Abstract
This paper provides an overview of video-based instruction for teaching assorted skills to individuals with disabilities. Video-based instruction is an umbrella term that refers to instructional techniques that present learners with video footage designed to teach a skill. A comprehensive description of the distinctive subcategories of video-based instruction (i.e., video modeling-other, video self-modeling, video feedback, point-of-view video modeling, video prompting) is included. Additionally, this manuscript provides practitioners with an illustrative sample of existing video-based instruction literature, a concept map of video-based instruction nomenclature, as well as guidelines and pragmatic information related to planning and deploying video-based instruction for learners with disabilities in clinical and/or school settings. Key extractions from the video-based instruction literature base are synthesized and analyzed in respect to limitations, and implications for future research are discussed.
