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Angela Henderson; John Cassidy; Abigail Croydon; Melanie Nind – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2024
Background: Inclusive research is widely accepted as an essential part of the process to democratise knowledge creation and dissemination. However, while peer review is an important part of academic publishing, the potential to include people with learning disabilities in this element of the research process has not previously been explored using…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Adults, Peer Evaluation, Inclusion
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Seubert, Florian J. – Research in Drama Education, 2022
This article re-contextualises applied drama practice in the wake of COVID-19, with a particular focus on cognitive diversity. From an inclusive perspective, it asks how encouraging self-expression helps to diversify the still often one-dimensional perception of people with learning disabilities in media reports. It thereby continues an on-going…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Females, Learning Disabilities
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Anderson, Ange – Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs, 2016
Over the last 30 years, controversy has reigned over the rights of children with learning disabilities to be educated alongside their peers in a mainstream classroom. Whether this is called integration or inclusion has been another hotly debated discussion among professionals. There have been calls for the abolition of special schools. This paper…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Learning Disabilities, Lifelong Learning, Well Being
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Woodcock, Stuart; Hitches, Elizabeth – Annals of Dyslexia, 2017
Despite strong support for inclusive education in principle, many teachers and administrators still demonstrate mixed responses to the inclusion of certain students in their classrooms. Students with specific learning difficulties (SpLD) form a large group of students in inclusive classrooms yet some provincial, state and national jurisdictions…
Descriptors: Secondary School Teachers, Outcomes of Education, Secondary School Students, Learning Disabilities
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Dimitrellou, Eleni; Hurry, Jane – European Journal of Special Needs Education, 2019
Despite the considerable institutional changes schools have made to accommodate the individual needs of pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND), as underpinned by key principles of inclusion, there is still international concern about the mainstream experiences pupils with SEND have in school settings. This study helps us…
Descriptors: Student School Relationship, Secondary School Students, Student Attitudes, Adolescent Attitudes
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Nind, Melanie; Armstrong, Alan; Cansdale, Mal; Collis, Anne; Hooper, Clare; Parsons, Sarah; Power, Andrew – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2017
This paper explores the potential of an online TimeBank for inclusive research to address some of the challenges related to the unequal distribution of power and money for researchers within and outside the academy working in collaboration. The problem, the concept of TimeBanking, and the relationship of TimeBanking to inclusive research…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Money Management, Banking, Power Structure
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Simmons, Ben; Watson, Debbie – Child Care in Practice, 2015
Children with profound and multiple learning disabilities (PMLD) are said to experience severe congenital impairments to consciousness and cognition stemming from neurological damage. Such children are understood as operating at the pre-verbal stages of development, and research in the field typically draws conceptual resources from psychology to…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Research Methodology, Constructivism (Learning), Inclusion
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Tomlinson, Sally – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2016
In countries that have developed special education (SE) provision, whether in segregated settings or "included" in mainstream, racial, ethnic and immigrant minorities continue to be disproportionately represented. Explanations for placement in SE programmes continue to centre round assumptions of deficiencies in student abilities to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Special Education, Minority Group Students, Ethnic Groups
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Nind, Melanie; Flewitt, Rosie; Payler, Jane – Children & Society, 2011
The paper tells of the social constructs surrounding young children with learning difficulties in their home, "special" early education setting and "inclusive" or mainstream early education setting in England. The exploratory study focused on how three- to four-year-old children made sense of their environments and how their…
Descriptors: Learning Problems, Learning Disabilities, Young Children, Foreign Countries
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Stickley, Theodore; Crosbie, Brian; Hui, Ada – British Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2012
The Stage Life was a participatory arts programme for people attending a day services provision in Nottinghamshire. The uniqueness of this programme was that it was provided in a local disused cinema acquired by the local authority for community-based activities amongst disadvantaged groups. The Stage Life aimed to build the community arts…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Disadvantaged, Art Activities, Young Adults
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Nind, Melanie; Flewitt, Rosie; Payler, Jane – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2010
This paper tells of the social experiences of three four-year-old children with learning disabilities as they negotiate their daily lives in their homes and early education settings in England. We apply a social model of childhood disability to the relatively unexplored territory of young children and use vignettes drawn from video observation to…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Young Children, Foreign Countries, Social Experience