |
| Scott Baker | University of Oregon; Southern Methodist University |
| Jeffrey P. Bakken | Bradley University, USA |
| Ruby Batz | University of Nevada Reno, USA |
| Sheri Berkeley | George Mason University, USA |
| Elizabeth Bettini | Boston University, USA |
| Bonnie Billingsley | Virginia Tech, USA |
| Brian Bottge | University of Kentucky, USA |
| Matthew Brock | Ohio State University, USA |
| Mary Brownell | University of Florida, USA |
| Matthew Burns | University of Missouri, USA |
| Carolyn M. Callahan | University of Virginia, USA |
| Jason C. Chow | University of Maryland - College Park, USA |
| María Cioè-Peña | University of Pennsylvania, USA |
| Diane Clark | Lamar University, USA |
| David J. Connor | Hunter College, City University of New York, USA |
| Christan G. Coogle | George Mason University, USA |
| Bryan Cook | University of Virginia, USA |
| M. Nickie Coomer | Colorado College, USA |
| Michael Coyne | University of Connecticut, USA |
| Jean Crockett | University of Florida, USA |
| Michelle Cumming | Florida International University, USA |
| Susan De La Paz | University of Maryland- College Park, USA |
| Lisa Dieker | University of Central Florida, USA |
| Christian Doabler | The University of Texas at Austin, USA |
| Shaun M. Dougherty | University of Connecticut, USA |
| David Edyburn | University of Central Florida, USA |
| Amy Elleman | Middle Tennessee State University, USA |
| Tammy Ellis-Robinson | University at Albany, USA |
| Anya Evmenova | George Mason University, USA |
| Hank Fien | Boston University, USA |
| Veronica Fleury | Florida State University, USA |
| Douglas Fuchs | American Institutes for Research |
| Lynn S. Fuchs | Vanderbilt University, American Institutes for Research |
| Nicholas A. Gage | University of Florida, USA |
| Justin D. Garwood | University of Vermont, USA |
| Russell Gersten | Instructional Research Group, USA |
| Allison Gilmour | American Institutes for Research, USA |
| Daniel P. Hallahan | University of Virginia, USA |
| Elizabeth A. Harkins | William Paterson University, USA |
| Shanna E. Hirsch | University of Maryland, USA |
| Robert Horner | University of Oregon, USA |
| John Hosp | University of Massachusetts Amherst |
| Youjia Hua | University of Virginia, USA |
| Charles Hughes | The Pennsylvania State University, USA |
| Li-Yu Hung | National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan |
| Sarah Ivy | Florida State University, USA |
| Evelyn S. Johnson | Boise State University, USA |
| Kristine Jolivette | University of Alabama, USA |
| Nancy Jordan | University of Delaware, USA |
| Michael J. Kennedy | University of Virginia, USA |
| Hyejung Kim | Texas A&M University, USA |
| Young-Suk Kim | University of California, Irvine, USA |
| Margaret King-Sears | George Mason University, USA |
| Dosun Ko | Santa Clara University, USA |
| Tuire Koponen | University of Jyvaskyla, Finland |
| Saili Kulkarni | San Jose State University, USA |
| Tara Kulkarni | California State University - Monterey Bay, USA |
| Timothy J. Landrum | University of Louisville, USA |
| Kathleen Lynne Lane | University of Kansas, USA |
| Jennifer R. Ledford | Vanderbilt University, USA |
| Melinda Leko | University of Florida, USA |
| Christopher Lemons | Vanderbilt University, USA |
| Tim Lewis | University of Missouri, USA |
| Mary-Anne Linden | University of Oregon, USA |
| Allison Lombardi | University of Wisconsin - Madison, USA |
| Andres De Los Reyes | University of Maryland at College Park, USA |
| Hailey Love | University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA |
| Charles MacArthur | University of Delaware, USA |
| Linda Mason | George Mason University, USA |
| Rose Mason | Purdue University, USA |
| D. Betsy McCoach | University of Connecticut, USA |
| Kristen McMaster | University of Minnesota, USA |
| David McNaughton | Pennsylvania State University, USA |
| Valentina Migliarini | University of Birmingham, UK † |
| Amanda L. Miller | Wayne State University, USA |
