Despite an unprecedented increase in classroom‐based support staff, there are confusing messages about their appropriate deployment and a lack of systematic evidence on their impact. This article addresses the deployment and impact on pupil engagement and individual attention of support staff, commonly known as teaching assistants (TAs), in terms of: (1) a comparison between TAs and teachers; (2) differences between pupils with and without special educational needs (SEN); and (3) differences between primary and secondary schools. Systematic observations of pupil behaviour in 49 primary and secondary schools showed that support staff presence resulted in increased individualisation of attention and overall teaching, easier classroom control,...
The last twenty years have seen a huge expansion in the additional adults working in classrooms in t...
The International Guide to Student Achievement brings together and critically examines the major inf...
There is increasing use of additional staff (teaching assistants, learning support assistants, behav...
Despite an unprecedented increase in classroom‐based support staff, there are confusing messages abo...
Over the past twenty years there has been a continuous and significant rise in the number of teachin...
These three studies address the deployment and impact of support staff – teaching assistants – in pr...
The reliance on teaching assistants (TAs) for inclusion is discussed in relation to the quality of i...
As a result of their high contact time with children, particularly children identified with special ...
European Journal of Special Needs Education, Vol 36, No 2 (2021), 215-230The reliance on teaching as...
It is widely assumed that increasing the number of Teaching Assistants (TAs) in the classroom will b...
In recent years there has been an unprecedented increase in support staff in schools in England and ...
Teaching assistants (TAs) comprise a quarter of the school workforce in England and Wales. There has...
Many primary school children with English as an additional language in the UK receive additional ed...
It is widely assumed that increasing the number of Teaching Assistants (TAs) in the classroom will b...
It is widely assumed that increasing the number of teaching assistants (TAs) in the classroom will b...
The last twenty years have seen a huge expansion in the additional adults working in classrooms in t...
The International Guide to Student Achievement brings together and critically examines the major inf...
There is increasing use of additional staff (teaching assistants, learning support assistants, behav...
Despite an unprecedented increase in classroom‐based support staff, there are confusing messages abo...
Over the past twenty years there has been a continuous and significant rise in the number of teachin...
These three studies address the deployment and impact of support staff – teaching assistants – in pr...
The reliance on teaching assistants (TAs) for inclusion is discussed in relation to the quality of i...
As a result of their high contact time with children, particularly children identified with special ...
European Journal of Special Needs Education, Vol 36, No 2 (2021), 215-230The reliance on teaching as...
It is widely assumed that increasing the number of Teaching Assistants (TAs) in the classroom will b...
In recent years there has been an unprecedented increase in support staff in schools in England and ...
Teaching assistants (TAs) comprise a quarter of the school workforce in England and Wales. There has...
Many primary school children with English as an additional language in the UK receive additional ed...
It is widely assumed that increasing the number of Teaching Assistants (TAs) in the classroom will b...
It is widely assumed that increasing the number of teaching assistants (TAs) in the classroom will b...
The last twenty years have seen a huge expansion in the additional adults working in classrooms in t...
The International Guide to Student Achievement brings together and critically examines the major inf...
There is increasing use of additional staff (teaching assistants, learning support assistants, behav...