This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural problems” (LOM) has played in knowledge production about learning disabilities and in the development of academic study of special education between 1949 and 1985. LOM-schooling grew rapidly during these years and attracted relatively many experts. In the selection and admission of LOM-children they had to be distinguished from normal, mentally deficient, and “very difficult” children. Around 1970 experts shifted their focus from the distinction between LOM-children and the latter to the difference between LOM- and mildly mentally retarded children, which turned out to be too small in the end to justify a separate school. The LOM-school’s culture o...
This paper discusses the role brain disease has played in the discourse and practices of child scien...
In this article Copeland's model of visualising the classification of children with learning disabil...
In this article Copeland's model of visualising the classification of children with learning disabil...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
Between c.1945 and 1965 across the West special education has grown and differentiated substantially...
This article explores the tensions between medical and pedagogical professionals involved with the c...
This article explores the tensions between medical and pedagogical professionals involved with the c...
This article explores the tensions between medical and pedagogical professionals involved with the c...
This paper discusses the role brain disease has played in the discourse and practices of child scien...
In this article Copeland's model of visualising the classification of children with learning disabil...
In this article Copeland's model of visualising the classification of children with learning disabil...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
This article focuses on the role the Dutch school for children with “learning and behavioural proble...
Between c.1945 and 1965 across the West special education has grown and differentiated substantially...
This article explores the tensions between medical and pedagogical professionals involved with the c...
This article explores the tensions between medical and pedagogical professionals involved with the c...
This article explores the tensions between medical and pedagogical professionals involved with the c...
This paper discusses the role brain disease has played in the discourse and practices of child scien...
In this article Copeland's model of visualising the classification of children with learning disabil...
In this article Copeland's model of visualising the classification of children with learning disabil...