The purpose of this study is to investigate meanings of inclusion at different levels of the education system in relation to the New Zealand Curriculum Framework and Special Education 2000 policies. My specific focus is to make connections between policy and practice in relation to the inclusion of students with disabilities in a secondary school setting. Through using an ethnographic qualitative methodology I am able to gain an in-depth understanding of the perspectives of participants at all levels within the state education system, (students, school staff, parents, support agencies and state representatives), particularly those directly involved within the school. Data was collected by way of participant observation, semi-structured inte...
Access, inclusion, and belonging: Perceptions of post-secondary refugee-background students in New Z...
This paper explores the tension between the policies and practice of Inclusion and the lived experie...
Explores the concept of inclusion in the educational policies for disabled children. Argues that the...
This study identifies issues, tensions and challenges within education in Aotearoa New Zealand throu...
Disabled students’ experiences of working with teacher aides constitute a recent focus of internatio...
Research evidence suggests that disabled students are experiencing forms of exclusion from and with...
Despite a political commitment towards inclusive education, research evidence suggests that barrier...
This is a single site qualitative case study to investigate how inclusion is understood, and put i...
This qualitative study is based on the narratives of two families who each parent a young disabled c...
This paper draws on interviews with teachers that were conducted as part of the EGSIE-Australia proj...
The notion of curriculum as contested was central to this thesis. In particular, the focus was on ho...
This paper represents the outcomes of an in-depth case study of a secondary school in the south-west...
This article considers the issue of inclusive education for children with disabilities and special e...
The notion of curriculum as contested was central to this thesis. In particular, the focus was on ho...
Special education has had a complex history in New Zealand. The Ministry of Education’s document Spe...
Access, inclusion, and belonging: Perceptions of post-secondary refugee-background students in New Z...
This paper explores the tension between the policies and practice of Inclusion and the lived experie...
Explores the concept of inclusion in the educational policies for disabled children. Argues that the...
This study identifies issues, tensions and challenges within education in Aotearoa New Zealand throu...
Disabled students’ experiences of working with teacher aides constitute a recent focus of internatio...
Research evidence suggests that disabled students are experiencing forms of exclusion from and with...
Despite a political commitment towards inclusive education, research evidence suggests that barrier...
This is a single site qualitative case study to investigate how inclusion is understood, and put i...
This qualitative study is based on the narratives of two families who each parent a young disabled c...
This paper draws on interviews with teachers that were conducted as part of the EGSIE-Australia proj...
The notion of curriculum as contested was central to this thesis. In particular, the focus was on ho...
This paper represents the outcomes of an in-depth case study of a secondary school in the south-west...
This article considers the issue of inclusive education for children with disabilities and special e...
The notion of curriculum as contested was central to this thesis. In particular, the focus was on ho...
Special education has had a complex history in New Zealand. The Ministry of Education’s document Spe...
Access, inclusion, and belonging: Perceptions of post-secondary refugee-background students in New Z...
This paper explores the tension between the policies and practice of Inclusion and the lived experie...
Explores the concept of inclusion in the educational policies for disabled children. Argues that the...