The present paper is part of a larger study carried out in North Queensland, Australia, between 1999 and 2001. The original study focused on the perceptions of 15 women who each have (or had) a child who was medically, educationally and socio-culturally constituted as having a disability. Qualitative methods were used for research design and to gather data. Poststructural and feminist perspectives were added to provide additional methods of data analysis. The primary focus in this paper is the spatiality of inclusive education with/in the discursive site of (special) education. It also considers the binary of regular/special education in relation to the spaces of educational discourse through the perspectives of the mothers, covering a temp...
Australian education policies advocate equal opportunities and non-discrimination through legislatio...
In light of the premise that student behaviour serves to communicate a child’s experience of problem...
Access to and participation in a quality education is seen as a basic human right for all children, ...
The present paper is part of a larger study carried out in North Queensland, Australia, between 1999...
With the increasing enrolment of students with disabilities in primary schools and the enactment of ...
For students with disability, there are entrenched barriers to receiving an inclusive education in A...
In 2010, QPPD commissioned research to investigate whether parents’ experience of inclusive educatio...
Current practices regarding inclusive education vary enormously depending on a wide range of issues,...
Current practices regarding inclusive education vary enormously depending on a wide range of issues,...
Inclusive education has emerged internationally over the past thirty y ears as a way of developing d...
With the release of Education White Paper 6: Special Needs Education — Building an Inclusive E...
The concept of inclusive education within the Australian context is portrayed. The autoethnographic ...
This paper explores the tension between the policies and practice of Inclusion and the lived experie...
Abstract: The fluidity of disability, and impairment emerges through a series of interviews develope...
This qualitative study is based on the narratives of two families who each parent a young disabled c...
Australian education policies advocate equal opportunities and non-discrimination through legislatio...
In light of the premise that student behaviour serves to communicate a child’s experience of problem...
Access to and participation in a quality education is seen as a basic human right for all children, ...
The present paper is part of a larger study carried out in North Queensland, Australia, between 1999...
With the increasing enrolment of students with disabilities in primary schools and the enactment of ...
For students with disability, there are entrenched barriers to receiving an inclusive education in A...
In 2010, QPPD commissioned research to investigate whether parents’ experience of inclusive educatio...
Current practices regarding inclusive education vary enormously depending on a wide range of issues,...
Current practices regarding inclusive education vary enormously depending on a wide range of issues,...
Inclusive education has emerged internationally over the past thirty y ears as a way of developing d...
With the release of Education White Paper 6: Special Needs Education — Building an Inclusive E...
The concept of inclusive education within the Australian context is portrayed. The autoethnographic ...
This paper explores the tension between the policies and practice of Inclusion and the lived experie...
Abstract: The fluidity of disability, and impairment emerges through a series of interviews develope...
This qualitative study is based on the narratives of two families who each parent a young disabled c...
Australian education policies advocate equal opportunities and non-discrimination through legislatio...
In light of the premise that student behaviour serves to communicate a child’s experience of problem...
Access to and participation in a quality education is seen as a basic human right for all children, ...