Realizing the rhetoric of the ideology of including disabled children in education has been a subject of debate in the UK since the nineteenth century (Armstrong 2007), more recent debates have intensified, as Lady Mary Warnock (a principle architect of special and inclusive education) appeared to change her mind about inclusion, intimating that the UK's attempts to include disabled children in mainstream schools have failed (Warnock 2005). Warnock believes that there are a significant number of children who are being included in the education system but who are neglected in terms of the quality of their experience. She champions a view that there is a benefit in maintaining segregated/special schools for some disabled children (ibid). Writ...
For children with special educational needs, seeds were sown for the move away from segregated setti...
A teacher and mother of a child with mental retardation examined the history and current status of t...
Must Inclusion be Special? confronts the messy compromises between inclusion, mainstream and special...
Realizing the rhetoric of the ideology of including disabled children in education has been a subjec...
ABSTRACT: Reform of regular and special education continues to forge ahead although little is known ...
This project attempts to understand the term 'inclusive education' and to put the theory, where poss...
This paper argues that the standards agenda works in opposition to the inclusion agenda despite gove...
In England, inclusion has once again become a much discussed topic following the publication of the ...
In 2003 the UK government announced, after six years of supporting the notion of educating all pupil...
The move towards inclusion, nationally and internationally, over the past three decades is a socio-p...
My choice for an in depth project is to focus on the term Inclusion. I have found that considerable ...
This article summarises three case studies examining the implementation of inclusive practices, whic...
This is an accepted manuscript of a book chapter published by Springer Routledge in the Handbook on ...
It is almost two decades since a concept of inclusion as selective segregation was proposed as an al...
Autism is a very common Special Educational Need (SEN); children with Autism attend both mainstream ...
For children with special educational needs, seeds were sown for the move away from segregated setti...
A teacher and mother of a child with mental retardation examined the history and current status of t...
Must Inclusion be Special? confronts the messy compromises between inclusion, mainstream and special...
Realizing the rhetoric of the ideology of including disabled children in education has been a subjec...
ABSTRACT: Reform of regular and special education continues to forge ahead although little is known ...
This project attempts to understand the term 'inclusive education' and to put the theory, where poss...
This paper argues that the standards agenda works in opposition to the inclusion agenda despite gove...
In England, inclusion has once again become a much discussed topic following the publication of the ...
In 2003 the UK government announced, after six years of supporting the notion of educating all pupil...
The move towards inclusion, nationally and internationally, over the past three decades is a socio-p...
My choice for an in depth project is to focus on the term Inclusion. I have found that considerable ...
This article summarises three case studies examining the implementation of inclusive practices, whic...
This is an accepted manuscript of a book chapter published by Springer Routledge in the Handbook on ...
It is almost two decades since a concept of inclusion as selective segregation was proposed as an al...
Autism is a very common Special Educational Need (SEN); children with Autism attend both mainstream ...
For children with special educational needs, seeds were sown for the move away from segregated setti...
A teacher and mother of a child with mental retardation examined the history and current status of t...
Must Inclusion be Special? confronts the messy compromises between inclusion, mainstream and special...