| Mary Morningstar | Kansas University, USA |
| Carlyn Mueller | University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA |
| Srikala Naraian | Teachers College, Columbia University, USA |
| Rollanda O'Connor | University of California, Riverside, USA |
| Courtney O'Grady | The University of Alabama, USA |
| Susan Osborne | North Carolina State University, USA |
| Peng Peng | University of Texas-Austin, USA |
| Jennifer Phuong | Swarthmore College, USA |
| Sarah R. Powell | University of Texas, Austin, USA |
| William A. Proffitt | Montclair State University, USA |
| Paige Pullen | University of Florida, USA |
| Catherine Richards-Tutor | California State University Long Beach, USA |
| Graham Rifenbark | University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA |
| Mandy Rispoli | University of Virginia, USA |
| Carly Roberts | University of Washington, USA |
| John E. Romig | University of Texas at Arlington, USA |
| Ji Hoon Ryoo | Yonsei University, South Korea |
| Elizabeth A. Sanders | University of Washington, USA |
| Barbara R. Schirmer | Walden University, USA |
| Ralf Schlosser | Northeastern University, USA |
| Thomas E. Scruggs | George Mason University, USA |
| Karrie Shogren | University of Kansas, USA |
| Jordan Shurr | Central Michigan University, USA |
| Patricia Snyder | University of Florida, USA |
| Manuel Soriano-Ferrer | University of Valencia, Spain |
| Laura M. Steacy | University of Connecticut, USA |
| H. Lee Swanson | University of New Mexico, USA |
| Cherie Takemoto | Parent Educational Advocacy Training Center, USA |
| Elizabeth Talbott | College of William and Mary, USA |
| Jonte' C. Taylor | The Pennsylvania State University, USA |
| Adai Tefera | University of Arizona, USA |
| Elif Tekin-Iftar | Anadolu University, Turkey |
| Colleen Thoma | Virginia Commonwealth University, USA |
| Aubry Threlkeld | Harvard University, USA |
| Martha Thurlow | University of Minnesota–Minneapolis |
| Gerald Tindal | University of Oregon, USA |
| Jessica Toste | University of Texas, Austin, USA |
| Audrey A. Trainor | New York University, USA |
| Audrey A. Trainor | New York University, USA |
| Sharon Vaughn | University of Texas, Austin, USA |
| Catherine Kramarczuk Voulgarides | City University of New York (CUNY)-Hunter College, USA |
| Federico R. Waitoller | The University of Illinois at Chicago, USA |
| Jeanne Wanzek | Vanderbilt University, USA |
| Margaret P. Weiss | George Mason University, USA |
| Mitchell L. Yell | University of South Carolina, USA |
Policies for Exceptional Children
PURPOSE OF EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN
Exceptional Children, an official journal of the Council for Exceptional Children, publishes original research and analyses that focus on the education and development of infants, toddlers, children, youth, and adults with exceptionalities. Descriptions of research, research reviews, methodological reviews of the literature, data-based position papers, and policy analyses are considered for publication. Exceptional Children publishes quantitative, qualitative, and single-subject design studies.
Articles published in Exceptional Children must have implications for research, practice, or policy in special or gifted education. Although Exceptional Children publishes research studies that examine the effectiveness of specific interventions, it does not publish descriptions of instructional procedures except as a part of an intervention study or classroom materials, accounts of personal experiences, letters to the editor, book or test reviews, and anecdotal single-case studies. Non-data-based reports on innovative techniques, programs, policies, or models, as well as studies involving a pretest-posttest only design with no comparison condition are also not published in Exceptional Children. Investigations involving questionnaires and surveys are generally not published unless the sample is reasonably representative of the population being studied.
