The history of schooling for students with disabilities in the United States is marked by exclusion and, until the passage of the Education for All Children Act in the 1970s, a substantial number of students with disabilities were denied free public education and many more were poorly served by public schools. The requirement that all children be educated in the ΓÇ£least restrictive environmentΓÇ¥ gradually allowed many students with disabilities to be educated alongside their non-disabled peers and today a majority of students with disabilities spend more than 80% of their school days in regular classroom settings. Still, the meaning of inclusion is bitterly disputed fueled in large part by two contrasting views of disability. This paper d...
Disability and inclusion should not be mutually exclusive events; rather they must be indivisible en...
In education settings, inclusive or mainstream classes are resisted at the secondary level and there...
In this paper I examine ways in which students with disabilities have the capacity to be full, contr...
Achieving inclusion of children with disabilities in general education remains a challenge. This ar...
Inclusion has been the preferred method of educating students with disabilities for several decades....
viii, 40 leaves ; 28 cm. --My choice for an in depth project is to focus on the term Inclusion. I ha...
This article presents an overview of inclusion, a practice that is being utilized increasingly in sc...
ABSTRACT: Reform of regular and special education continues to forge ahead although little is known ...
Inclusion is usually defined “as a student with an identified disability, spending greater than 80% ...
Abstract: This article draws on a review of literature on inclusion taking into account the differen...
Federal law in the United States requires that students with disabilities receive their education al...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph.One of the newest and most controver...
Disability is often perceived as a rare phenomenon that only affects a small number of people (Dewsb...
Although inclusive education has been increasing in frequency for students with disabilities in the ...
The promotion of inclusive education has become a focus of international debate. Research which has ...
Disability and inclusion should not be mutually exclusive events; rather they must be indivisible en...
In education settings, inclusive or mainstream classes are resisted at the secondary level and there...
In this paper I examine ways in which students with disabilities have the capacity to be full, contr...
Achieving inclusion of children with disabilities in general education remains a challenge. This ar...
Inclusion has been the preferred method of educating students with disabilities for several decades....
viii, 40 leaves ; 28 cm. --My choice for an in depth project is to focus on the term Inclusion. I ha...
This article presents an overview of inclusion, a practice that is being utilized increasingly in sc...
ABSTRACT: Reform of regular and special education continues to forge ahead although little is known ...
Inclusion is usually defined “as a student with an identified disability, spending greater than 80% ...
Abstract: This article draws on a review of literature on inclusion taking into account the differen...
Federal law in the United States requires that students with disabilities receive their education al...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph.One of the newest and most controver...
Disability is often perceived as a rare phenomenon that only affects a small number of people (Dewsb...
Although inclusive education has been increasing in frequency for students with disabilities in the ...
The promotion of inclusive education has become a focus of international debate. Research which has ...
Disability and inclusion should not be mutually exclusive events; rather they must be indivisible en...
In education settings, inclusive or mainstream classes are resisted at the secondary level and there...
In this paper I examine ways in which students with disabilities have the capacity to be full, contr...