For questions on manuscript submission, please download this presentation on how to write for Exceptional Children.
TYPES OF ARTICLES THAT EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN PUBLISHES
The Journal primarily publishes five types of articles:
- Research Studies including qualitative, large group quantitative, or single-subject design studies. Appropriate effect sizes must be reported for quantitative studies.
- Research Reviews including the analysis and integration of research in one or more areas. Reviews must be comprehensive and critical. Whenever possible, effect sizes for individual studies should be reported.
- Methodological Reviews including systematic examinations of the methodological strengths and weaknesses of a specific body of literature (e.g., a methodological review of the soundness of research on teaching phonological awareness).This can include a methodological analysis of qualitative, quantitative, and single-subject design studies.
- Data-Based Position Papers including papers addressing an important (practical or theoretical) issue(s) in special or gifted education. This involves analyzing and integrating the existing research literature to provide a balanced and scholarly examination of the issue.
- Policy Analyses including critical analyses and research related to public policy issues that impact the education of exceptional infants, toddlers, children, youth, and adults.
WRITING FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN
Articles published in Exceptional Children are typically 25 to 35 pages in length, including cover page, abstract, references, tables and figures. Manuscripts should be double spaced with 1-inch margins and size 12 font type per the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th Edition, 2010 (APA) guidelines.
Although Exceptional Children is a scholarly research journal, its articles are read by a broad audience. This includes national, state, and local administrators; school practitioners; and parents. Therefore, articles written for Exceptional Children must be developed with this broad audience in mind. Each article must be clear and concise, providing enough general information so that readers can understand the issues or questions addressed, what was done, and the basic findings and recommendations. Consistent with APA guidance, authors should avoid educational jargon whenever possible, and each article must address implications for practice.
Authors must also provide enough specific information about their methodology so that their work can be replicated by other researchers. The participants in research studies must be appropriately described, as such description is critical to the science and practice of special education. In research articles, adequate evidence on the reliability and validity of tests, measures, or instruments must be provided. For intervention studies, evidence that treatments were implemented as intended should be provided as well. Authors must further address implications for research, indicating what needs to be done next (see Exceptional Children, 2005, Volume 71, Issue 2, for guidelines on standards for describing research participants and other research quality indicators).
MANUSCRIPT REQUIREMENTS
Manuscripts submitted to Exceptional Children are reviewed only if they meet the following criteria:
- Manuscript is consistent with the purpose of the journal and is between 25–35 pages including all references, tables, and figures.
- Manuscript conforms to APA format (see Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th Edition, 2010), particularly:
– Manuscript is double spaced, Microsoft Word, with 1-inch margins (size 12 font type preferred).
– All pages are numbered in sequence, starting with the title page. Note: The uploaded manuscript should include a title page and abstract but you must remove the author(s) name from the manuscript due to the blind review process.
– Titles and headings are bold.
– Digital object identifiers (dois) must be included in the reference list. Below is the link to the CrossRef site where authors can look up a doi number for a reference.
http://www.crossref.org/guestquery/
– Language in the manuscript making reference to disabilities and other characteristics of individuals must conform to the “person first” recommendations outlined in General Guidelines for Reducing Bias (Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th Edition, pp. 71–77). - Reproductions of figures (rather than professionally prepared figures) may be submitted for the review process (APA exception for submission).
- Effect size information is provided for quantitative studies.
- All references in text are listed and in complete agreement with text citations. It is important that the journal articles and references to studies that are cited in the articles reflect the most current work (preferably within the last 10 years)—except when it is a classical or seminal work.
- Article title should not exceed 12 words.
- Abstract is not more than 150 words long. It is included in the submitted manuscript and uploaded separately on the portal site.
- Footnotes are not used.
- All word processing codes (including those that may identify authors) are removed from the electronic version of the manuscript for apostrophes, quotation marks, hyphens, and so forth.
Cover Letter Requirements
- Clearly state the purpose of the article and its expected contribution.
- Indicate that you are the author, or the authorized agent of the author(s) and copyright holder (if different from the author(s)), that the author(s) have approved the work for publication, have agreed to submit the article, and accept full responsibility for the content of the article.
- Acknowledge that the article is the author(s)’ original work and does not contain any libelous or unlawful statements or infringe on the rights or privacy of others or contain material or instructions that might cause harm or injury.
- State that the article has not been previously published, is not pending review elsewhere, and will not be submitted for review elsewhere pending the completion of the editorial decision process at the journal.
- Indicate if any part of the data on which the article depends has been published elsewhere or is part of another manuscript submitted for publication. Authors must also indicate if the data for their study is part of a larger data set, describing how this study differs from other investigations drawn from the same data set. If either situation exists, the author needs to provide a thorough explanation.
- Report that the author(s) have received approval by the appropriate Institutional Review Boards for all participating agencies and obtained consent and assent when appropriate.
- Include contact information for all authors (full name, institution, address, phone number, e-mail address).
- State that if accepted, authors agree to grant exclusive license to publish to CEC.
Submission Process and Requirements
All manuscripts should be submitted using the Exceptional Children portal site:
http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ecx
The steps for submission are as follows:
- Log in to your account on the portal site. If you are submitting for the first time, create an account and then log in.
- On the right, click “Submit an Article.”
- Read and accept submission agreement. Note: All information in the submission agreement should also be addressed in your submission cover letter.
- Fill out your personal information as it appears on your manuscript.
- Add additional author email addresses so they receive correspondence about the submission.
- Upload manuscript, cover letter, and related items such as table and figures.
- Submit.
- Verify accuracy of submission and revise as necessary.
REVIEW PROCESS
Selection of manuscripts for publication is based on a blind peer review process; however, all manuscripts are screened first by the editors. Those manuscripts that do not meet all the manuscript requirements, or that are not consistent with the purpose of the journal, are not forwarded for peer review. In such cases, the submitting author is notified that the manuscript is not acceptable for Exceptional Children, or is requested to make changes in the manuscript so that it meets requirements.
Manuscripts that are consistent with the purpose of the journal and meet all requirements are assigned two or more reviewers to evaluate the manuscript. Reviewers are asked to evaluate the manuscript on its overall importance, quality of the work, and clarity of writing. Reviewers will not know the identity of the authors. While under review (until authors receive word of a decision from Exceptional Children), the journal has exclusive options on possible publication. The manuscript should not be submitted elsewhere during this time.
After reading and evaluating the manuscript and the reviews, the editors will e-mail the submitting author a written decision and the reviews. The decision will be one of the following:
- Acceptable, with routine editing.
- Acceptable, with revisions indicated.
- Revise and resubmit.
- Unacceptable.
Decisions on manuscripts submitted to Exceptional Children will be made within 3 months from the time that they are received by the editors. Once a manuscript is received, the date is recorded and the submitting author is notified by e-mail. If the authors fail to submit following the portal directions, the manuscript is not listed as received until the manuscript is uploaded meeting all requirements.
AUTHOR RESPONSIBILITIES FOLLOWING PUBLICATION ACCEPTANCE
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After a manuscript is accepted for publication in Exceptional Children, the authors are responsible for completing the following:
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Acknowledging the funding agency for supported research.
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Verifying the authenticity of all quoted material and citations and for obtaining permission from the original source for quotes in excess of 150 words or for tables or figures reproduced from published works.
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Preparing camera-ready black and white copies of all figures included in the article. Obtaining permission to reprint or adapt previously published figures, tables, and other materials.
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Granting CEC the exclusive license to publish the article by signing the contributor agreement.
WHERE TO SUBMIT MANUSCRIPTS
http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ecx
Contact
John Wills Lloyd, Editor
William J. Therrien, Editor
pubproposal@cec.sped.org
For more information, please refer to the SAGE Manuscript Submission Guidelines.